this post was submitted on 10 Mar 2026
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It’s a solution that seems so divorced from reality… I don’t quite understand how the expectation is reasonable, unless the goal is to force complaints to surface from the OS developers so that they can refine future versions of the law with more accuracy.
Because Linux distributions can be created free-willy. Just check out Linux From Scratch, Gentoo, etc. Same with live boot from USB, same with stripped down server distros like Alpine — you have the same issue.
Linux isn’t a product in the same way that other products can be regulated. It would make more sense if they defined clearly who this law actually targets, being something that is actually enforceable; something like this:
That at least makes some sense. In a way, it only targets PC distributors and porn distributors. The end user could still do whatever they want, but porn distributors may not serve content to them without the functionality described.
I don't want to be "that person", but here's how it could play out...
The "free-willy" distros would not fulfill the "trust" requirements needed to pass the "certification process". You can still use them, but think of it like running custom firmware on your cellphone: you're not going to be able to access your bank, but somethings will still work.
Larger distros (Red Hat, Ubuntu, etc) would pay to pass the "certification process", but this would come by making certain concessions:
Then with theses concessions, your PC world be deemed "reliable" to perform the necessary age verification and have this confirmation passed through your browser to your favor porn site.
You would need to create yet another version of HTTP to handle that (a few years) and banks would have to handle it globally (at least 5 years from my own experience). It will never happen like that. Banks are the slowest companies to handle that kind of modification.
We're going down the rabbit hole, but I'll play along:
I don't think we'd need a "new http" version to support this. It could all be done with http headers.
Disclaimer: I'm spit balling here, there are probably more efficient ways to do this.
Anyway, when you go to your bank, included in your banks response header would be a "challenge" (a blob of data in as
X-Age-ThinkOfTheChildren-Request).Your browser would pick this up and generate a "response" and send this as part of all future requests to your bank, like an http-cookie (
X-Age-ThinkOfTheChildren-Response).The "response" was created using the banks challenge plus using the unique age certificate stored on your pc (in your TPM module), which was generated (and "officially digitally signed") during your initial "age registration process".
The bank looks at the response, verifies that it was probably signed by the "official age verification organization" (simply using the same technology used to verify ssl certs are valid).
Of course, this entire process depends on a "chain of trust". The bank needs to trust that you didn't hack your browser to forward these challenges to another pc. However, this is realistic. As part of the initial age verification process, you can only use "trusted vendors" (ie: Red Hat, Ubuntu) - this means they are required to prevent you from installing "hacked" apps. This could be in the form of preventing certain browser plug-ins and only allowing distro provided versions of your web-browser.
True, but this also depends on the bank. Fintech banks like Revolut were the first ones to start to blocking access to phones that are rooted or running custom firmware (... because they care about security /s)
Most of the effort to implement this will be at the OS and browse level, but this would be a univeral solution. Meaning, it would be trivial for your bank, email service, porn site to support it as it's simply generating a challenge and verifying the response.
With microslop forcing tpm 2.0 as a hardware requirement into windows 11, all the pieces are in place to pull this off - it just needs the software and the legal requirement.
It's like M$ secure boot on steroids. Speaking of which, we really ought to have our entire computing ecosystem less dependant on the wills of like 10 companies
Damn, that sounds like gunk. I’ve been so exciting about the day and age when phones reach the same level of customizability as a PC. Little did I know, they want to phoneify the PCs instead.
Yeah, I have wanted my phone to be more like a computer for a long time, not the other way around! This timeline sucks.