this post was submitted on 16 Apr 2026
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I'm personally against this kind of thing, but I hate how much of a fantasy echo chamber this stuff is here. There's so much misinformation and hyperbole in this thread alone.
In general I support the idea of device-level age verification. The narrative around it uses old school methods only (this one goes with just inputting your date of birth, which I've already done for years for stuff like Steam), rather than the ID or face scan by random third parties methods used in age verification discussions and requirements elsewhere. In my opinion software being able to use an API provided by the OS itself is much better, and with the right OS (linux) much more trustworthy than any web-based solution.
My only real problem is the lack of user choice. This comes in two forms:
I don't think it is wrong to be concerned about this. We live in an era of mass surveillance and control. This is just one more tool that governments and corporations can use to control and surveil.
It starts as a DOB field but then escalates to an always online requirement where your full identity is passed along to every app and website. We've seen this happen across mobile phones and social media; I don't want it on my PC.
Steam believes I'm somewhere between 62 and 126 years old. I don't think Steam's birthday gate is going to qualify as age verification
This bill requires the OS to ask you for your birth date, explicitly the birth date. That's all the age verification it requires. So I'm not sure how that's "not going to qualify as age verification". Why would the very method specified in the bill not count? There's no requirement to use other methods to verify the age you're given. The user just selects their birth date freely and the OS accepts it and that's it if they're not underage.
Just make it illegal to buy a PC without an ID, problem solved.
Adding more fantasy to the echo chamber will help for sure.