this post was submitted on 01 May 2026
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Lawmakers in Congress are moving quickly on the GUARD Act, an age-gating bill restricting minors’ access to a wide range of online tools, with a key vote expected this week. The proposal is framed as a response to alarming cases involving “AI companions” and vulnerable young users. But the text of the bill goes much further, and could require age gates even for search engines that use AI.

If enacted, the GUARD Act won’t just target a narrow category of risky chatbots. It would require companies to verify the age of every user — then block anyone under 18 from interacting with a huge range of online systems. It would block minors from everyday online tools, undermine parental guidance, and force adults to sacrifice their privacy. In the process, it would require services to implement speech-restricting and privacy-invasive age-verification systems for everyone—not just kids.

Under the GUARD Act’s broad definitions, a high school student could be barred from asking homework help tools questions about algebra problems. A teenager trying to return a product could be kicked out of a standard customer-service chat.

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[–] LukeZaz@beehaw.org 1 points 15 hours ago

I'm aware. I think the primary difference between this bill and that general age-gating push is that AI itself does cause very real harm. To everyone, really. I'm not sure I'd even say children are particularly vulnerable.

Regardless, I came to the conclusion that the bill isn't worth it as-is in my newer analysis post.