Ubuntu and Fedora developers address California's age assurance act

Developers from Ubuntu and Fedora have begun discussing how to comply with California's Digital Age Assurance Act, set to take effect in January 2027. The law requires operating systems to collect age information during account setup and provide an age signal to applications. Canonical and Fedora leaders emphasize ongoing reviews without firm plans yet.

California's Digital Age Assurance Act, known as AB 1043, mandates that operating systems gather age details at account creation and share an age signal with qualifying apps starting in January 2027. This has prompted early conversations within the Linux community, particularly among major distributions like Ubuntu and Fedora. Colorado is preparing a similar measure, though later, signaling potential broader U.S. trends in age verification for digital platforms.

On the Ubuntu side, a recent developer mailing list thread ignited online debates about adaptation strategies. Canonical's Vice President of Engineering, Jon Seager, clarified the situation in a response on the Ubuntu Discourse forum. He stated that the company is aware of the legislation and consulting legal counsel internally, but no specific changes to Ubuntu are planned at this stage. Seager described the mailing list discussion as an informal exchange among community members, not an official announcement from Canonical. "When we have a clear plan, we will publish it through our usual channels," he added.

Similarly, Fedora Project Leader Jef Spaleta addressed the issue on the Fedora forum. Initially unaware of the law, Spaleta later shared thoughts on potential implementations. He expressed hope for a local OS API allowing applications to query the user's age bracket without telemetry. In a family desktop scenario, Spaleta envisioned parents as administrators creating child accounts and optionally specifying an age bucket. Applications could then adjust their user interface based on this OS-provided information, possibly via a D-Bus service or a simple extension to user mapping files in /etc/.

Spaleta cautioned that his views represent an evolving understanding of the legislation, pending further discussions. He noted that the law likely requires documented methods for apps to access age data during OS account setup. These developments highlight challenges for Linux distributions, especially smaller ones lacking dedicated legal resources, as more age-related regulations emerge globally.

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Governor Gavin Newsom signs California's Digital Age Assurance Act, requiring OS age verification for safer online content.
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California enacts Digital Age Assurance Act requiring OS age verification

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Following initial reports of an impending law, California Governor Gavin Newsom has signed AB 1043, the Digital Age Assurance Act, requiring operating system providers to collect users' ages during account setup and share via API with app developers. Effective January 1, 2027, it applies to major platforms like Windows, iOS, Android, macOS, SteamOS, and Linux distributions, aiming for age-appropriate content without biometrics.

Following initial discussions among Ubuntu and Fedora developers, more Linux and BSD distributions are addressing age verification mandates in California, Colorado, Illinois, and beyond. Responses range from minimal compliance plans to outright resistance, amid unclear enforcement for open-source OSes.

Reported by AI

Building on our earlier coverage of California's Digital Age Assurance Act (AB 1043)—signed by Governor Gavin Newsom in October 2025 and effective January 1, 2027—the law's requirements for age data collection and API sharing pose steep compliance hurdles for volunteer-driven open-source operating systems like Ubuntu, Debian, Arch Linux, and SteamOS.

Discord announced it will default all accounts to a teen-appropriate experience starting in early March, requiring age verification to access adult content and restricted servers. The move aims to enhance child safety but has sparked backlash over privacy concerns following a recent data breach. Verification options include on-device facial estimation or submitting government IDs.

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Discord announced new default settings on February 9 to enhance age-appropriate experiences, set to implement in March. The 'teen-by-default' policy requires age verification for accessing sensitive content and features. Users have expressed concerns over privacy and potential data breaches.

Google is introducing a developer verification program for Android apps starting September 2026 in select regions, requiring developers to register personal details regardless of app source. The measure aims to enhance security by increasing accountability, but critics argue it threatens open source projects and user choice. An open letter opposing the program has garnered support from numerous organizations.

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Digital rights groups have criticized a proposed Wisconsin bill that includes provisions to ban VPN use for age verification. The Electronic Frontier Foundation describes the measure as unworkable. Lawmakers are set to discuss the controversial proposal on February 18.

 

 

 

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