Digital Age Assurance Act challenges open-source OS projects with mandatory age-tracking

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.

The Act marks the first U.S. legislation directly regulating operating system behavior on age verification. OS providers must gather self-reported ages during account creation, categorizing into brackets: under 13, 13-15, 16-17, or 18+. This data is shared real-time via API with app developers, providing 'actual knowledge' to shield against child safety liabilities.

While commercial giants like Microsoft and Apple have resources, open-source communities face acute difficulties. Many distributions lack centralized user accounts, relying on decentralized mirrors and global volunteers without legal teams. Compliance could require building account systems, APIs, and maintenance—straining limited engineering and potentially repelling contributors wary of liability.

Projects might restrict California users, add disclaimers, or seek exemptions, mirroring pushback noted at enactment. Enforcement by the Attorney General carries fines up to $7,500 per child for intentional violations. This regulatory push equates open-source platforms with Big Tech, reshaping decentralized software development and user privacy norms in the name of minor protection.

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President Lula signs decrees for the Digital Child and Adolescent Statute (ECA Digital) at Palácio do Planalto, emphasizing online protections for minors.
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Lula signs ECA Digital decrees this Tuesday

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President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signs decrees regulating the Digital Child and Adolescent Statute (ECA Digital) this Tuesday (March 17), a law entering into force that expands protections for minors online. The ceremony takes place at the Palácio do Planalto, featuring measures like age verification and bans on harmful content.

California lawmakers are advancing legislation to exempt most open source operating systems from the state's age verification requirements. The move follows concerns from Linux advocates about the original rules. Colorado has already enacted similar protections.

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As Linux distributions continue responding to age verification laws in regions like California and Brazil—following earlier plans from Ubuntu, Fedora, and others—Garuda Linux has stated it will not comply, citing hosting in Finland and Germany. Arch Linux remains silent with forum discussions deleted, while Arch Linux 32 has blocked Brazilian users due to new legislation.

The Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously approved a bipartisan bill requiring AI companies to implement age verification for chatbots to protect minors. The legislation, co-sponsored by Senators Josh Hawley and Richard Blumenthal, prohibits AI companions for children and blocks sexually explicit content or self-harm encouragement. This rare cross-aisle agreement signals potential for swift Senate passage.

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Jeffrey Seathrún Sardina, a machine learning researcher, has created a fork of systemd called Liberated systemd to excise its recently added birthDate field. The field was introduced last week in response to age verification laws in California, Colorado, and Brazil. The fork aims to eliminate what its creator views as surveillance-enabling code while staying in sync with the mainline project.

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