AB 1043 Details: Age Signals and Verification for OS Providers and App Stores

One day after Governor Gavin Newsom signed California's AB 1043 (Digital Age Assurance Act) into law, details emerge on its requirements for operating system providers and app stores to collect birth dates during account setup—effective January 1, 2027—to deliver non-personally identifiable age bracket signals to app developers, protecting children without ID scans or biometrics.

California's AB 1043 mandates that operating system providers and covered app stores implement an accessible interface at account creation where users provide their birth date, age, or both. This generates a digital signal indicating age brackets—such as under 13, under 16, or 18 and over—for transmission to developers via a consistent, real-time API upon app download or launch.

The signal relies solely on self-reported birth date data, ensuring it is non-personally identifiable and avoiding ID scans, third-party brokers, or anticompetitive practices. The law applies globally to any OS or app store available for download in California, including open-source distributions like Linux, which may need simple date pickers or California-specific disclaimers.

Existing accounts created before July 2027 must include mechanisms for users to retroactively add age data. Noncompliance incurs civil penalties enforced by the Attorney General, complementing the bill's fines for developers outlined in initial coverage. Provisions are severable to withstand legal challenges.

Proponents hail it as a child safety advance by embedding age assurance in personal devices, amid broader trends in platform regulations.

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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.

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.

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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.

Linux PC vendor System76 is advocating against state mandates for operating system-level age verification. The company's CEO met with a Colorado senator to discuss excluding open source software from a proposed bill. Similar legislation is advancing in several other US states.

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Dylan M. Taylor, a longtime open source contributor, added an optional birthDate field to systemd's user database to help Linux distributions comply with US state age verification laws. The change sparked intense controversy in the Linux community, leading to harassment and death threats against Taylor. In an interview, he defended the addition as simple attestation rather than verification.

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.

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The SPD has proposed a ban on social media platforms for children under 14 in an impulse paper. The plan includes age verification via the EU app EUDI-Wallet and tiered rules by age group. It draws inspiration from Australia's recent model.

 

 

 

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