GrapheneOS refuses age verification laws, may exit regions enforcing them

GrapheneOS, a privacy-focused Android-based operating system, has stated it will not comply with age verification requirements, even if it means losing market access in certain regions. The team emphasized that its OS and services will remain available worldwide without requiring personal information or accounts. This stance comes amid expanding global laws targeting operating systems.

In a post on X on March 25, 2026, the GrapheneOS team declared it would refuse to implement age verification at setup, regardless of legal demands. 'It won't comply, regardless of where the demand comes from,' the post stated, according to reports. The project prioritizes keeping its OS and services available globally without collecting personal information, identification, or requiring accounts. If that results in devices being unsellable in some areas, the team accepts that outcome. GrapheneOS is an open-source mobile OS based on the Android Open Source Project, developed by the GrapheneOS Foundation, a Canadian non-profit. Age verification laws are increasingly targeting operating systems. Brazil's Digital ECA took effect on March 17, imposing fines up to R$50 million per violation. California's Digital Age Assurance Act is set for January 1, 2027, mandating OS providers to collect user age at setup and share it with developers via a real-time API. Colorado has a similar bill planned for January 2028, while the UK, Australia, and Singapore pursue comparable measures. Earlier this month at MWC 2026, Motorola and the GrapheneOS Foundation announced a partnership for a Motorola smartphone pre-installed with GrapheneOS, expected in 2027. This raises questions for Motorola, a global vendor, in regions with mandates. One potential solution: Motorola sells the device only in compliant-free markets, preserving GrapheneOS's no-account policy while maintaining its operations elsewhere.

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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.

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A new law in California mandates that all operating systems, including Linux, implement some form of age verification during account setup. The legislation aims to address online safety concerns. Details on enforcement remain unclear.

Australian regulators are poised to require app stores to block AI services lacking age verification to protect younger users from mature content. This move comes ahead of a March 9 deadline, with potential fines for non-compliant AI companies. Only a fraction of leading AI chat services in the region have implemented such measures.

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Proposed amendments to a UK bill aim to restrict children under 16 from using social media and virtual private networks to enhance online safety. Legal experts warn that these measures could require adults to undergo age verification for everyday online services, potentially compromising privacy. The changes build on the Online Safety Act, which took effect in July 2025 but has loopholes that tech-savvy users exploit.

Discord has informed UK users that they may be part of an experiment using the age-assurance vendor Persona for verification, where submitted data is temporarily stored unlike previous promises. This change has raised privacy concerns among users, particularly due to Persona's links to investor Peter Thiel and his surveillance firm Palantir. The update is part of a broader global rollout of mandatory age verification starting in early March.

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Governments around the world are pushing to restrict children's access to social media, doubting platforms' ability to enforce age limits. TikTok has responded by announcing a new age-detection technology across Europe to prevent users under 13 from joining. This approach aims to balance protection with less drastic measures than outright bans.

 

 

 

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