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.
Building on early community talks about California's AB 1043 Digital Age Assurance Act (effective January 2027), several US states including Colorado and Illinois are advancing similar laws. These require OSes like Linux and BSD variants to collect self-reported ages during account setup and expose APIs for apps to query age brackets, aiding minor content filtering. Proposals loom in New York and Brazil.
Ubuntu parent Canonical continues legal reviews without firm plans, while community proposals include a local D-Bus interface (org.freedesktop.AgeVerification1). elementary OS, based on Ubuntu, plans preemptive action. Fedora explores local APIs or /etc/ files for age data. Pop!_OS maker System76 eyes minimal self-attestation changes to avoid restricted app access.
Resistance is mounting: DHH's Omarchy Linux rejects California's law outright. Adenix GNU/Linux vows no age checks. MidnightBSD will bar California desktop users via license changes from January 2027. No word yet from Linux Mint, Arch Linux, SUSE; NixOS awaits major distro leads.
Enforcement challenges for community projects persist, shaping diverse strategies.