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A new Californian law will have far reaching effects censorsing social media and requiring widespread age verification
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| 3rd October 2024
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| See article from latimes.com |
California's governor Gavin Newsom has signed a wide ranging bill to limit the ability of social media companies to provide feeds to minors that politicians claim to be addictive. Newsom signed Senate Bill 976, named the Protecting Our Kids From
Social Media Addiction Act and introduced by state Senator Nancy Skinner. Of course the fundamental social media 'algorithm' is to provide a user with more of the content that they showed they enjoyed. Politicians and campaigners would clearly
prefer that users would instead get a feed of what they 'should' be enjoying. The legislation was widely opposed by groups including the American Civil Liberties Union of California, Equality California and associations representing giants in the
industry that own TikTok, Instagram and Facebook. The California Chamber of Commerce argued that the legislation unconstitutionally burdens access to lawful content, setting up the potential for another lawsuit in an ongoing court battle between the
state and social media companies over use of the platforms by children. The bill, which will take effect Jan. 1, 2027, with Newsom's signature, prohibits internet service and applications from providing addictive feeds, defined as media curated based
on information gathered on or provided by the user, to minors without parental consent. SB 976 also bans companies from sending notifications to users identified as minors between midnight and 6 a.m. or during the school day from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. unless
parents give the OK. The bill will effectively require companies to make posts from people children know and follow appear in chronological order on their social media feeds instead of in an arrangement to maximize engagement. The bill doesn't
specifically mandate age verification but the policies outlined above do require the internet companies to know the age of a user whether specified or not. |
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Georgia joins list of states requiring age/ID verification to access porn websites
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| 30th
April 2024
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| See article from catholicvote.org
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Georgia's state governor Brian Kemp has signed into law a bill that requires age verification on adult websites, a law which likely will cause the sites to shut down in the state. Senate
Bill 351 sponsored by Sen. Jason Anavitarte, aims at protecting children from cyberbullying and exposure to pornographic content, as well as regulates the usage of social media. The law requires parental consent before allowing minors to create
social media accounts. It also echoes a Texas law that would mandate age verification on pornography sites by requiring users to upload a government-issued photo ID before allowing them to view adult content. Any sites that do not enforce these rules
would receive a $10,000 fine for each child who accesses content deemed harmful to minors. |
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Meta outlines plan for operating systems and app stores to take control of age/ID verification
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| 19th
April 2024
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| See article from biometricupdate.com
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When the British Government started work on online censorship laws I think it envisaged that age/ID verification would create a business opportunity for British start up companies to exploit the market so created. Unfortunately for them it looks
inevitably set that the usual US internet giants will be the ones to profit from the requirements. In fact Meta has been speaking of its ideas that operating system companies and app stores should be the ones to implement age/ID verification. Meta
is calling for implementing age verification across Europe and proposed a way to do it. The company wants to ensure that parents only need to verify the age of their child once and noted that the most effective way of achieving this would be to have
operating systems or app stores complete the verification process. The move would pass on the responsibility of age verification from social media platforms to firms such as Apple and Google. Other platforms have also in argued in favor of the
solution, including Twitter and Match, the company behind dating apps like Tinder, Hinge and OkCupid. Meta delivered its statement during a hearing of an Irish parliament committee focused on children's rights this week. Meta has been taking
different approaches to try and ease pressure from global censors on the age verification question. The company has been experimenting with facial age estimation technology from UK firm Yoti in several countries. |
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19th April 2024
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Online porn restrictions are leading to a VPN boom See article from popsci.com |
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The Kansas state governor refuses to sign the states age/ID verification law but it will become law anyway
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| 17th April 2024
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| See article from avn.com
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The Kansas state governor, Laura Kelly, has announced that she will not sign age verification legislation that was recently passed through the state legislature. Instead, she will let the bill, Senate Bill (SB) 394 , automatically become law by
letting it enter force on April 25. The bill levies age verification requirements on websites with users from Kansas IP addresses to check their identities through government identification or transactional data. SB 394 empowers Attorney General Kris
Kobach to enforce the law. Kelly said in a statement: While well-meaning in its efforts to protect children from content the legislature considers 'harmful to minors,' this bill is vague in its application and may
end up infringing on constitutional rights, which is an issue being litigated in other jurisdictions over similar bills. For that reason, I will allow this bill to become law without my signature.
Kelly added that she could have
vetoed the bill, but the Republican-held state legislature would have the necessary votes to overturn her veto. |
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Alabama State House passes bill to require Net Nanny like filters to be installed on all phones and tablets and turned on for minors
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8th April 2024
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| See article from
al.com |
The Alabama House of Representatives has passed a bill that would require makers of phones and tablets to fit the devices with a filter to block pornography that would be activated when the device is activated for use by a minor. The bill, HB167 by
Representative Chris Sells passed by a vote of 98-0. It moves to the Senate. HB167 says that beginning on Jan. 1, 2026, all smartphones and tablets activated in the state must contain a filter, determine the age of the user during activation and
account set-up, and set the filter to on for minor users. The filter must be able to block access to obscenity as it is defined under state law. The bill says a manufacturer can be subject to civil and criminal liability if a device is
activated in the state, does not, upon activation, enable a filter that complies with the law, and a minor accesses obscene material on the device. The bill says retailers would not be liable. |
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Ohio age/ID verification law proposes criminal sanctions against kids who circumvent the controls
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| 7th April 2024
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| See article from avn.com
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The Ohio state legislature is debating House Bill (HB) 295 , introduced last October by Republican state Rep. Steve Demetriou. HB 295 would require adult entertainment websites with content considered harmful to minors to verify users' ages using
government identification or transactional data, with felony penalties for website operators who violate the law. An amended version of the bill, dropping the penalties for website operators to a misdemeanor, was adopted during the hearing before the
House Criminal Justice Committee on April 3. However, one of the more controversial elements of the bill is the establishment of a misdemeanor charge against minors who manage to circumvent the age gate through falsified records or the use of a
virtual private network that spoofs an IP address. |
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US Federal Trade Commission rejects facial age estimation for age/ID verification for gamers
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| 6th April 2024
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| Thanks to Daniel See article from
ign.com |
The US games censor, the Entertainment Software Ratings Board (ESRB) has been working on a facial recognition tool to verify gamers' ages and this method was submitted to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for approval. In a blog post, the FTC
has just announced that it was denying the company's application for the technology. The FTC stated that it denied the application in a vote of 4-0, noting that it received over 350 comments on the issue before the vote. As the FTC notes, those who
opposed the application cited privacy, protections, accuracy, and deepfakes as concerns. Had the application been approved, the FRC would have added the facial age detection tech to the list of acceptable forms of receiving parental consent for
collecting information from minor-aged users under the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). This Act requires parental consent for the collection or use of personal data for users under the age of 13. Last year, the ESRB partnered
with the digital identity firm Yoti and SuperAwesome to create this technology to verify users' ages. The ESRB claimed it was not meant to identify individuals outright but rather estimate the user's age and stated it would not store the data after the
analysis concluded. However age companies offering facial age estimation also offer facial recognition, so users would have to somehow trust big tech companies (or national authorities) not to identify users. And let's face it, such institutions haven't
proved themselves to be very trustworthy in the past. While the FTC rejected the proposal, it said that ESBR could re-file the application in the future,presumably after improvements to the system. |
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Arizona state is the latest to adopt age/ID verification requirements to access porn websites
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| 3rd April 2024
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| See article from xbiz.com
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The Arizona state legislature has just passed the state's version of the age verification bills being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists. HB 2596 has been sent to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs, who has five days to
veto it. Free Speech Coalition Executive Director Alison Boden wrote to Hobbs, outlining the free speech and privacy concerns raised by HB 2596 and copycat bills being passed around the country. The text of the FSC letter follows:
The Free Speech Coalition, an advocate for the rights of the adult industry and others engaged in constitutionally-protected sexual expression, writes to express our deep concern regarding HB2586, and ask that you veto the
legislation. The adult industry whole-heartedly supports efforts to keep young people from material that is age-inappropriate or harmful. Unfortunately, HB2586 has significant practical, technical and legal problems that render
its ability to protect children limited, while creating dangerous privacy risks for adults, and violating the First Amendment rights of both consumers and producers. Age-Verification Bills Have a Substantial Chilling Effect
In the past fourteen months, several similar age-verification bills have gone into effect in other states. In that time, we've seen a substantial chilling effect on adult consumers seeking to access legal content. Some adult websites
initially attempted to comply with the laws, only to find that the vast majority of adult consumers -- as many as 97% -- refuse to submit their ID or otherwise engage age-verification protocols. Despite the claims of the
proponents of HB2586, submitting an ID online for sensitive content is simply not the same as flashing an ID at a checkout counter. The process is expensive and complicated, and most consumers fear the real risks of surveillance,
identity theft and exposure. Proponents of these laws have promised that this information will never be shared, but anyone who knows the history of the internet and hacking, knows how unrealistic that is. Even more worrisome, these bills allow this sensitive information to be stored and sold. While age-verification providers themselves are barred from retaining this information, state governments, credit bureaus, employers, banks or other databases against which age and identity is checked are not.
Unfortunately, this chilling effect goes far beyond explicit adult content. The law is written so broadly that the description or depiction of nudity, sexuality or sexual activity can create liability for a website, if it is
determined to be inappropriate for a single minor. In the past several years, we've seen that the designation material harmful to minors has been weaponized to censor art, sex education, LGBTQ+ literature and healthcare resources, chilling speech
throughout the public square. With HB2586, the same tactics could now be applied to the internet. |
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US Amazon throws its hat in the ring as an age/ID verification service
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| 30th
March 2024
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| See article from engadget.com
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US Amazon has just launched an app that lets people sign up for its palm recognition service. The Amazon One app uses a smartphone's camera to take a photo of a palm print to set up an account. Once signed up, you can pay for stuff by using your
hand. The tech uses generative AI to analyze a palm's vein structure, turning the data into a unique numerical, vector representation which is recognized by scanning machines at retail locations. You'll have to add a payment method within the app to
get started and upload a photo of your ID for the purpose of age verification. Beyond payments, the tech is also used as an age verification tool and as a way to enter concerts and sporting events without having to bring along a ticket. There are
obvious privacy concerns here, as passwords can change but palms cannot. Amazon says that all uploaded palm images are encrypted and sent to a secure Amazon One domain in the Amazon Web Service cloud. The company also says the app includes additional
layers of spoof detection, noting that it's not possible to save or download palm images to the phone itself.
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Indiana introduces age/ID verification for porn whilst Pornhub blocks itself in Texas
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15th March 2024
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| See article from xbiz.com See
article from beaumontenterprise.com |
Indiana's Republican governor, Eric Holcomb, has signed into law the state's version of the age/ID verification bills being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservatives. SB 17 requires age verification for material that Indiana
deems harmful to minors. The new law will take effect July 1. This bill stipulates that any website that displays 'material harmful to minors,' is required to use an age verification method to guarantee only adults are accessing the website, the
civil liberties group wrote. If the website fails to do so, the parents of a child harmed by the website's content can sue for damages. And, as passed in the Indiana House, the bill would also allow the Attorney General to sue companies who fail to
follow the law. SB 17 will undoubtedly have a chilling effect on free expression online. The legitimate fear of having personal information exposed may deter adults from accessing legal and consensual adult content, thereby limiting their freedom
to explore and express themselves in a private digital space, the ACLU of Indiana concluded. Indiana is the ninth U.S. state to pass a law mandating age/ID verification for viewing adult content.
Meanwhile in Texas, Pornhub has decided to voluntarily withdraw its content from the state. Texas was one of the earlier states to inflict age/ID verification but its enforcement was delayed by a legal case. That legal case has just been lost so Pornhub
has reverted to the self blocking policy implemented in other states with age/ID verification requirements. A judgment on March 8 from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Texas can enforce a new law requiring age-verification systems on porn
websites . Viewers who attempt to visit Pornhub.com are met with a statement from the site's owners, Aylo Global Entertainment, explaining the block: you may know, your elected officials in Texas are requiring
us to verify your age before allowing you access to our website, the statement reads in part. Not only does this impinge on the rights of adults to access protected speech, it fails strict scrutiny by employing the least effective and yet also most
restrictive means of accomplishing Texas' stated purpose of allegedly protecting minors.
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Ohio law requiring parental permission to use social media has been blocked by a judge
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| 11th
January 2024
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| See
article from eu.dispatch.com
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An Ohio state law intended to restrict children's social media use by requiring parental permission was slated to go into effect next week but has been stopped by a judge. U.S. District Court Judge Algenon L. Marbley issued a temporary restraining
order Tuesday to block the law from going into effect for now, after a group representing social media companies filed a federal lawsuit earlier this month. Ohio's Social Media Parental Notification Act was passed last year and would have made it
so parents have to allow children under the age of 16 to use certain social media sites. It would apply to new accounts being created on gaming platforms, message boards and social media companies such as Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube and Snapchat
and requires them to get verifiable parental permission for children under age 16 to create new accounts on the sites. But a trade group representing Meta (the parent company of Facebook and Instagram), TikTok and other tech companies filed a
federal lawsuit in early January claiming that the Ohio law is too broad and is in violation of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. |
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US senator introduces national internet censorship bill requiring age/ID verification for porn sites
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| 16th
November 2023
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| See article from avn.com
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US Senator Mike Lee, R-UT, has reintroduced a bill in the U.S. Senate that would make it federal law for all adult websites to verify their users' ages. The bizarrely titled Shielding Children's Retinas from Egregious Exposure on the Net (SCREEN) Act
would require all pornography and adult entertainment websites with users in the United States to deploy reasonable age verification methods from third-party providers. Supporters of the bill include software company Envoc, which provides ID
verification software and anti-porn groups, such as the National Center on Sexual Exploitation, National Decency Coalition, Enough Is Enough, and Culture Reframed. House Representative Mary Miller, R-Ill., introduced a companion bill in the House
of Representatives. The SCREEN Act requires the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) enforce elements of the bill that would require a porn site, like Pornhub, xHamster, and Xvideos, to verify ages. FTC is also required to conduct regular audits of the
parent companies affected by the act to ensure compliance and to promulgate rules based on the statutes of the bill if it were to become law. The SCREEN Act competes with the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA). This requires an expansive overhaul of trust
and safety protocols for web platforms. If adopted into law, KOSA would require Congress to coordinate with the executive branch, namely the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, to review the benefits and shortcomings of nationwide age
verification requirements for websites. |
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Alabama set to go further than other states to censor adult websites
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| 13th
November 2023
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| See article from wsfa.com
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Alabama lawmakers have proposed a bill for the upcoming legislative session that would block pornographic sites from anyone under 18 years old. Representative Ben Robbins plans to sponsor a bill that will require someone to verify their age using a
photo ID in order to access sites that offer pornographic material. His bill will aslo require companies to register with the state as adult content distributors. It will also create additional state taxes for items sold on pornographic websites, and
tax memberships Alabamians purchase through a site. The money will be allocated for mental health services in the state. Lastly, the bill will require distributors to have written consent from people who are posted on the site. |
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Ohio House Representative introduces a bill to criminalise the use of VPNs to circumvent age/ID verification
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29th October 2023
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| See article from
clevescene.com |
Ohio House Representative Steve Demetriou has introduced an extraordinarily repressive House Bill (HB) 295. Dubbed the Innocence Actwould implement an age verification requirement similar to what has already been implemented in other states. However this
bill goes way beyond other is that it introduces criminal penalties for websites that don't comply and misdemeanor penalties for any internet user who tries to circumvent age verification, eg by using VPNs. In its current form, companies and
webmasters who don't implement reasonable age verification methods could be subject to criminal charges -- a third-degree felony. No other proposed and implemented age verification regulation in the country has such punitive criminal penalties. Corey
Silverstein, a First Amendment attorney, commented: VPNs are available on most mobile devices through the Apple App Store or Google Play Store. They are also free or relatively inexpensive. And, to think that a 17-year-old
high school student can't learn about and effectively deploy a VPN is short-sighted. I can't think of a worse idea than charging minors with criminal offenses for viewing adult content and potentially ruining their futures. Attempting to shame and
embarrass minors for viewing adult-themed content goes so far beyond common sense that it begs the question of whether the supporters of this bill gave it any thought at all.
It is not yet clear if the bill has a chance of becoming
law. |
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North Carolina initiates an internet censorship requiring age/identity verification for porn viewing
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| 23rd
September 2023
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| See article from
xbiz.com |
The North Carolina Senate has voted unanimously to mandate age verification on adult websites, after a Republican senator snuck a copycat amendment mirroring other states' requirements into an unrelated bill. Senator Amy Galey added the requirement to
House Bill 8, a previously unrelated measure that would add a computer science class to the state's high school graduation requirements. Galey justified her amendment by saying the measure was needed to protect children, citing the seven other
states that have passed similar laws and noting with satisfaction that overall traffic to adult websites in Louisiana dropped 80% after that state's age verification law passed. North Carolina's HB 8 is now headed back to the state's House of
Representatives for further debate. |
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Age/Identity Verification is back on for Texas porn viewers
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| 23rd September 2023
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| See article from avn.com
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A three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals has issued an administrative stay on the preliminary injunction blocking Texas House Bill 1181 from entering into force. This means that the law requiring age verification for internet porn is now
in effect, at least until a full hearing challenging the internet censorship law as unconstitutional. House Bill (HB) 1181 is a controversial law requiring an age verification regimen for all adult websites that have users from Texas IP addresses. The
law was challenged in a federal district court last month due to a measure in the bill that would require adult websites to additionally post health warning labels at the top and bottom of web pages and on marketing collateral. The Free Speech
Coalition, the parent companies of the largest adult tube sites in the world, and pay-sites affiliated with these platforms sued the state of Texas , arguing that HB 1181 is unconstitutional because it violates the First Amendment. They argued that a
government cannot require a privately owned website to issue a public health warning when the claims in the warnings are not accepted by mainstream medicine, psychology and neuroscience. Senior U.S. District Judge David Alan Ezra agreed with the
plaintiffs and issued a preliminary injunction temporarily blocking Texas from enforcing the law. but it was this decision that was overturned in this appeal. |
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A US judge has blocked the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act
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| 20th September 2023
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| See article from theverge.com
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A federal judge has granted a request to block the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act (CAADCA), a law that requires special data safeguards for underage users online. The law is based upon a bizarre UK censorship policy seemingly intended to
age gate much of the internet. The idea is to verify that users are old enough to understand the consequences of sharing personal data. But of course users are expected to hand over loads of personal date to prove that they are old enough to understand
the dangers of handing over loads of personal data. In a ruling, Judge Beth Freeman granted a preliminary injunction for tech industry group NetChoice, saying the law likely violates the First Amendment. It's the latest of several state-level
internet regulations to be blocked while a lawsuit against them proceeds, including some that are likely bound for the Supreme Court . The CAADCA is meant to expand on existing laws -- like the federal COPPA framework -- that govern how sites can
collect data from children. But Judge Freeman objected to several of its provisions, saying they would unlawfully target legal speech. Although the stated purpose of the Act -- protecting children when they are online -- clearly is important, NetChoice
has shown that it is likely to succeed on the merits of its argument that the provisions of the CAADCA intended to achieve that purpose do not pass constitutional muster, wrote Freeman. |
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Federal judges block internet censorship laws about to commence in Texas and Arkansas
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| 3rd September 2023
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| See article from therecord.media |
Hours before controversial internet censorship laws were set to take effect in Texas and Arkansas, two federal judges granted preliminary injunctions temporarily blocking them. The more narrow Texas law sought to restrict minors from accessing content
that is meant for adults. The law in particular required age/ID verification to access porn websites. It was opposed by free speech groups and adult performer industry groups. The Arkansas law, known as the Social Media Safety Act, is broader and
would prevent minors from creating accounts without parental permission on platforms earning more than $100 million a year. The tech industry trade group NetChoice, which represents Google, Meta and TikTok, among others, sued in June to block the law on
the grounds that it is unconstitutional and would place an onerous burden on digital platforms. In Arkansas, U.S. District Judge Timothy Brooks sided with NetChoice , saying that the law is not targeted to address the harms it has identified, and
further research is necessary before the State may begin to construct a regulation that is narrowly tailored to address the harms that minors face due to prolonged use of certain social media. Brooks added that age--gating social media platforms does not
seem to be an effective approach when, in reality, it is the content on particular platforms that is driving the State's true concerns. The more narrow Texas law seeking to stop minors from accessing adult content online was temporarily blocked
Thursday by District Judge David Alan Ezra in a move that the Free Speech Coalition said in a press release will protect citizens from facing a chilling effect on legally-protected speech. The temporary injunctions block the laws from taking
effect until further adjudication. It is unclear whether both Arkansas and Texas intend to appeal. |
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The Free Speech Coalitions warns porn websites about a new internet censorship law starting 1st September in Texas
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| 25th
August 2023
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| See article from freespeechcoalition.com
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The Texas age-verification and labeling law is scheduled to take effect September 1, 2023. While multiple age-verification laws have taken effect this year, Texas will join Louisiana in allowing direct government enforcement. According to the law, the
Attorney General may fine a site with adult content $10,000 per day, and up to $250,000 if it fails to adequately verify the age of visitors and a minor is able to access it. Additionally, the Texas law requires all adult sites to affix warning
messages to any page with adult content stating the supposed harms of viewing adult material. These 'warnings' are as follows: TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES WARNING:
Pornography is potentially biologically addictive, is proven to harm human brain development, desensitizes brain reward circuits, increases conditioned responses, and weakens brain function. Exposure
to this content is associated with low self-esteem and body image, eating disorders, impaired brain development, and other emotional and mental illnesses. Pornography increases the demand for prostitution, child exploitation,
and child pornography.
Free Speech Coalition and a collection of leading adult platforms have filed a legal challenge to the Texas law, including a motion for preliminary injunction. While we are hopeful the challenge will succeed, and that a decision will be
made prior to the start of enforcement, all members should be aware of the law and the risks of non-compliance. Alison Boden, Executive Director of Free Speech Coalition said: This is a blatantly unconstitutional law,
but the stakes are high for individual adult businesses with websites accessible in the state of Texas. We urge every platform and creator to review their potential exposure to legal liability with their legal counsel.
Free Speech
Coalition has created landing pages for platforms that geo-block access to their sites from within the state of Texas , as it has in other states that have instituted
age verification. The page explains why the site is blocked, and provides an avenue for residents to contact their representatives. However, geo-blocking a state does not necessarily provide safe harbor from the law. The law, including the
required age-verification methods and the legal warning stipulated, are available here . |
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The US state of Arkansas enacts an internet censorship law to mandate ID verification for both porn and social media
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3rd August 2023
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| See article from aclu.org
See article from theverge.com |
Arkansas recently passed the Social Media Safety Act , which requires every person to verify their age before they can access existing social media accounts or create new ones. If a user cannot show they are at least 18 years old using a commercially
reasonable age verification method -- potentially including biometric screening or requiring government-issued ID -- the law requires them to obtain parental consent to use social media. If allowed to go into effect, the Arkansas law would prohibit
users from accessing social media anonymously or under a pen name. Age verification requirements can deter even adults from engaging on social media because they worry about sharing additional personal data with social media companies, which could misuse
the information or get hacked. And those who don't have government-issued identification -- undocumented immigrants, for example -- might be unable to access social media at all. Additionally, the parental consent requirement violates kids' rights to
speak and receive information as well as adults' right to hear what they have to say. The American Civil Liberties Union is challenging the law saying: We urge the Western District of Arkansas to protect adults'
and kids' right to access social media. We all have the right to speak and read about everything from upcoming protests to violin tips to challenging Arkansas' law.
Meanwhile Pornhab as responded to the new law by blocking all access
from IP addresses associated with Arkansas. The Arkansas law, SB 66, doesn't ban Pornhub from operating in the state, but it requires porn sites to verify that a user is 18 by confirming their age with identifying documents. Pornhub blocked all
traffic from IP addresses based in Arkansas in protest, arguing that the law, which was intended to protect children, actually harms users. The blocked website currently just displays a message explaining the actions: While safety and compliance are at the forefront of our mission, giving your ID card every time you want to visit an adult platform is not the most effective solution for protecting our users, and in fact, will put children and your privacy at risk.
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Pornhub explains its policies in response to internet censorship laws enacted in several US states
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31st July 2023
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| See article from pornhub.com |
Pornhub recently had to make the difficult decision to block access to users in Virginia and Mississippi due to newly passed Age Verification laws. These states have joined Utah and Louisiana where, earlier this year, similar laws were introduced. While
these new laws claim to protect children from accessing harmful material online -- something we fully support -- they not only fail to do this, but also jeopardize user safety and privacy. What does age verification mean?
In the context of these laws, age verification requires users to prove that they are 18+ to view adult content. There are multiple ways that a user can prove their age, but any effective method requires
them to submit some form of personally identifiable information ("PII"). By assigning this responsibility to the platform(s) visited by a user, this means submitting private information many times to adult sites all over the internet, while
normalizing disclosure of PII across the internet. This is not a privacy-by-design approach. It also creates a substantial risk for identity theft. Since age verification software requires users to hand over extremely sensitive
information, it opens the door for the risk of data breaches. Whether or not your intentions are good, governments have historically struggled to secure this data. It also creates an opportunity for criminals to exploit and extort people through phishing
attempts or fake AV processes, an unfortunate and all too common practice. Age verification is a good thing, if done correctly Safety and compliance are at the forefront of our mission. We firmly
believe age verification can make the internet a safer space for everyone, when it is done right. Unfortunately, the way these new laws are executed by lawmakers is ineffective and puts users' privacy at risk. Those seeking adult content will inevitably
end up on irresponsible sites that don't enforce safety, privacy, consent, or content moderation. Back in January, we saw the outcome of this firsthand when Louisiana passed a similar law. Pornhub was one of a tiny handful of
websites to comply with the new state law requiring websites prevent minors from accessing them by employing age verification solutions. The Louisiana law and other copycat state level laws have no regulator, only civil liability,
which results in a flawed enforcement regime, effectively making it an option for platform operators to comply. Consequently, traffic to Pornhub dropped by approximately 80% in Louisiana, but we know that people didn't stop consuming porn overnight
because of this new law. They just very easily moved to pirate, illegal, or other non-compliant sites that don't ask visitors to verify their age. Very few sites are able to compare to the robust Trust and Safety measures we currently have in place to
protect both the users viewing content on Pornhub from engaging with potentially dangerous content and provide a safe platform for creators to monetize their content and engage with fans. Most other sites unfortunately do not take these same extensive
measures towards community protection and without barrier to entry, is where viewers risk ending up. Therefore, these laws have not only failed at protecting children, but have introduced further harm by displacing traffic to sites with few or zero Trust
and Safety measures. What you need to know -- a device-based solution More of these laws are coming, and the safety of our users is one of our biggest concerns. However, the best and most effective
solution for protecting children and adults alike is to identify users at the source: by their device, or account on the device, and allow access to age-restricted materials and websites based on that identification. This means users would only get
verified once, through their operating system, not on each age-restricted site. This dramatically reduces privacy risks and creates a very simple process for regulators to enforce. Who will these new laws affect?
These new laws will affect everybody differently. For example, Content Creators will get redirected to a separate login flow that will still allow them on the site to upload content. This is because, as verified users on Pornhub,
which is the required status for anyone wishing to upload, they have already verified their age with government issued ID using Yoti. However, for site visitors in Utah, Mississippi, and Virginia, they are greeted by a video featuring Cherie Deville who
explains why we had to make the difficult decision to block them from accessing Pornhub. What is the ideal solution? The only viable solution that will make the internet safer, preserve user privacy,
and stands to prevent children from accessing material harmful to minors is performing age verification at the source: on the device itself. What can community members do? To fight against
these haphazard and dangerous laws, we encourage all members of our community to stand up for your freedom to enjoy and consume porn privately. There are a few ways you can do this. First, spread the message on social media. Using
your platform to raise awareness and to help your fans understand the implications of these poorly designed laws is the first step in making a change. Be loud, be vocal, and show how important it is for us to get this right. We believe the only way for
these laws to be effective is to have age verification on the devices used to access adult content. Second, contact your local government and encourage your fans to do the same! Change begins when the public applies pressure and
contacts lawmakers. Write them letters or emails, call their offices, tweet at them, demand changes and demand answers. It is their job as civil servants to respond to concerned citizens. In your letters, you can request device-based age verification
solutions. By doing this, your safety and privacy, as well as the safety of your children, are protected much better than entering your ID every time you want to visit an adult website. In the meantime, share this blog widely to help spread the word!
And third, stay informed on legislative updates. Please check back often on the Free Speech Coalition AV page.
Don't give up! We know that normalizing sex work and sexual expression is an uphill battle, but it can be done. We must be vocal about it. Change begins with raising our voices, educating others, and engaging in these important
conversations on our socials to spread the message. For more information, visit the Free Speech Coalition
.
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Fans will have to use a VPN to access Pornhub in Virginia
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| 1st July
2023
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| See article from
dailymail.co.uk |
One of the most visited sites in the world, Pornhub, has blocked users in Virginia over the state's new age verification law. The new law taking effect July 1 now requires websites with pornographic content being viewed in Virginia to verify that
users are at least 18 years old before they can view the site. The law, proposed by Republican state Sen. William M. Stanley Jr. (Franklin), sailed through the Virginia General Assembly. Pornhub decided that it would be blocking all Virginia users
rather than try to implement unsafe and privacy endangering age verification. Pornhub wrote in a message to those attempting to log in: The safety of our users is one of our biggest concerns. We believe that the
best and most effective solution for protecting children and adults alike is to identify users by their device and allow access to age-restricted materials and websites based on that identification. Until a real solution is
offered, we have made the difficult decision to completely disable access to our website in Virginia.'
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Age verification for porn starts on 1st July in Virginia
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| 28th
June 2023
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| See article from avn.com
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Virginia is the next jurisdiction in the United States to implement a law that requires all adult entertainment websites to have age verification measures in place or face civil action. Similar to age verification laws implemented in states like Utah and
Louisiana, Senate Bill (SB) 1515 was adopted with virtually universal support from lawmakers in both of the state's major political parties. Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed SB 1515 into law at the behest of parental rights groups and organizations
that believe that age verification mandates are the best way to prevent minors from viewing age-restricted content, like pornographic sites. Industry trade group the Free Speech Coalition (FSC) has filed suit in federal district courts in both Utah
and Louisiana seeking to render the age verification laws in those states unconstitutional on the grounds of the First and Fourteenth Amendments. FSC director of public affairs Mike Stabile characterized the law in Virginia as dangerous and and said the
organization has reached out to Gov. Youngkin with little results. The Virginia law suffers from the same technological and constitutional problems as the laws in Utah and Louisiana, Stabile told AVN in an email:
Adult consumers shouldn't have to risk surveillance or secure government approval in order to view legal content in the privacy of their own home. We are looking at potential suits in every state that has
passed this law, including Virginia. Adult industry attorney Corey Silverstein told AVN that the new Virgina law is foolish. Virginia's law, much like Louisiana, Utah, and others are not going to
survive First Amendment challenges. While these politicians are patting themselves on the back for pushing through these blatant speech suppression tools, they seem to have forgotten about the First Amendment that they swore to protect when they took
office.
Virginia's age verification law goes into effect on July 1, 2023. |
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A trade group representing US porn producers files a legal challenge to Louisiana's censorship law requiring age verification for porn
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| 22nd
June 2023
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| See press release from avn.com
See legal challenge [pdf] from action.freespeechcoalition.com |
Adult industry trade group the Free Speech Coalition (FSC) has announced that it has filed a lawsuit in Louisiana challenging the law that went into effect there January 1 of this year requiring age-verification to access online adult content.
Free Speech Coalition, the advocacy organization for the adult industry, has filed a legal challenge in Louisiana over the state's unconstitutional age-verification law. The Louisiana law gives the state the power to fine sites with
adult content up to $5,000 per day, a direct violation of the First Amendment. FSC filed a similar suit against the state of Utah in May. Joining Free Speech Coalition in filing the challenge are Elizabeth Hanson, a military
veteran and spouse of an active-duty Coast Guard member residing in Slidell; Andrea Barrica, founder of the sex education site O.school; journalist, educator, and content creator Charyn Ryn Pfeuffer; and fan platform JustFor.Fans. The parties are
represented by Jeffrey Sandman of Webb Daniel Friedlander LLP and D. Gill Sperlein of the Law Office of D. Gill Sperlein. These laws give the state the power to harass and censor legal businesses, says Alison Boden, Executive
Director of Free Speech Coalition. We, of course, support keeping minors from accessing adult content, but allowing the state to suppress certain speech by requiring invasive and burdensome systems that consumers refuse to engage with is simply state
censorship. Seven states have passed laws requiring sites with substantial amounts of material harmful to minors to check users' government ID or other age and identity verification information in order to access content. But
consumers have been reluctant to do so, with more than 90% of users abandoning sites that comply with such laws. Last year, Louisiana passed a law allowing for a private right of action against adult sites without such
age-verification for consumers, and other states followed suit. In June, Governor John Bel Edwards signed a new law giving the government the power to fine sites directly, as much as $1M per year. The First Amendment protects
our right to freely access legal content and ideas without government interference, says Jeff Sandman, a New Orleans-based counsel for the Free Speech Coalition. We're fighting not only for adult businesses but for the right of legal adults to use the
internet without government surveillance. Showing your ID in a checkout lane is simply not the same as submitting it to a government database. For decades, our industry has voluntarily and enthusiastically worked with filters that
allow parents and others to easily block adult sites, says Boden. Those who wish to can do so easily, and the Supreme Court has ruled that this is preferable to government-mandated censorship. We are again asking the courts to reject these unreasonable
and dangerous restrictions on a free internet.
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Just how stupid is it to expect people to type in personal ID into any foreign porn site that asks?
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| 17th June 2023
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| See article from avn.com See
Pornhub announcement from vimeo.com |
Pornhub has released a new public service announcement on its homepage for site visitors in Virginia, Mississippi and Arkansas imploring them to contact their representatives and protest the age-verification laws for online adult content recently passed
in each of those states. The announcement features 2023 AVN MILF Performer of the Year Cherie DeVille, who last month appeared in a similar video for the website that greets visitors in Utah, where access to the site has been otherwise blocked in
retaliation for a similar law that went into effect there May 3. Meanwhile, in Louisiana, where yet another age-verification measure took effect January 1 of this year, Pornhub is currently complying with the requirement using a state-sanctioned
digital ID mobile app called LA Wallet, making Louisiana the first state to implement a digital driver's license. According to a story today by tech site Ars Technica, a Pornhub spokesperson reported that Pornhub was one of the few adult sites to put an
ID requirement into place in the state, and since doing so, Pornhub's Louisiana traffic dropped by approximately 80 percent as adult content seekers presumably chose to visit sites that do not require ID. DeVille underscores this point noting:
As we've seen in other states where similar laws have passed, this just drives activities to other sites with far fewer or even no safety measures in place. This clearly demonstrates that poorly executed age verification
solutions only make the internet more unsafe.
The Ars Technica story went on to add, Pornhub reported that Louisiana users have already experienced identity theft as a result of the age verification law there. |
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Texas is the latest US state to demand age verification for porn websites
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| 5th June 2023
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| See article from reprobatepress.com
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Texas is the latest American state to implement age verification rules for adult websites. The new law HB 1181 -- spearheaded by Republicans but enthusiastically supported by Democrats, creates a new criminal liability for any website when more than
one-third of its content is sexual material harmful to minors unless the site uses reasonable age verification methods to verify that an individual attempting to access the material is 18 years of age or older. How reasonable those methods might have to
be and what defines harm remain two vague aspects of the new legislation. But it doesn't stop there. In addition any adult website now operating or available in Texas will now have to feature one of the following statements in 14pt or above on every
landing page:
Pornography is potentially biologically addictive, is proven to harm human brain development, desensitizes brain reward circuits, increases conditioned responses and weakens brain function. Exposure to
this content is associated with low self-esteem and body image, eating disorders, impaired brain development, and other emotional and mental illnesses. pornography increases the demand for prostitution, child exploitation and
child pornography.
Offsite Comment: Brain Rotting In Texas 5th June 2023. article from reprobatepress.com
Sex, lies and bad science as Texas passes a law to restrict porn forcing adult websites to carry spurious health warnings. |
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Pornhub fights back against internet porn censorship in Utah
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14th May 2023
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| See article from news.bloomberglaw.com
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Pornhub is fight back against Utah's new law requiring visitors to porn websites to verify their age by dangerously identifying themselves before being able to watch adult content.. Pornhub began totally blocking Utah-based internet connections' from
access to its content when the law took effect May 3. The site redirects visitors to a video message of adult film actress Cherie DeVille explaining that the company disabled access over concerns that the law is not the most effective solution for
protecting our users and in fact will put children, and your privacy, at risk. The Free Speech Coalition, a group representing the adult entertainment industry, also sued to block the law's enforcement that same day, making a similar argument about
the trade-off regarding safety, privacy, and adults' freedom to browse the web as they wish. The group has also vowed to sue over unsafe age-verification measures set to take effect soon in other states. |
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Internet porn censorship marches across many US states
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| 12th March 2023
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| See article
from henricocitizen.com See article from xbiz.com |
The Arkansas House has approved an amendment to SB 66, a Republican bill that would require age verification before entering a website offering pornography, over confusing language. SB 66 was introduced in January by state Senator Tyler Dees, who later
admitted that his state initiative is only a steppingstone toward the ultimate goal of a federal mandate. A vote in the Arkansas House sent the amended bill back to the Committee on House Rules for further consideration, the Northwest Arkansas
Democrat Gazette reported. Representative Mindy McAlindon told the paper that the amendment was needed to clarify distinctions between 'corporate entities' and 'third party vendors' in the bill. SB 66 is a copycat version of Louisiana's Act 440, a
new law enacted in January after being championed by a religious anti-porn activist Republican legislator. Meanwhile Virginia lawmakers recently passed a bill with near-unanimous support that would require pornography websites to more stringently
verify whether a person is 18 before allowing them access to the site. Websites would have to implement more advanced methods of their choosing to verify age, such as requiring users to submit copies of government-issued identification, biometric scans
or use other forms of commercial age verification software. Under the bill, a civil cause of action, or a lawsuit, could be brought on behalf of a minor who suffered damages from access to pornographic websites that didn't use age verification
measures. No one spoke in opposition when the bill was debated during the session, but some people took to social media to express their concerns. The bill now heads to Gov. Glenn Youngkin's desk for his signature. |
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| 25th February 2023
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A summary of US states proposing or enacting internet age verification See article from
news.bloomberglaw.com |
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Utah gets onboard the US rush to internet censorship
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| 5th
February 2023
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| See article from xbiz.com
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Utah Republicans have introduced two ludicrous age verification bills that could have nationwide ramifications. State Rep. Jordan Teuscher and State Senator Michael McKelland introduced HB311 and SB152 respectively. SB152 demands that beginning
January 1, 2024, a social media company shall verify the age of all Utah resident wanting to use social media. If the platform determines that the person is a minor, defined by the bills as anyone under the age of 18, the proposed bill would require any
social media company to give parents access to their kids' accounts. State Sen. McKelland would like the minor's parent or guardian to be able to monitor all posts the Utah minor account holder makes under the social media platform account and all
responses to those posts. SB152 also demands that minors be prevented by the platform from accessing social media cannot between 10:30 p.m. and 6:30 a.m. Meanwhile HB 311 not only mandates age verification, but also forbids anyone under the age
of 16 from having any social media accounts. |
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So how is porn age verification panning out in the US?
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22nd January 2023
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| See article from addictivetips.com See
article from xbiz.com |
The US state of Louisiana has commenced a new law requiring porn websites to obtain identity/age verification before allow access to viewers. The law is not enforced by official censors. Instead it simply allows Louisiana to sue for damages for any harm
claimed as a result of underage porn viewing. So how is it panning out in practice? It is the second week of the new law. Vice has found that very few sites have actually implemented the age verification system. As it stands, only PornHub and OnlyFans
check Louisiana's residents' ages, others don't. This may have something to do with the way the age check is implemented: when you access PornHub from Louisiana, you're met with a screen asking you to verify your age. From there, you're redirected to
AllPassTrust, a Cyprus-based company specialized in age verification. AllPassTrust links to LAWallet, the state of Louisiana's digital driver's license wallet, which provides you with a code that you need to enter on AllPassTrust. The way it's looking
now, only Louisiana drivers licenses are accepted for verification, which is a problem for anybody currently in the state that doesn't have one. Sure, practically everybody in the United States has a driver's license, but there are those who don't, and
visitors or short-term residents of the state won't be able to verify their age since they won't have a license issued in Louisiana. According to local Louisiana newspaper L'Observateur, opponents are already gearing up for a legal challenge. The idea is spreading though. There are reports of national politicians proposing similar laws to Louisiana.
Also two Republican state senators in Arkansas introduced a bill this week requiring age verification before entering a website offering pornography. Senate Bill 66, which proposes a Protection of Minors from Distribution of Harmful Material Act, is
sponsored by Sen. Tyler Dees and Sen. Jim Petty. The proposed legislation is a copycat version of Louisiana's new law. |
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Louisiana now requires age verification for porn on the pain of being sued by residents for 'harm'caused
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| 31st
December 2022
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| See article from kplctv.com
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Republican Louisiana state representative Laurie Schlegel pushed through her bill HB 142 earlier this year requiring age verification for any website that contains 33.3% or more pornographic material. The law takes effect from 1st January 2023. According to Schlegel, websites would normally verify someone's age in collaboration with LA Wallet. An app available for anyone who has a Louisiana state ID or driver's license. Other options are also allowed.
It will be the website's responsibility to ensure age verification is required when accessing their site in Louisiana. There are no censors to enforce the law, instead the law allows residents to sue porn sites for any claimed harm to children
caused by viewing porn on a website without age verification. There is legislation in Washington, D.C. that looks to implement something like this on a national level. Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, introduced a bill similar to Schlegel's. |
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