If California wants to protect the children they should remove their countries president. Cars have operating systems now, should we age check there as well?
California law to require operating systems to check your age
Submitted 1 day ago by ZippyBot@lemmy.zip [bot] to gaming@lemmy.zip
https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2026/03/california-law-to-require-operating-systems-to-check-your-age/
Comments
melsaskca@lemmy.ca 1 day ago
Skyrmir@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Cars have an age check already, it’s called a license.
IntrovertTurtle@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
An estimate of 10-15% of US population drives without a license, and that’s just based on confirmed cases.
melsaskca@lemmy.ca 10 hours ago
Those are humans who have the age-check, not the cars. A 10 year old can potentially drive a vehicle without a license.
Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
Are you joking? California hates Trump. We can’t just “remove him”, lol.
This verification reportedly doesn’t require ID, just the honor system.
lost_faith@lemmy.ca 1 day ago
just the honor system.
for now… “If you build it, they will come”
pennomi@lemmy.world 1 day ago
California should be the state championing privacy laws, not authoritarianism and surveillance.
taiyang@lemmy.world 1 day ago
At least it’s not requiring ID, and it’s kind of easy to circumvent, but it’s a slippery slope. Also it’s definitely just virtue signalling to the dumbest among us, which is generally a bad thing.
California does this sometimes. One of our more notoriously stupid laws put up cancer warnings on virtually everything with a certain unnamed substance, making it almost impossible to identify things that might be seriously unhealthy. Like you enter a Starbucks and it says something in the Starbucks causes cancer. Like, gee, thanks.
Overprotective, not well thought out, bullshit laws.
Ptsf@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Actually, that one was interestingly both corporate sabotage as well as poor design. The law detailed that all products containing materials known to increase risk of cancer have labeling as such, at first listing only things that the common person would definitely want to know about. Formaldehyde for example. Companies producing products with these chemicals did not like this, and sued to add a laundry list of additional chemicals to the bill under the context that in lab settings they’ve been shown to increase the risk of cancer… And well go figure, they didn’t specify a “significant risk” or anything sane like that in the law, so now pretty much everything that has even a inkling of cancer risk increase gets labeled. Good intent, terrible execution, corporately ruined.
taiyang@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Oh yeah, that makes sense. Does make you wonder where the corporate interests lie in the age verification case, but it’s probably the usual suspects in tech and surveillance.
Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 1 day ago
Step 1: don’t worry you don’t even need to give it ID!
Step 2: now pretty much everyone has implemented this, we will require ID
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com 23 hours ago
At least there’s some nontrivial additional challenges to make the jump, such as authenticating the user is on an approved OS, and the infrastructure for identity verification itself. I like this better than other age verification mandates because those make the latter the first step, fueling the growth of surveillance tech and the companies providing it as a service.
Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 14 hours ago
If its on the OS at least there is just 1 thing to bypass I suppose is the main benefit I can see with that method.
NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 23 hours ago
If anyone actually looks through the legislature and the discourse around it:
It is not age verification like you need for pornhub. You aren’t giving a photocopy of your license to some org to verify you exist.
It is literally the same logic as “please enter your birthday to continue”. Just say you were born on jan 1 1900 or whatever. That will then be fetchable by the app/browser to send when a site requests it.
Which… seems like a really good system? It allows people who care about what their kids do to lock down their accounts. And it provides no meaningful PII for adults (or kids whose parents don’t care).
ArchEngel@lemmy.ca 2 minutes ago
Oh wow, if this is it, then it’s really not bad at all - easy to setup, client side, easy to ignore, and easy enough for teens to get around it when they feel like learning how. I don’t hate this, other than the potential for a dangerous slide towards ID.
AntiBullyRanger@ani.social 1 day ago
Already posted my thoughts on this in the /c/pcgaming🧵
hesh@quokk.au 1 day ago
The world has gone insane