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BackSupreme Court Declines to Block Texas Law Requiring Age Verification for App Stores
Supreme Court Declines to Block Texas Law Requiring Age Verification for App Stores
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ABC News3d agoLaw2 min readUnited States

Supreme Court Declines to Block Texas Law Requiring Age Verification for App Stores

Quick Look

  • Supreme Court has refused to block a Texas law mandating age verification and parental consent for minors downloading apps or making in-app purchases.
  • Plaintiffs argued it violates free speech rights, while Texas claims it protects children.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The U.S. Supreme Court declined to block a Texas law requiring age verification and parental consent for minors using app stores. Plaintiffs argued the law infringes on First Amendment rights, while Texas asserted it protects children.

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WASHINGTON -- The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to block Texas from enforcing a state law that requires apps stores to verify users' ages and obtain parental consent for minors seeking to download apps or make in-app purchases on mobile phones.

Justice Samuel Alito, in a pair of one-sentence orders, denied petitions by plaintiffs who claim that the Texas App Store Accountability Act violates users' constitutional rights to free speech.

Last month, a three-judge panel from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the law can take effect. The panel suspended a district court's ruling last December that the law is unconstitutional.

The plaintiffs suing to block the law include the Computer & Communications Industry Association and Students Engaged in Advancing Texas. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is a defendant in both cases.

Plaintiffs' lawyers argued that the law impermissibly seeks to limit access to content protected by the First Amendment, including news and educational material.

“Equity and the public interest support relief because protecting First Amendment rights — and parents’ rights to supervise their children as they see fit, not as the government tells them they should — is always in the public interest,” wrote attorneys for Students Engaged in Advancing Texas.

Attorneys from Paxton's office argued that the law protects children from “dangerous modern products.”

“A child with access to an app store and a mobile device (such as a tablet or smartphone) can potentially download any number of software applications, potentially agreeing to invasions of the child’s privacy and sale of the child’s data and be exposed to any conceivable content without parental consent or even parental knowledge,” they wrote.

Open Questions

  • Will further legal challenges arise?
  • How will app stores implement the verification process?

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This article was originally published by ABC News.

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