FB pixel

US bill would mandate operating system-level age verification

Parents Decide Act shifts age checks from apps to OS providers, with FTC oversight and parental controls for minors
Categories Age Assurance  |  Biometrics News
US bill would mandate operating system-level age verification
 

A bipartisan House bill introduced this week, HR 8250, would require operating system providers to verify the age of every user who sets up an account or uses an operating system, shifting age-checking obligations away from individual apps and onto platform owners such as mobile and computer operating system companies.

The Parents Decide Act was introduced by Rep. Josh Gottheimer and Rep. Elise Stefanik.

“With each passing day, the Internet is becoming more and more treacherous for our kids,” Gottheimer said. “We’re not just talking about social media anymore — we’re talking about artificial intelligence and platforms that are shaping how our kids think, feel, and act, often without any real guardrails.”

“Right now, we expect children to self-police their safety online,” Gottheimer continued. “That’s not realistic – and it’s not responsible. Parents should decide what apps their kids can download, what content they can see, and how they interact online – not algorithms or tech companies.”

The bill would require users to provide their date of birth to create an account and use an operating system. If the user is under 18, a parent or legal guardian would have to verify the minor’s age.

Companies would be required to create a system through which app developers can access the information necessary to verify a user’s age, shifting age-verification infrastructure to the operating-system level.

“This approach creates a trusted, consistent standard across platforms,” Gottheimer said. “The phone – the operating system that controls it – will tell the apps and the AI platforms the limits you set for your kid. It gives parents real control, not buried deep in some settings menu, but right in front of them, where it should be.”

Gottheimer said the legislation works alongside broader bipartisan efforts to improve online safety, including Sammy’s Law, the Kids Online Safety Act, and the Children and Teens’ Online Privacy Protection Act.

The bill also would direct operating system providers to build a system allowing app developers to access information needed to verify a user’s age, subject to Federal Trade Commission (FTC) rules on privacy and data protection.

Enforcement would fall to the FTC, which would be required to issue regulations within 180 days of enactment for shared devices, parent verification, and data protection standards to ensure birth-date information is collected securely and not breached.

The FTC would be required to brief Congress on its rulemaking process, and within 18 months it would have to submit a report on how providers are complying with the new law and whether Congress should update the requirements.

The bill also provides a safe harbor for compliant providers, which might not be held liable under the act if they followed the statute’s requirements and FTC rules. The law would take effect one year after enactment.

Related Posts

Article Topics

 |   |   |   | 

Latest Biometrics News

 

White House fraud crackdown sharpens focus on digital identity

The Trump administration’s March 6 Executive Order 14390, aimed at combating cybercrime and fraud, has prompted a significant response from…

 

Gender gaps threaten progress on global legal identity goals, Vital Strategies CEO warns

As countries work toward universal legal identity under SDG 16.9, greater focus on gender inclusion is needed to ensure women and…

 

Guyana data chief says digital ID won’t replace voter ID

Guyana’s Data Protection Commissioner, Aneal Giddings, has clarified that the country’s national digital ID is not intended to be used…

 

Biometrics at scale: EES setbacks meet growth push

The effectiveness of biometrics deployments at scale can be prone to failures of procedure or coordination, as travelers to Europe…

 

Concordium’s Boris Bohrer-Bilowitzki wants to keep your AI agents in line

“Without identity, autonomous action is just autonomous risk.” So says Boris Bohrer-Bilowitzki, CEO of Layer-1 blockchain protocol Concordium. Concordium has…

 

Veratad among first certified to ISO 27566 age assurance standard

Veratad is one of the first companies worldwide to achieve certification to ISO/IEC 27566‑1:2025, the newly established international standard for…

Comments

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Biometric Market Analysis and Buyer's Guides

Most Viewed This Week

Featured Company

Biometrics Insight, Opinion

Digital ID In-Depth

Biometrics White Papers

Biometrics Events