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The App Store Accountability Act Poses Serious Concerns for Privacy, Security, and Free Expression

Age verification requirements鈥攅specially those blocking access to a wide range of speech, as seen in ASAA鈥攗ndermine Americans' rights.

An upward shot of three people holding cell phones. Their phones obscure their faces.
Xavier Lorenzo via Getty Images

Today, the House Energy and Commerce Committee is considering a wide range of youth online safety bills for markup that touch everything from social media and gaming to the use of chatbot companions.

The markup will include H.R. 3149, the聽聽(ASAA), as well as a new聽聽that would update and replace ASAA.

When the ASAA was first introduced last year, the Open Technology Institute (OTI)聽opposed聽the bill because its sweeping age verification component would require everyone who uses an app store to verify their age, regardless of which app they intend to use. As we explained then, this was 鈥渓ike requiring every person shopping at a grocery store to provide ID upon entering the store, regardless of whether they intend to buy chips, fruit, or alcohol.鈥 Age verification requirements鈥攅specially those blocking access to a wide range of speech, as seen in ASAA鈥undermine everyone鈥檚 privacy, online security, and constitutional rights.

These core concerns remain for both the latest version of ASAA and the proposed amendment.

ASAA Creates Privacy and Security Vulnerabilities

A Committee聽聽circulated among staffers confidently states that 鈥渁ge verification can be done in a privacy-security-protective way.鈥 OTI has聽written聽about promising advances on this front, but the digital ecosystem is not yet ready to support it at scale. More importantly, the ASAA鈥檚 proposed verification architecture would create major privacy and security vulnerabilities by requiring app stores to collect age information and then share that sensitive information with聽every聽app developer, regardless of whether an app actually needs that data.

Requiring people to hand over sensitive personal information, like government IDs, credit cards, or even biometric data, in order to verify their age online puts that information at risk of being exposed, stolen, misused, or subject to surveillance. In just the past year, we鈥檝e seen these risks dramatically materialize. In July 2025, hackers聽聽13,000 selfies and photo IDs used to verify account holders from the Tea Dating Advice app. In October, Discord found that聽聽may have had their government-ID photos exposed; they were submitted as part of the platform鈥檚 age-gating process.

The Committee聽聽highlights that ASAA 鈥渟tate[s] that submitting a government ID is not required.鈥 But the bill鈥檚 other requirements establish incentives that strongly favor that outcome. ASAA provides safe harbors for app developers but not app stores. And app stores are required to capture granular age categories and are liable for accuracy failures. These mandates are likely to push platforms toward reliance on government-issued IDs. This raises serious implications for people from vulnerable communities or people seeking content that is often stigmatized.

ASAA Raises Constitutional and Free Expression Concerns

ASAA鈥檚 overly broad age verification requirement鈥攁pplied to accessing every app鈥攃ould chill speech and prevent people without acceptable forms of ID from accessing online spaces and content that they otherwise have a right to access. The rollout of the UK鈥檚 Online Safety Act demonstrated how age verification requirements can fuel censorship. In the聽聽of its implementation, news, journalistic content, and speech otherwise not intended to be blocked were age-gated.

The Committee聽聽suggests that the ASAA 鈥渇ollows the approach in Texas鈥檚 age verification law for pornography that the Supreme Court upheld.鈥 But the qualifier about the type of content is the key. In聽,聽the Court鈥檚 ruling narrowly permits age verification for explicit content. The Supreme Court hasn鈥檛 provided a constitutional blank check for age verification applied to聽all聽apps and content types, but that is precisely how the ASAA would operate.

This critique isn鈥檛 theoretical. In聽CCIA v. Paxton, a聽federal court has already聽聽the Texas App Store Accountability Act on First Amendment grounds precisely because 鈥渢he categories of speech it restricts are so exceedingly overbroad.鈥 Judge Pitman鈥檚聽聽explains that requiring users to verify their age to download general-interest apps is 鈥渁kin to a law that would require every bookstore to verify the age of every customer at the door.鈥 The analogy powerfully captures the overbreadth problem that is also at the heart of the ASAA. (Similar聽聽against Utah鈥檚 version of an app store bill is making its way through the courts.)

ASAA Creates Major Circumvention Gaps

These constitutional and privacy risks are even more troubling in light of the major circumvention problems that jeopardize the ASAA鈥檚 core safety goals. Minors can readily access much of the content that the bill鈥檚 drafters and many parents are eager to restrict via web browsers or, under the amended version of ASAA, through third-party app stores that no longer meet the definition of covered app stores.

This is precisely why OTI has聽聽that age verification requirements be applied in the least restrictive manner, with privacy-preserving techniques and strong data minimization rules, only to those apps and websites offering legally age-restricted content and only for the users seeking to access it. This approach is not just privacy and security-protective, it also allows for targeted interventions at content without chilling speech across the internet.

What鈥檚 Next?

As markup begins, it鈥檚 worth remembering that the Committee has less restrictive templates to consider. While not perfect, the聽聽(POPA)鈥攚hich the committee chose not to mark up鈥攐ffers a less restrictive, more privacy-forward approach to implementing youth safety guardrails at the app store level. POPA would require app stores to generate an age signal (which indicates only whether a user is an adult or minor) based on a user鈥檚 self-declared age, rather than strict age verification. Unlike the approach in ASAA, app stores would only be required to make this age signal available to apps that offer a different experience to young people or are labeled for adults only. Importantly, they would only share this age signal when an account holder or the account holder鈥檚 parent has agreed to share it.

POPA鈥檚 voluntary approach to sharing age signals, sharing with only a subset of apps, and other data security requirements in the bill are elements worth closer consideration and improvement. The ASAA, meanwhile, would magnify privacy and security vulnerabilities, chill free expression, and leave doors wide open that imperil its stated safety goals.

More 国产视频 the Authors

Sarah Forland
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Sarah Forland

Policy Analyst, Open Technology Institute, 国产视频

Prem M. Trivedi
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Prem M. Trivedi

Director, Open Technology Institute, 国产视频

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The App Store Accountability Act Poses Serious Concerns for Privacy, Security, and Free Expression