IPFS News Link • Privacy Rights
The App Store Accountability Act Is A Privacy Nightmare Disguised As Child Protection
• https://www.zerohedge.com, by Julio RiveraThe latest example is the App Store Accountability Act, a bill championed by lawmakers who appear eager to regulate the internet without understanding how it actually works.
Supporters insist the legislation will protect kids online. In reality, it risks undermining privacy, violating constitutional protections, and creating a cybersecurity disaster in the process.
And remarkably, Congress is pushing forward with this even though federal courts have already signaled that this exact regulatory model is unconstitutional.
The App Store Accountability Act would require app stores to verify the ages of every user and share age information with app developers. On paper, that sounds straightforward. In practice, it would force companies to collect massive amounts of sensitive personal data simply to download everyday apps.
Want to download a weather app? Verify your age.
Want to install a calculator? Verify your age.
Want to read the news? Verify your age.
The practical result is obvious: app stores would be compelled to gather highly sensitive identity data on tens of millions of Americans and then distribute that information to countless third-party developers.
This could be one of the largest digital identity honeypots ever conceived.
Security experts have been warning about this for months. In fact, 419 cybersecurity and privacy academics from 30 countries recently signed an open letter warning that large-scale age verification systems are "dangerous and socially unacceptable" because they create enormous new attack surfaces for hackers and data thieves.
The logic is simple. If every app download requires age verification, that means sensitive identity data must be stored, transmitted, and accessed across thousands of services. Instead of limiting the spread of personal information, the bill effectively multiplies it.
For cybercriminals, it would be a dream target.
Equally troubling is the bill's blatant disregard for recent federal court rulings. Lawmakers promoting the legislation often claim that age-verification mandates have already received judicial approval.
That claim collapses under even basic scrutiny.
Just months ago, a federal judge blocked a nearly identical Texas law modeled on the same concept, ruling that it was "exceedingly overbroad" and failed strict constitutional scrutiny.
The court compared the requirement to a government mandate forcing bookstores to check the ID of every customer before allowing them inside. Such a system, the judge explained, would restrict minors from participating in the "democratic exchange of views online."




