Read the Published Version of My Paper Against Mandatory Online Age Authentication
The final published version of my paper, “The ‘Segregate-and-Suppress’ Approach to Regulating Child Safety Online,” is now available. Some more context about this publication:
We’re on the cusp of major structural changes to the Internet as more websites and apps implement age authentication walls to confirm readers are adults. Another major rollout of these access barriers will occur soon courtesy of the UK Online Safety Act. These mandates are proliferating in the US, and that pace will quickly accelerate as state legislatures crank up age authentication-based censorship following the Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton opinion.
I wrote my Segregate-and-Suppress paper knowing that its publication date might come after the Supreme Court issued its FSC v. Paxton ruling. (In fact, the paper had finished all of its editing before the decision, but the journal published it a week after 🤷‍♂️). To avoid potential preemption, I decided early on that the paper wasn’t going to focus on the constitutional analysis.
Instead, the paper emphasized the many intractable problems with mandatory age authentication online. These critiques act as a policy checklist of sorts. You can use the paper to question anyone–policymakers or advocates–who urges the adoption of these mandates. Do they understand the consequences? Do they think they’ve mitigated the problems? Do they really care about the policy goals they claim to be advancing? Or are they just using those claims as a pretext to advance other goals, such as censorship?
In particular, the paper explains how the imposition of online age authentication mandates HARMS CHILDREN. This poses a major conundrum for advocates: the advocates claim the mandates will PROTECT children, but in fact their policies do the opposite. Now what?
The FSC v. Paxton ruling was a devastating blow to the Internet, but there is still a lot to fight for on this topic. Many existing online age authentication mandate laws in the US remain overreaching post-FSC v. Paxton. New online age authentication mandates that stray beyond the “obscene as to minors” swimlanes still will be subject to constitutional challenges. And most importantly, we can hold our policymakers accountable for their policy positions. Policymakers who support harming children–intentionally or not–deserve our opprobrium…and maybe do not deserve our votes…
Blog Posts on Segregate-and-Suppress Obligations
- Prof. Goldman’s Statement on the Supreme Court’s Demolition of the Internet in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton
- Court Permanently Enjoins Ohio’s Segregate-and-Suppress/Parental Consent Law–NetChoice v. Yost
- Arkansas’ Social Media Safety Act Permanently Enjoined—NetChoice v. Griffin
- Why I Emphatically Oppose Online Age Verification Mandates
- California’s Age-Appropriate Design Code (AADC) Is Completely Unconstitutional (Multiple Ways)–NetChoice v. Bonta
- Another Conflict Between Privacy Laws and Age Authentication–Murphy v. Confirm ID
- Recapping Three Social Media Addiction Opinions from Fall (Catch-Up Post)
- District Court Blocks More of Texas’ Segregate-and-Suppress Law (HB 18)–SEAT v. Paxton
- Comments on the Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton SCOTUS Oral Arguments on Mandatory Online Age “Verification”
- California’s “Protecting Our Kids from Social Media Addiction Act” Is Partially Unconstitutional…But Other Parts Are Green-Lighted–NetChoice v. Bonta
- Section 230 Defeats Underage User’s Lawsuit Against Grindr–Doll v. Pelphrey
- Five Decisions Illustrate How Section 230 Is Fading Fast
- Internet Law Professors Submit a SCOTUS Amicus Brief on Online Age Authentication–Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton
- Court Enjoins the Utah “Minor Protection in Social Media Act”–NetChoice v. Reyes
- Another Texas Online Censorship Law Partially Enjoined–CCIA v. Paxton
- When It Comes to Section 230, the Ninth Circuit is a Chaos Agent–Estate of Bride v. YOLO
- Court Dismisses School Districts’ Lawsuits Over Social Media “Addiction”–In re Social Media Cases
- Ninth Circuit Strikes Down Key Part of the CA Age-Appropriate Design Code (the Rest is TBD)–NetChoice v. Bonta
- Mississippi’s Age-Authentication Law Declared Unconstitutional–NetChoice v. Fitch
- Indiana’s Anti-Online Porn Law “Is Not Close” to Constitutional–Free Speech Coalition v. Rokita
- Fifth Circuit Once Again Disregards Supreme Court Precedent and Mangles Section 230–Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton
- Snapchat Isn’t Liable for Offline Sexual Abuse–VV v. Meta
- 2023 Quick Links: Censorship
- Court Enjoins Ohio’s Law Requiring Parental Approval for Children’s Social Media Accounts–NetChoice v. Yost
- Many Fifth Circuit Judges Hope to Eviscerate Section 230–Doe v. Snap
- Louisiana’s Age Authentication Mandate Avoids Constitutional Scrutiny Using a Legislative Drafting Trick–Free Speech Coalition v. LeBlanc
- Section 230 Once Again Applies to Claims Over Offline Sexual Abuse–Doe v. Grindr
- Comments on the Ruling Declaring California’s Age-Appropriate Design Code (AADC) Unconstitutional–NetChoice v. Bonta
- Two Separate Courts Reiterate That Online Age Authentication Mandates Are Unconstitutional
- Minnesota’s Attempt to Copy California’s Constitutionally Defective Age Appropriate Design Code is an Utter Fail (Guest Blog Post)
- Do Mandatory Age Verification Laws Conflict with Biometric Privacy Laws?–Kuklinski v. Binance
- Why I Think California’s Age-Appropriate Design Code (AADC) Is Unconstitutional
- An Interview Regarding AB 2273/the California Age-Appropriate Design Code (AADC)
- Op-Ed: The Plan to Blow Up the Internet, Ostensibly to Protect Kids Online (Regarding AB 2273)
- A Short Explainer of Why California’s Social Media Addiction Bill (AB 2408) Is Terrible
- A Short Explainer of How California’s Age-Appropriate Design Code Bill (AB2273) Would Break the Internet
- Is the California Legislature Addicted to Performative Election-Year Stunts That Threaten the Internet? (Comments on AB2408)
- Omegle Denied Section 230 Dismissal–AM v. Omegle
- Snapchat Isn’t Liable for a Teacher’s Sexual Predation–Doe v. Snap
- Will California Eliminate Anonymous Web Browsing? (Comments on CA AB 2273, The Age-Appropriate Design Code Act)
- Minnesota Wants to Ban Under-18s From User-Generated Content Services
- California’s Latest Effort To Keep Some Ads From Reaching Kids Is Misguided And Unconstitutional (Forbes Cross-Post)
- Backpage Gets Important 47 USC 230 Win Against Washington Law Trying to Combat Online Prostitution Ads (Forbes Cross-Post & More)
- Backpage Gets TRO Against Washington Law Attempting to Bypass Section 230–Backpage v. McKenna
- MySpace Wins Another 47 USC 230 Case Over Sexual Assaults of Users–Doe II v. MySpace
- MySpace Gets 230 Win in Fifth Circuit–Doe v. MySpace
- Website Isn’t Liable When Users Lie About Their Ages–Doe v. SexSearch