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Apple today said App Store rules in Texas are changing due to the enforcement of SB 2420, a law that adds age assurance requirements for app marketplaces and developers.

Liquid-Glass-App-Store-Feature.jpg

Apple users located in Texas will soon be required to confirm whether they are 18 years or older when creating an Apple Account. Apple Accounts for users under 18 must be part of a Family Sharing group, and parents need to provide consent for all App Store downloads, app purchases, and in-app transactions.

Developers need to adopt the Declared Age Range API to provide the required age categories for new account users in Texas, and they are responsible for implementing the correct age restrictions. Developers must get parental consent for a minor to download an app, and are required to re-obtain consent if there is a "significant change" to an app. It is up to developers to determine when a significant change has been made to an app.

Parents in Texas are able to revoke consent for any app they previously approved for their child, a system that developers also need to support. Apple has several APIs for developers who need to implement these features, including the Declared Age Range API and the Significant Change API. Developers could face civil penalties of up to $10,000 per violation.

Apple first outlined the changes it was making to support SB 2420 in October 2025, because it was supposed to go into effect on January 1, 2026. In December, a Texas federal judge blocked the age verification law and said it was "more likely than not unconstitutional" and a violation of the First Amendment due to the burden of age verification.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit temporarily stayed the injunction that was blocking the law from being enforced, so SB 2420 will go into effect on June 4, 2026. Legal proceedings are still ongoing, and the Fifth Circuit has not decided on whether it will issue a permanent stay of the injunction during the appeals process. The courts still need to determine the constitutionality of SB 2420 and whether the state has the authority to impose age verification requirements on app marketplaces.

When SB 2420 is live, Apple will need to confirm user age when a person creates an Apple Account, an action that the company has not wanted to take. Apple is required to use "commercially reasonable methods to identify an individual's age" during account creation. Existing accounts are not affected. Google's Play Store is also subject to the law.

Apple fought against age assurance requirements in Texas and other states because of the data collection required to determine user age. Apple says SB 2420 forces users to share personally identifiable data to download any apps, even a simple app for checking weather or sports scores. Apple introduced the Declared Age Range API to minimize data collection where possible.

Apple CEO Tim Cook attempted to persuade Texas Governor Greg Abbott to veto the legislation, but Abbott went ahead and signed it into law.

More information on Apple's age assurance frameworks can be found on its Developer website.

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

Article Link: Apple Bringing App Store Age Verification to Texas as SB 2420 Takes Effect June 4
 
Lol. Isn't Texas the place where freedom from government is considered a good thing?

This sounds like a true pain. I'm so glad I didn't waste time having kids. A very good move in the modern world IMO.
Texas is just a bag of chips! (All bark..)

Been trying to get liquor shops to open Sundays but ...nope!!
 
"Apple Accounts for users under 18 must be part of a Family Sharing group, and parents need to provide consent for all App Store downloads, app purchases, and in-app transactions."

It sounds like this is all that should be needed to implement...Approve the apps your kid downloads. If you don't know what it is: deny it or take initiative to see what the app is.
 
don you think that is the parental controls features are for, you know for the parents to be the ones responsible. the government is not your baby sitter.
I agree with you 100%. Unfortunately, the parental controls on iOS are pure hot garbage.

Half the time, turning on downtime does nothing. My phone says downtime is on, my kid’s phone says it is on, but all apps are still accessible.

Screen time data fails to sync reliably. Sometimes weeks will go by where it just flat out doesn’t work, then it will work again for a while, then stop.

Time limits stack. If I set 3 hours for entertainment apps, it should mean 3 hours of actual time. But if a YouTube video is playing in PIP while also playing a game? Each counts, so the apps lock out after 90 minutes. And that’s if the limit took effect in the first place; often I’ll turn on time limits and it will never actually block the apps. Another syncing issue here it seems.

App approval needs a lot of work, too. Want to share a family account with step-kids? All app approval requests go to all parents. No way to have my kids’ approvals go to me, and my step-kid’s to my wife.

I used to think I’d never switch away from the Apple ecosystem, but the software quality and reliability (both iOS and macOS) have been going downhill so rapidly over the last few years, I’m now seriously considering it.
 
Of course Texas doesn’t even have a digital DL in the works, but can do this stupid garbage. The digital DL at least would keep it semi-private, but of course, Texas.
 
Is it possible to pull my apps out of Texas
I ain’t dealing with surveillance.
It's an interesting question. Will they just allow people to ignore the API as long as they are willing to be barred from Texas?

My gut says yes, Apple will allow this, and then they will be sued by the Texas Attorney General because some family will move into Texas and not update their address, and Texas is hoping to use this to force age verification on the entire country. It'll be interesting to see if the current Supreme Court allows Texas to become our new digital overlords or not.
 
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Surveillance is the systematic observation and monitoring of people, places, or activities to gather information, ensure security, or manage behavior.

Where do we all sign up and disclose every details of our lives so we can put it on one website for everyone to know about us! No need to cover things up right? I didn't do any thing wrong right? I am good and special right? Privacy means nothing to me I done nothing wrong right? on and on it goes.
We are TOAST in the Machine feeding GREED!
 
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Lol. Isn't Texas the place where freedom from government is considered a good thing?

This sounds like a true pain. I'm so glad I didn't waste time having kids. A very good move in the modern world IMO.
All fun and games until the existential crisis kicks in during older age .

But yes, Texas is supposed to be about “Big Freedom” as we see, it’s not. Both parties want to enslave is all in digital prisons and we aren’t voting our way out of it to be truthful.
 
But yes, Texas is supposed to be about “Big Freedom” as we see, it’s not. Both parties want to enslave is all in digital prisons and we aren’t voting our way out of it to be truthful.

Texas, like many states, is bout "Freedom for me but not for thee..."
 
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don you think that is the parental controls features are for, you know for the parents to be the ones responsible. the government is not your baby sitter.
Then explain drinking laws and traffic signals? Your argument in the past gave us rivers that caught fire, toxic water, tragic birth defects from unsafe medications and so much more. Not to mention it’s the first damn sentence in the preamble of the Constitution.
 
Requiring all adults and children quite possibly to submit personal documents, possibly to unknown third parties, to set up and use their own computers and devices in everyday fashion.

What an unimpressive look for Texas, along with other states and countries.

Good for people, especially those affected, who criticize and make fun of requirements like this, and anyone in power for pushing them.
 
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