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Apple today provided an update on its age assurance tools for developers in Brazil, Australia, Singapore, Utah, and Louisiana. Developers in these areas will face new age assurance and parental consent obligations, and Apple's APIs will help them meet these upcoming requirements.

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As of February 24, Apple is blocking users in Australia, Brazil, and Singapore from downloading apps rated 18+ unless they have been confirmed to be adults through an App Store age confirmation process that uses "reasonable methods." Age confirmation is done automatically through the App Store, but developers may also need to independently confirm their users are adults with the Declared Age Range API.

In Brazil, apps that have loot boxes will have their age rating adjusted to 18+ in the Brazilian storefront, as Brazil's new age-related app store laws prevent apps from offering loot boxes to children. Developers can see a user's age group when the user or user's parent opts to share it, with Apple including a new signal about the method of age assurance.

In Utah and Louisiana, there are upcoming regulations that require developers to establish a user's age with the Declared Age Range API to restrict children from downloading apps that are not age appropriate. Apple has updated the API to help developers determine whether age-related regulatory requirements apply to a user, and whether the user is required to share age range. There's also a new notice if an app is required to get a parent or guardian's permission for significant app updates for an app downloaded by a child.

In some cases, developers are required to inform parents when apps receive a major update with new functionality, and the parents have to provide permission for the child to use the app, even if permission was previously granted.

Utah's App Store Accountability Act requirement starts on May 6, 2026, while Louisiana's House Bill 570 begins on July 1, 2026, and both laws are applicable only to new Apple Accounts.

Several countries and U.S. states have started implementing strict child protection laws, some of which require app store operators like Apple to confirm user age and obtain parental consent before minors are allowed to download apps.

Developers can face fines for not complying with age assurance requirements. In Utah, for example, parents can recover damages of up to $1,000 per violation, while Louisiana can fine developers up to $10,000 per violation after a 45-day grace period.

Apple could also be fined millions of dollars for non-compliance in Brazil, Australia, and Singapore, where there are now platform-level requirements.

Apple fought against platform-level legislation because of the privacy issues raised by the age verification process. Apple does not want to verify age through methods like ID submission due to data collection concerns, and the company also does not want to share age information from every user with developers.

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 Now Blocks 18+ App Downloads in Australia, Brazil, and Singapore Without Age Assurance
 
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Reactions: Pezimak and Z-4195
When they say ‘age assurance’, they mean laws imposed by government which usually entails you giving your full driving licence or passport details to a third party company, and wait for that information to be stolen as they inevitably get hacked…. It is one of THE most stupid ideas for age verification yet…
 
In Europe, FYI to all those praising this idea, they are trying to pass a law where by law you have to use your full REAL name on all social media, and all your real details. All in the name of ‘online safety’… How many on here would do that I wonder? All linked to the age verification idea of course where systems will scan your details (passport, drivers licence etc) so you can’t bypass it.
 
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I wouldn't be surprised that within the next few years, you will be unable to have a social media account unless you're at least 16 years old for limited access and 18 years old for full access.
 
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Um no, you don’t speak for the majority , leave the gov out of our lives, we don’t want it
But you don’t understand, raising children is hard. Parents don’t want to be engaged with their kids and monitoring their activity constantly, who has time for that when there’s all that doom scrolling that needs to be done by SOMEbody!” 🙂

Next thing you know, you’ll be saying that people that don’t have the time/patience/energy to take care of children shouldn’t have children, well, to THAT I say… wait, I just got a meme from a friend and I’ve gotta post this to the group chat before anyone else does. Have you seen where my kid went? I need to record them doing something so I can post it. That’s the reason I had a kid in the first place.
 
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Parents too lazy to be parents is why this is happening.

Makes me cringe when at the grocery store, seeing a toddler in the stroller with their face glued to the parent's phone. Not sure how having a age gate on say tiktok, if the parent just tosses their kid their age verified tiktok app.
 
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