Federal Judge Blocks California Online Age-Checking Law as Unconstitutional
Shielding children from “harm” shouldn’t come at the expense of speech protected by the First Amendment.

A federal judge has granted an injunction blocking a California law that would force online businesses and social media platforms to estimate the ages of people visiting their sites and protect children from seeing content that might cause harm, stating that the law likely violates the First Amendment and would likely lead to online government-fueled censorship.
The law in question, the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act (CAADCA), is one of the recent crop of bills seeking to "childproof" the internet by either demanding age verification checks of users or by locking away content. CAADCA, passed in 2022 unanimously by the state legislature and supported by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, requires every business in the state with an online component to create a report showing how any new good or service they provided would be accessed by children and investigate and account for any sort of "harms" children might face. Businesses that are not in compliance with the law face fines of up to $2,500 per violation.
NetChoice, a trade organization representing tech firms, sued earlier this year to try to block the law. In NetChoice v. Bonta, the trade organization argued that this overly broad law violates the Constitution by "enact[ing] a system of prior restraint over protected speech using undefined, vague terms, and creat[ing] a regime of proxy censorship, forcing online services to restrict speech in ways the State could never do directly." In short, the end result of the law would lead to businesses and online platforms having to censor content in order to keep children from seeing it, even though a lot of this content is likely to be protected First Amendment speech.
On Monday, U.S. District Judge Beth Labson Freeman of the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of California, San Jose Division, agreed and blocked the state from enacting the law, which was scheduled to take effect on July 1, 2024.
"[T]he materials before the Court indicate that the steps a business would need to take to sufficiently estimate the age of child users would likely prevent both children and adults from accessing certain content," Freeman writes. "The age estimation and privacy provisions thus appear likely to impede the 'availability and use' of information and accordingly to regulate speech."
Critics of the law have noted that rather than protecting children's privacy, CAADCA's would likely result in the exact opposite by forcing online platforms to collect personal information to comply with the law. Freeman agreed: "Based on the materials before the Court, the CAADCA's age estimation provision appears not only unlikely to materially alleviate the harm of insufficient data and privacy protections for children, but actually likely to exacerbate the problem by inducing covered businesses to require consumers, including children, to divulge additional personal information."
In the ruling, Freeman embraces and takes note of and supports the arguments presented in an amicus brief by Eric Goldman, professor of law at Santa Clara University School of Law, about the many constitutional and privacy flaws within CAADCA. Goldman also wrote a policy brief for the Reason Foundation (the non-profit think tank that publishes Reason), detailing further the law's many problems.
"Imagine if, to protect children from seeing or buying potentially harmful products, you had to share your government-issued ID and wait for verification before you could enter any retail store—groceries, gas stations, liquor stores, bookstores, garden supply, etc. That would be an extraordinary invasion of your private information just to do any shopping or browsing," Goldman warned.
The Supreme Court in the past has rejected efforts by the government to mandate age verification to access online content as unconstitutional as an overly restrictive solution that requires people to potentially abandon their anonymity in order to engage in online speech (and reading) that is protected under the First Amendment.
That logic remains true, and all these new age verification proposals are running into the same problem in the courts. A law that purports to protect children from harm cannot lead to blanket censorship of online speech.
NetChoice is, of course, happy with the injunction.
"We appreciate the district court's thoughtful analysis of the First Amendment and decision to prevent regulators from violating the free speech and online privacy rights of Californians, their families, and their businesses as our case proceeds," said Chris Marchese, director of the NetChoice Litigation Center, in a prepared statement. "We look forward to seeing the law permanently struck down and online speech and privacy fully protected."
The fight is far from over. But given the court history on similar cases (a similar ruling came down in August over an age verification law in Texas), lawmakers should start taking note before using "Think of the children!" fearmongering to push for more online censorship.
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I thought his law was the fourth amendment of the internet or something. Or do we wait ten years before we call it that?
"enact[ing] a system of prior restraint over protected speech using undefined, vague terms, and creat[ing] a regime of proxy censorship, forcing online services to restrict speech in ways the State could never do directly."
The cognitive dissonance is literally incredible.
And figuratively retarded.
And using those terms in that way opens the door wide open to child strippers, porn stars and sex workers. Gotta love the leftists and libertines for pedophiles.
it is like you all don't know that what they are criticizing is a law passed by the leftists..... conservatives for government forced censoring?
Conservatives for not fucking around with kids, pervert.
in other words.... conservatives for big government censorship...... for the children.....
don't you ever bitch again about anything Twitter or facebook has done to posts they thought were misinformation..... because forcing companies to do that kind of shit is officially what you are advocating for.
No, just not actually fucking kids.
you guys are even stupider than usual, today.
Fucking kids will get you a busted skull, Shrike, no matter what the NAP says.
Pretty sure Twitter and Facebook are both already required to take down kiddie porn, shreek. Even Reason took down the thread where you posted dark web links to hardcore child pornography. Remember?
find a new tune, you stupid mother fucker. everyone who sees how stupid you are is not the same person.
Except you are. You're not tricking anyone.
If you don't want to get called out for socking, maybe try not getting 2 dozen of your socks outed on the same day in a humiliating meltdown, shreek.
are you talking about the troll who played you all?
Where the fuck do you get this shit? This does precisely none of that. All of that is illegal. This doesn't change that one teeny-tiny bit. It just says you don't have to suck the state's cock in order to do anything online.
Here’s a crazy idea. Let parents decide what they want their children to see on the internet. I know giving parents the responsibility of raising their own children is controversial and really out there, but it might work.
But how can the schools effectively transition kids to a different *checks language chart* gender if the parents are involved?
Easy!
Redefine "parents" to mean teachers, social workers, LGBTQWTFBBQ advocates, school board trustees and the "woman" with the erection in the YWCA changing rooms.
Team1: But those parents might let their kids see something obscene.
Team2: But those parents might let their kids see something racist.
it's absolutely stunning that people think there is an elegant government solution that doesn't have horrific unintended consequences
They haven't come to terms that 'guns' (monopoly gun-force) is the only tool that separates government from anything else.
^^^ BINGO ^^^
When did they all become children of the government anyways?
Should, but won't.
Yet they support mutilating little children’s genitals. Homosexual books in elementary schools and children’s drag shows. I don’t think it is sexual contents they fear as much as different opinions, and kids can find those on the Internet too
And they probably won't either.
Ray Epps charged with the lightest charges possible despite fermenting trespass and encouraging people to breach the Capitol.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/justice/ray-epps-charged-misdemeanor-capitol-riot
On the same day video gets releases of him encouraging push back against the very same police line a PB got 17 years and terrorist charges for.
Video in link.
https://twitter.com/stephenehorn/status/1703942684174430333
"Come on Ray, be a pal. It will be super-light, we swear, but they're on to us. Soros will make you whole afterwards".
I wonder if they're ever going to get around to charging the FBI agent who was caught on camera breaking the Capitol's windows, too?
They don't care if they get caught. They rely on the ignorance of democrats.
"I wonder if they’re ever going to get around to charging the FBI agent who was caught on camera breaking the Capitol’s windows, too?"
you mean the guy with an earpiece who you don't actually know anything else about?
It’s weird that the same FBI who was able to track down 60 year old grandmothers in Alaska who walked through the capitol on January 6th can’t tell us anything about the guy with the earpiece, eh shreek? I guess we’ll just never know…
You're right. He's a real mystery, Shrike. They can track down guys in Oregon who took selfies in the Rotunda that day, but they'll never find the guy breaking windows.
you don't know. the guy could be in jail right now, for all you know. you are 100% talking out your ass, because you know nothing except there was an "earpiece," and the dumb-fucks who posted selfies on facebook were easy to catch.
Yes, I can imagine it, because it already happens! I can be asked to show ID if I'm buying porn. Not just porn, but cigarettes, alcohol, or to enter a nightclub. How is any of that less of an invasion of privacy?
if you are going to fight a straw man, don't include the quote showing what you are arguing against is not what was said. do you have to show ID just to walk in the grocery store? does the grocery store have to record that information to prove they checked?
we are not talking about proof of age to make a purchase, we are talking about treating every grocery store like a strip club.
If you are going to argue with my comment, read my whole comment. Many times in the past I needed to show an ID at the door to enter a nightclub. So that is now unconstitutional?
Shreek is well aware, he's just very, very, very personally invested in making sure children can access pornography on the internet, for reasons that should be quite obvious. You could even make it a 1:1 comparison: you have to show ID to get into a strip club or an adult book store.
"Shreek is well aware, he’s just very, very, very personally invested in making sure children can access pornography on the internet, for reasons that should be quite obvious."
go figure.... still not "shreek." but, might i suggest you take responsibility for your own kids and install parental controls on your devices instead of pretending this law has anything to do with porn. these liberals didn't even have to say porn to hook you morons. you are too stupid to understand that YOU are the ones they are looking to censor with this shit. "hurtful" is going to be using the wrong pronouns and saying it isn't healthy to be that fat (that is why the language is vague.... it is not a mistake.)..... and you morons are defending them."
"make it a 1:1 comparison: you have to show ID to get into a strip club or an adult book store."
and you think that means we should force every grocery store/gas station/drugstore/fro-yo store/etc. operate like a strip club? any place you ever enter must now be forced to collect your personal information. are you about to start telling me what a great idea vaccine passports are?
Except you are, and even though I've know that since ~9 years ago when you first started this sock, everybody got a chance to find it out for certain during your mass un-socking when 2 dozen of your accounts all got outed within 24 hours, shreek.
If I had children I probably would. That doesn't change the fact that treating online porn businesses the same as offline porn businesses is no more or less a first amendment infringement.
Good try, shreek, but the law wouldn't have required Wayfair to collect ID data. It applies to porn sites. I think if an independent gas station owner is at risk of jail time for failing to card a 17 year old horndog trying to buy a Playboy, you're on untenable ground trying to pretend that Pornhub.com is one iota different. Thanks for bringing up vaccine passports though. Another great opportunity to rub your shit-encrusted nose in yet another pile of your hypocrisy, since you spent 3 years supporting that shit. Making Walmart force its customers to wear paper masks on their face and its employees to take experimental drugs was fine, but verifying the age of kids trying to access porn? Well, finally we've found a serious first amendment violation that shreek finds objectionable. Now gee, I wonder why a guy who got his original Sarah Palin's Buttplug account banned for posting dark web links to hardcore child pornography finds controlling minors' access to porn so objectionable. Just like that totally-not-an-FBI-agent with an ear piece directing traffic and shattering windows on J6, I guess we'll just never know.
".......during your mass un-socking when 2 dozen of your accounts all got outed within 24 hours, shreek."
you mean that day when a troll came on and spoofed half the posters on here? make sure you go call jesseAZ and mothers lament shreek too, because the troll spoofed them too. kind of pathetic that the best you can come up with is something everyone knows was fraudulent.
I can't imagine why a troll would bother with jesse or ml. No one could possibly beclown them any better than they do themselves.
Shrieking "Porn! Porn! Porn!" every other sentence doesn't make your argument any less retarded. These laws affect a whole hell of a lot more than porn. If you can't get that through your skull, then I have to ask just how you can breathe with your head that far up your ass.
so your reply is that only 75% of what you said was a completely irrelevant straw man attack?
fine, lets talk about the nightclubs....... where it is not the government forcing anyone to do anything...... it is the owners not wanting the headache of carding every person, every time they walk up to the bar, and then policing who they hand the drink to. they could do it at the bar, like other bars usually do, if they wanted to. not the governments place to force every single grocery store/gas station/clothing store/etc./etc. to do the same thing.
Lol. Wherein shreek the absolutely retarded pedophile simultaneously argues that the governnment requiring you to check the ID of every patron in a drinking establishment is not actually government forcing a drinking establishment that also happens to have a dance floor to check ID.
kind of telling that those who are the most obsessed with calling other people socks seem to have name changes in the middle of an argument..... a flood of responses by shu, and then you respond to all of my responses to that person.......
Note that the law does not limit itself to porn, alcohol, tobacco or any specific types of businesses, but "requires every business in the state with an online component to create a report showing how any new good or service they provided would be accessed by children and investigate and account for any sort of "harms" children might face."
Even though I've become accustomed to the "I hate Reason the most" pissing contest here in the comments where every article must be trashed, I'm truly surprised to see the level of defense for this lefty nanny state law.
Maybe becaus they run this defensive in articles about how great it is to be able to discuss and explore their kinks, and how dare children not be part of that discussion. You want to align with pedo defenders and actual pedos, go right ahead.
I align with less nanny state without concern for which side pedos are on.
pedophilia is a 1A matter now?
it is nothing short of amazing how many of you are rushing to pretend this has anything to do with pedophiles, as you rush to so vigorously defend the democrats on this one.
>>Shielding children from “harm” shouldn’t come at the expense of speech protected by the First Amendment.
all I did was comment on the frame.
the problem is that the "harm" in question is not pedophiles. they are going WAAAAAYY past attempting to restrict adult content, they are going after every business that has a website.
yeah it's completely fascist Newsom nonsense and I don't have an answer to it but also kids shouldn't have free access to pron so ...
i don't think i have ever seen a porn site that a voluntarily installed internet filter would not block.
sure. my parents thought they walled me up pretty good and never once stopped me from doing what I wanted
kind of underscores the absurdity of thinking the government can fix it all for us. point is that you can restrict access on your own, even if you do a piss poor job on the follow through.
>>thinking the government can fix it all for us
never said this. said I have no answer. it's an apples/naranjas debate
sounds like you know the law should not be defended, but you can't help but try to defend it because.... for the children...
And we know how extensively you've looked, shreek, because you got your Sarah Palin's Buttplug account banned for posting dark web links to hardcore child pornography.
still not shreek, you mindless drone.
Except - oopsie whoopsie - you got this sock outed along with the ~20 others on that fateful day.
i wonder who it is running all the socks that do nothing but claim other people are socks.
It's nothing but socks all the way down. Sockception!
I swear I can remember a time when there were actual discussions and debates in the comments. These days I can count the actually libertarian commenters on the fingers of one hand. The rest have leaned into retardation so hard they make the rampant spambots look sensible by comparison.
So liquor stores and convenience stores don't need to card anymore, right?
Oh wait I forgot. The magical series of tubes means that Sadiq's 7-11 #407921 has to check ID before they sell Playboys, Marlboros or OE, but asking Pornhub.com to do the same thing violates the "judges and legislators like to look at internet porn" clause of the first amendment.
Maybe it just wasn’t ever a proper role of government to try and raise other people’s children especially when they essentially passed that buck onto merchants and threw them in jail if they refused too.
And I'm fine with that argument if you want to make it. I'm not fine with two different standards of first amendment jurisprudence because adult horndogs want to look at internet porn in privacy but wouldn't be caught dead walking into Sadiq’s 7-11 #407921 to buy a Playboy and therefore don't care about turning him into a state enforcer.
The op of this thread thread might be missing a couple of important parts.
First, the state was requiring detailed reporting:
requires every business in the state with an online component to create a report showing how any new good or service they provided would be accessed by children and investigate and account for any sort of "harms" children might face.
Likewise, the effort to collect and maintain user data and estimate ages of visitors is really goddamned nebulous. If a user wants to remain anonymous, there's no way to do that accurately short of stripping that anonymity.
Since this isn't just a targeted thing, like buying beer or a playboy at the Circle K, that's everything. Including social media, or even shopping for shoes. Remember "every business in the state with an online component " which is, effectively, every business. The percentage without at least a website is going to be vanishingly small.
And since it is online, that data isn't ephemeral. It forces the user to give up their personal data in a way that getting carded at the door to the pub does not. This isn't one guy knowing you're really 30 when you told the guy you're dating you're 24, it is a lasting marker of who you are, where you are, what you read or wrote, or bought, or anything else. And, if the state can demand "every" business report on every product, they can demand they share these records. Or, more likely, just "request" them expecting most businesses will not fight. And they can be subpoenaed, or hacked, or just sold to data brokers because that's what happens now. Data is the new oil.
All "Sadiq" has to do is not sell beer to the 17 year old the cops send on a sting and he's good. Look at the ID, yeah, you're 21, you're on your way.
Wow, someone with actual reading comprehension skills. How did you sneak in here?
This is a deeply retarded argument. Yeah, the convenience store clerk might card you if you want to buy a pack of smokes. But under this law, he'd be required to card you if you wanted to buy a Mountain Dew and a bag of Doritos. You have to be a complete idiot if you think this is only about porn.
The humor in Lefty-California being the Religious puritans.
You can bet your *ss it's all about government-fueled censorship.
Perfectly timed directly after SCOTUS already told them to knock it off.
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