cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/37439450
S.B. No. 2420
AN ACT relating to the regulation of platforms for the sale and distribution of software applications for mobile devices. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. Subtitle C, Title 5, Business & Commerce Code, is amended by adding Chapter 121 to read as follows: CHAPTER 121. SOFTWARE APPLICATIONS SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL PROVISIONS Sec. 121.001. SHORT TITLE. This chapter may be cited as the App Store Accountability Act. Sec. 121.002. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter: (1) “Age category” means information collected by the owner of an app store to designate a user based on the age categories described by Section 121.021(b). (2) “App store” means a publicly available Internet website, software application, or other electronic service that distributes software applications from the owner or developer of a software application to the user of a mobile device. (3) “Minor” means a child who is younger than 18 years of age who has not had the disabilities of minority removed for general purposes. (4) “Mobile device” means a portable, wireless electronic device, including a tablet or smartphone, capable of transmitting, receiving, processing, and storing information wirelessly that runs an operating system designed to manage hardware resources and perform common services for software applications on handheld electronic devices. (5) “Personal data” means any information, including sensitive data, that is linked or reasonably linkable to an identified or identifiable individual. The term includes pseudonymous data when the data is used by a person who processes or determines the purpose and means of processing the data in conjunction with additional information that reasonably links the data to an identified or identifiable individual. The term does not include deidentified data or publicly available information. SUBCHAPTER B. DUTIES OF APP STORES Sec. 121.021. DUTY TO VERIFY AGE OF USER; AGE CATEGORIES. (a) When an individual in this state creates an account with an app store, the owner of the app store shall use a commercially reasonable method of verification to verify the individual’s age category under Subsection (b). (b) The owner of an app store shall use the following age categories for assigning a designation: (1) an individual who is younger than 13 years of age is considered a “child”; (2) an individual who is at least 13 years of age but younger than 16 years of age is considered a “younger teenager”; (3) an individual who is at least 16 years of age but younger than 18 years of age is considered an “older teenager”; and (4) an individual who is at least 18 years of age is considered an “adult.” Sec. 121.022. PARENTAL CONSENT REQUIRED. (a) If the owner of the app store determines under Section 121.021 that an individual is a minor who belongs to an age category that is not “adult,” the owner shall require that the minor’s account be affiliated with a parent account belonging to the minor’s parent or guardian. (b) For an account to be affiliated with a minor’s account as a parent account, the owner of an app store must use a commercially reasonable method to verify that the account belongs to an individual who: (1) the owner of the app store has verified belongs to the age category of “adult” under Section 121.021; and (2) has legal authority to make a decision on behalf of the minor with whose account the individual is seeking affiliation. © A parent account may be affiliated with multiple minors’ accounts. (d) Except as provided by this section, the owner of an app store must obtain consent from the minor’s parent or guardian through the parent account affiliated with the minor’s account before allowing the minor to: (1) download a software application; (2) purchase a software application; or (3) make a purchase in or using a software application. (e) The owner of an app store must: (1) obtain consent for each individual download or purchase sought by the minor; and (2) notify the developer of each applicable software application if a minor’s parent or guardian revokes consent through a parent account. (f) To obtain consent from a minor’s parent or guardian under Subsection (d), the owner of an app store may use any reasonable means to: (1) disclose to the parent or guardian: (A) the specific software application or purchase for which consent is sought; (B) the rating under Section 121.052 assigned to the software application or purchase; © the specific content or other elements that led to the rating assigned under Section 121.052; (D) the nature of any collection, use, or distribution of personal data that would occur because of the software application or purchase; and (E) any measures taken by the developer of the software application or purchase to protect the personal data of users; (2) give the parent or guardian a clear choice to give or withhold consent for the download or purchase; and (3) ensure that the consent is given: (A) by the parent or guardian; and (B) through the account affiliated with a minor’s account under Subsection (a). (g) If a software developer provides the owner of an app store with notice of a change under Section 121.053, the owner of the app store shall: (1) notify any individual who has given consent under this section for a minor’s use or purchase relating to a previous version of the changed software application; and (2) obtain consent from the individual for the minor’s continued use or purchase of the software application. (h) The owner of an app store is not required to obtain consent from a minor’s parent or guardian for: (1) the download of a software application that: (A) provides a user with direct access to emergency services, including: (i) 9-1-1 emergency services; (ii) a crisis hotline; or (iii) an emergency assistance service that is legally available to a minor; (B) limits data collection to information: (i) collected in compliance with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (15 U.S.C. Section 6501 et seq.); and (ii) necessary for the provision of emergency services; © allows a user to access and use the software application without requiring the user to create an account with the software application; and (D) is operated by or in partnership with: (i) a governmental entity; (ii) a nonprofit organization; or (iii) an authorized emergency service provider; or (2) the purchase or download of a software application that is operated by or in partnership with a nonprofit organization that: (A) develops, sponsors, or administers a standardized test used for purposes of admission to or class placement in a postsecondary educational institution or a program within a postsecondary educational institution; and (B) is subject to Subchapter D, Chapter 32, Education Code. Sec. 121.023. DISPLAY OF AGE RATING FOR SOFTWARE APPLICATION. (a) If the owner of an app store that operates in this state has a mechanism for displaying an age rating or other content notice, the owner shall: (1) make available to users an explanation of the mechanism; and (2) display for each software application available for download and purchase on the app store the age rating and other content notice. (b) If the owner of an app store that operates in this state does not have a mechanism for displaying an age rating or other content notice, the owner shall display for each software application available for download and purchase on the app store: (1) the rating under Section 121.052 assigned to the software application; and (2) the specific content or other elements that led to the rating assigned under Section 121.052. © The information displayed under this section must be clear, accurate, and conspicuous. Sec. 121.024. INFORMATION FOR SOFTWARE APPLICATION DEVELOPERS. The owner of an app store that operates in this state shall, using a commercially available method, allow the developer of a software application to access current information related to: (1) the age category assigned to each user under Section 121.021(b); and (2) whether consent has been obtained for each minor user under Section 121.022. Sec. 121.025. PROTECTION OF PERSONAL DATA. The owner of an app store that operates in this state shall protect the personal data of users by: (1) limiting the collection and processing of personal data to the minimum amount necessary for: (A) verifying the age of an individual; (B) obtaining consent under Section 121.022; and © maintaining compliance records; and (2) transmitting personal data using industry-standard encryption protocols that ensure data integrity and confidentiality. Sec. 121.026. VIOLATION. (a) The owner of an app store that operates in this state violates this subchapter if the owner: (1) enforces a contract or a provision of a terms of service agreement against a minor that the minor entered into or agreed to without consent under Section 121.022; (2) knowingly misrepresents information disclosed under Section 121.022(f)(1); (3) obtains a blanket consent to authorize multiple downloads or purchases; or (4) shares or discloses personal data obtained for purposes of Section 121.021, except as required by Section 121.024 or other law. (b) The owner of an app store is not liable for a violation of Section 121.021 or 121.022 if the owner of the app store: (1) uses widely adopted industry standards to: (A) verify the age of each user as required by Section 121.021; and (B) obtain parental consent as required by Section 121.022; and (2) applies those standards consistently and in good faith. Sec. 121.027. CONSTRUCTION OF SUBCHAPTER. Nothing in this subchapter may be construed to: (1) prevent the owner of an app store that operates in this state from taking reasonable measures to block, detect, or prevent the distribution of: (A) obscene material, as that term is defined by Section 43.21, Penal Code; or (B) other material that may be harmful to minors; (2) require the owner of an app store that operates in this state to disclose a user’s personal data to the developer of a software application except as provided by this subchapter; (3) allow the owner of an app store that operates in this state to use a measure required by this chapter in a manner that is arbitrary, capricious, anticompetitive, or unlawful; (4) block or filter spam; (5) prevent criminal activity; or (6) protect the security of an app store or software application. SUBCHAPTER C. DUTIES OF SOFTWARE APPLICATION DEVELOPERS Sec. 121.051. APPLICABILITY OF SUBCHAPTER. This subchapter applies only to the developer of a software application that the developer makes available to users in this state through an app store. Sec. 121.052. DESIGNATION OF AGE RATING. (a) The developer of a software application shall assign to each software application and to each purchase that can be made through the software application an age rating based on the age categories described by Section 121.021(b). (b) The developer of a software application shall provide to each app store through which the developer makes the software application available: (1) each rating assigned under Subsection (a); and (2) the specific content or other elements that led to each rating provided under Subdivision (1). Sec. 121.053. CHANGES TO SOFTWARE APPLICATIONS. (a) The developer of a software application shall provide notice to each app store through which the developer makes the software application available before making any significant change to the terms of service or privacy policy of the software application. (b) For purposes of this section, a change is significant if it: (1) changes the type or category of personal data collected, stored, or shared by the developer; (2) affects or changes the rating assigned to the software application under Section 121.052 or the content or elements that led to that rating; (3) adds new monetization features to the software application, including: (A) new opportunities to make a purchase in or using the software application; or (B) new advertisements in the software application; or (4) materially changes the functionality or user experience of the software application. Sec. 121.054. AGE VERIFICATION. (a) The developer of a software application shall create and implement a system to use information received under Section 121.024 to verify: (1) for each user of the software application, the age category assigned to that user under Section 121.021(b); and (2) for each minor user of the software application, whether consent has been obtained under Section 121.022. (b) The developer of a software application shall use information received from the owner of an app store under Section 121.024 to perform the verification required by this section. Sec. 121.055. USE OF PERSONAL DATA. (a) The developer of a software application may use personal data provided to the developer under Section 121.024 only to: (1) enforce restrictions and protections on the software application related to age; (2) ensure compliance with applicable laws and regulations; and (3) implement safety-related features and default settings. (b) The developer of a software application shall delete personal data provided by the owner of an app store under Section 121.024 on completion of the verification required by Section 121.054. © Notwithstanding Subsection (a), nothing in this chapter relieves a social media platform from doing age verification as required by law. Sec. 121.056. VIOLATION. (a) Except as provided by this section, the developer of a software application violates this subchapter if the developer: (1) enforces a contract or a provision of a terms of service agreement against a minor that the minor entered into or agreed to without consent under Section 121.054; (2) knowingly misrepresents an age rating or reason for that rating under Section 121.052; or (3) shares or discloses the personal data of a user that was acquired under this subchapter. (b) The developer of a software application is not liable for a violation of Section 121.052 if the software developer: (1) uses widely adopted industry standards to determine the rating and specific content required by this section; and (2) applies those standards consistently and in good faith. © The developer of a software application is not liable for a violation of Section 121.054 if the software developer: (1) relied in good faith on age category and consent information received from the owner of an app store; and (2) otherwise complied with the requirements of this section. SUBCHAPTER D. ENFORCEMENT Sec. 121.101. DECEPTIVE TRADE PRACTICE. A violation of this chapter constitutes a deceptive trade practice in addition to the practices described by Subchapter E, Chapter 17, and is actionable under that subchapter. Sec. 121.102. CUMULATIVE REMEDIES. The remedies provided by this chapter are not exclusive and are in addition to any other action or remedy provided by law. SECTION 2. It is the intent of the legislature that every provision, section, subsection, sentence, clause, phrase, or word in this Act, and every application of the provisions in this Act to every person, group of persons, or circumstances, is severable from each other. If any application of any provision in this Act to any person, group of persons, or circumstances is found by a court to be invalid for any reason, the remaining applications of that provision to all other persons and circumstances shall be severed and may not be affected. SECTION 3. This Act takes effect January 1, 2026.
______________________________ ______________________________ President of the Senate Speaker of the House I hereby certify that S.B. No. 2420 passed the Senate on April 16, 2025, by the following vote: Yeas 30, Nays 1; and that the Senate concurred in House amendments on May 14, 2025, by the following vote: Yeas 30, Nays 1. ______________________________ Secretary of the Senate I hereby certify that S.B. No. 2420 passed the House, with amendments, on May 9, 2025, by the following vote: Yeas 120, Nays 9, three present not voting. ______________________________ Chief Clerk of the House Approved: ______________________________ Date ______________________________ Governor
Rejoice, in time this will become the norm all over the world. You have all been driven into a trap that was carefully set so that it could snap shut at any moment.
Unclear if this would impact any app store that has no Texas or U.S. presence. Is Texas planning on blocking websites? It would be entertaining to see.
Shithole state for morons and businessmen that don’t want to pay taxes.
2025-03-13 Senate Received by the Secretary of the Senate
https://legiscan.com/TX/bill/SB2420/2025
It takes less than a year to lock things down.
Kids will grow up around the idea that there is no freedom and their superiors (e.i. the corrupt companies) have to decide their rights.
My dad, now passed, once said “I’m glad I won’t have to live in the world you kids are growing up in” (or approximately those words). He was primarily referring to privacy and rights, which I think were being directed by Bush at that time.
I was young and privileged enough that I had noticed a few worrying governmental trends but didn’t really feel myself affected, nor did I have much concern about the future. I now feel his words more impactfully.
(I know some of the prevailing sentiments on lemmy; I worry about our collective future but don’t resent my dad for his part in bringing me into this world. He was a good dad who provided me with a good life and set me up to continue that after he was gone and, even if that weren’t true, he couldn’t have predicted the world we’re in today.)
I’m now saying the same thing. The future looks increasingly bleak.
Yes, it’s going to be a downward spiral until we die.
It’s better to accept it and adjust accordingly instead of pretending things are going to improve.
spoiler
It’s only going to get worse because the average person is a moron with no self-respect or self-sufficiency.
Well, children might get the idea that it’s okay to slingshot birds at pigs if they’re allowed to download apps!
Data brokers are allowed to buy data from the dark web after our data is hacked. I saw a 1 million fine I think?
App store owners will use this or that, which will get hacked, then our data will be bought up, and then it will be endlessly repackaged and moved around. That’s why you can’t remove your data using those scam services; the moment it’s moved to another broker it’s fair game again. You’ll never scrub your data.
Your insurance will know what apps you installed. Walmart will know what apps you installed. Police bypass warrants by leasing this data from corporations like Flock. Just add it to the pile.
sounds like quite a pain to google/apple, I think they should just ban them until they change their minds
If this was Lithuania or Rhode Island I’m pretty sure they would, but both Apple and Google have massive presences in Texas, thousands of employees and many offices. It would not go well for them to “ban” them and have their assets seized and employees arrested.
Why would anyone get arrested? There is no requirement for a business to operate in Texas or for people in Texas. And it is almost a certainty that Google and Apple have clauses saying they can not serve anyone for almost any reason.
A man can dream…
Orwellian surveillance dystopia.
So… conservatives hate China so much, yet copies exactly what China does? 🤔
Texans hate freedom.
They love being useful idiots, though.
Bot
?
They are Christian nationalists and many of them want authoritarianism.
Conservatives have taken up everything they claimed to hate 25 years ago. Go bomb dictators because the dictators are oppressive? Now they want their own dictator. Talk about how women and other segments of society in that country are oppressed? Now they oppress women and other minorities. Hate government spending? Proceed to piss money away at levels never seen before. Rail against government interference in private business? Proceed to meddle with and claim they will tell businesses how to behave. Etc. etc.
You don’t need an ID to download apps on your phone in China. The process is virtually identical to how we do it in the West.
It’s wild how almost every bad thing in China is worse in the US now.
Makes one think: if I’m going to deal with the same level (or worse) of authoritarianism as China, I might as well at least get the lower cost of living and better ability to be car-free that China has.
/this is rhetorical, not actually considering a relocation to China
You’d be surprised how many of these “bad things in China” are US propaganda. I guess those millions spent on misinformation are paying off.
I think the limit for me was the articles about forced repatriation, where China had snatch squads sent into other countries to force people to return, even when they had broken no laws recognized by that country. Oh, and the Uyghur genocides, which multiple global newspapers have reported on.
I will accept “US Bad”. These days, any claim of a large empire being perfect should be treated with massive suspicion.
While that is technically true, do any of the “everything” apps have meaningful functionality without an account/ID?
It’s projecting.
Hard no for me if this comes where i live, which is not the USA. Libre Phone and self hosting/loading will be inevitable in such a scenario, as tinfoil as this can sound.
This will just become an excuse to jail you, then. “Unlicensed radio broadcast” or whatever is the equivalent. With those kinds of brutish, authoritarian regimes, anyone of intelligence is a threat that needs to be disappeared, and that includes you poindexter with <checks notes> OsmAnd~ installed on their phone.
You and me are allies. Imagine 100 000 allies like us two in a jail for such petty reasons. What do you think would happen in such a scenario?
Gulags full of free workers!
It has been done before.
We’ll just wait to be picked up.
Or not.
You and me are allies.
Hell yea we are. Let’s be real though, if we’re in jail we’re not doing shit. We have to stay out of jail to be effective.
How many people in your city know what self-hosting even is, though? Is it anywhere near hundreds or even tens of thousands? I’d be shocked if it was even 1000 in my city. I’m willing to bet every single person in this thread has technical skills that far exceed the average person.
How many people in your city know what self-hosting even is, though?
WAAAAAY more than you’re giving credit for
I think you’d be surprised. The average person has trouble remembering to check a device is plugged in when they’re wondering why it won’t turn on. People generally don’t know what “hosting” means, let alone “self-hosting”, it’s far nerdier than you give us all credit for.
But if you live in a city of 300,000 people and 99% don’t know about self-hosting you still have 3,000 people who do. Unite!
This in combination with Google closing down the android ecosphere, kinda says a lot, no?
This in combination with Google closing down the android ecosphere, kinda says a lot, no?
It says that my next phone will be a dumb feature flip phone.
Suddenly that’s beginning to feel like an attractive idea again.
Tread on me harder daddy
Well that fucking sucks. Can someone explain how this will affect those on GrapheneOS? I’m assuming it’ll only affect play store and proxy apps, e.g. aurora store. Any other way to get around this, or anything else I’m missing?
I expect VPN + Aurora (or any other non Play store) will be enough to get around it
Freedom loving shitheads. The freedom to do as you are told. What a bunch of sheep.
Doublespeak has always been their bread and butter, like “trickle down”. Add the mindrot of “faith”, and bang, you have the reigns. My birth family ate that Reagan-era shit up.
edit: heh, I didn’t notice your username until after
“The slave who cannot organize his own revolt deserves no pity for his fate. He alone is responsible for his misfortune if he believes his master’s false promise of freedom. Freedom can be won only through struggle.”
- Thomas Sankara
Does the context make that better? As it stands that sounds like something Kanye would say.
XD omg how embarrassing… Kanye and Sankara sound the same lmao