California AB 1856 advances with open-source exemption but would expand age-check requirements to browsers and websites

California lawmakers advanced AB 1856, a bill that would exempt open-source operating systems from parts of the state's age-assurance law but broaden age-checking requirements for many internet services. EFF says the amended bill would still extend the age-bracketing regime created by AB 1043 beyond operating systems and app stores to web browsers and websites, increasing pressure to collect users' age data and potentially affecting anonymity, privacy, and access to lawful speech.
Why it matters: If enacted, the bill could force more online services to ask for and retain age information, creating new privacy and security risks for ordinary users while raising compliance burdens for developers and platforms. People and organizations tracking internet freedom and privacy policy should watch the Senate process closely.

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One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: CA's AB 1856 Exempts Open Source But Expands Age-Gating
Molly Buckley 2026.05.29 100% relevant
This article establishes a distinct California policy story centered on AB 1856's legislative advance, its new open-source exemption, and its simultaneous expansion of age-gating obligations to browsers and websites.
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