Comment Analogy not strong enough (Score 1) 14
>"Judge Robert Pitman wrote that the statute "is akin to a law that would require every bookstore to verify the age of every customer at the door"
No, it is much worse. Because it isn't just a store, this is much broader than that. It is more akin to having a mall, and requiring every person to show an ID at the entrance, AND THAT DATA IS RECORDED, and stored, and linked, and shared, and later stolen and abused. AND you have someone follow you around everywhere you go there and take notes.
If you want to protect your children in the mall, YOU GO WITH YOUR CHILDREN and supervise what they have access to. It is not the job of the mall to parent your kids.
I don't want to live in a world where adults have to ID themselves to gain access to websites or app stores. I DO want to live in a world where parents (and their agents) do not allow their children to have unsupervised access to unrestricted, internet-connected devices. Give parents better lockdown and whitelist tools AND promote a new social norm that you can't just give a stock connected phone/tablet/computer to a child and walk away.