Why Utahns might need to show ID in order to download apps
Lawmakers on Utah's Capitol Hill advanced a bill that would require digital app stores to verify the ages of users in an effort to protect underage Utahns from accessing potentially harmful content and having personal data collected by apps.
The bill is similar to the state's previous attempts to require age verification on social media platforms, though several opponents said the bill opens kids and families to even more invasive data collection while potentially violating constitutional free speech protections.
Sen. Todd Weiler, R-Woods Cross, presented his proposal to the Senate Transportation, Public Utilities, Energy and Technology Committee Tuesday, comparing app privacy agreements to car rental agreements — saying most parents would never allow their children to sign agreements with a car rental company.
"You would never let your child or your grandchild enter into a legally binding contract, and yet, we parents are doing this every day by allowing our children to carry around smartphones with apps that can be easily downloaded," he said.
Weiler's SB142 — also known as the App Store Accountability Act — is similar to a federal piece of legislation introduced last year by Utah Sen. Mike Lee. It requires app stores, such as the Apple's iTunes or Google's Play, to verify the ages of users and sort them into one of several categories: children under age 13, younger teenagers between ages 13-15, older teenagers aged 16 and 17, and adults.
If a minor in Utah tries to create an account with an app store, Weiler's bill would require that they associate with a parent account before being allowed to download apps or make in-app purchases. The bill prevents app store providers from entering contracts with minors without parental consent and requires app developers to enforce any age restrictions on their apps.
The proposal requires the state Division of Consumer Protection to create standards for age verification and allows parents of harmed minors to sue over violations of the bill.
Several members of the public spoke for and against the proposal — including three teenage girls who shared personal experiences with social media use.
Rachel Williams, 16, spoke in favor of the bill, saying her parents closely monitor her phone. "Unlike other kids, I don't mind. It keeps me safe," she said.
Some opponents, however, said the bill could prompt lawsuits over freedom of speech rights. David McGarry, with the Taxpayers Protection Alliance, said requiring age verification "would create acute privacy-related dangers for children," adding that he believes the measure is unconstitutional.
He said it violates the First Amendment, particularly the "rights of adult users forced to submit sensitive personal data as a precondition to accessing constitutionally protected speech online."
Amaya Mueller, with the Utah-based Sutherland Institute, disagreed, sayingt the bill "empowers parents" without restricting free speech.
"This bill does not prohibit app developers from creating content," she said. "This bill would simply prohibit app stores from giving children free reign access to potentially harmful app downloads," Mueller said.
Weiler said he doesn't believe his bill is "any less constitutional than asking for an ID at a 7-Eleven when you buy a six-pack of bear."
None of the app stores or social media platforms directly impacted by the bill addressed the committee, but several tech industry groups weighed in, including NetChoice, a trade association that has sued Utah over its social media regulations. Justin Hill, a representative of NetChoice, argued against SB142, saying there are already other tools for parents to monitor and regulate their children's app usage.
Caleb Williamson, with the App Association, also spoke against the bill, saying it would potentially harm small businesses that develop apps because they will have to navigate the new regulations imposed by the state. The App Association receives a majority of its funds from Apple, which operates one of the two most popular app stores, per Bloomberg.
State lawmakers have been focused on mitigating the alleged harms of social media platforms on minors for several years, and have made efforts to require that social media platforms check the ages of users and turn on parental controls for underage users.
Large social media platforms have largely been resistant to Utah's efforts, but Meta — the owner of Facebook and Instagram — has lobbied to shift age verification responsibilities to the app stores themselves, according to the Washington Post. Supporters of app store verification argue it evens the playing field for all apps that might have age-restricted material and the approach is thought to be a way around free speech issues raised by other social media laws.
In a Deseret News op-ed published Monday, Weiler and several co-authors alleged that app stores "routinely treat kids like adults, steering them into accepting exploitative terms of service with billion-dollar corporations," which they said can potentially "give apps sweeping access to personal data — photos, contact lists, exact locations, even microphones and cameras — all without meaningful consent or oversight."
SB142 cleared the committee with unanimous support and now heads to the Senate floor for consideration.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
13 minutes ago
- Forbes
New Apple ‘Lessons' Ad Highlights Student Learning As Mac Sales Grow In India
Apple Lessons ad Apple Apple MacBooks are arguably one of the best options for students, and the Cupertino giant is highlighting this in its new ad for India. Released on June 4, the new Lessons ad focuses on how students can use a Mac to 'level up' and make the most of their studies. This comes at a time when M4 Mac sales have seen double-digit growth in a quarter. The new Lessons ad encourages students to try different approaches to learning instead of mugging up answers. It showcases a few Apple Intelligence features like Summary in Writing Tools to turn a lengthy note into short bullet points, and how the MacBook Air M4 allows students to run multiple engineering applications, including AutoCAD, MATLAB, and more simultaneously. According to a report from Counterpoint, Apple saw 17% YoY growth in the global PC market shipments in Q1 2025. It was driven by M4 series Macs. In India, Apple had a 6% PC market share with 29% growth in 2024. The Cupertino tech giant has seen very strong momentum for its MacBook sales in the country—and there are various reasons for it. 'Education as a segment is increasing. Young professionals and even young students are opting for Macs, especially after the launch of their M series chipsets, because a lot of people believe and correlate that to performance and efficiency gains, which they offer,' says Tarun Pathik, Research Director at Counterpoint. The consumer financing and discounts on Apple products are also playing a major part in MacBook adoption in India. 'That [consumer financing and discounts] is one of the reasons why iPhone sales are growing in India at one of the fastest rates in the world,' he added. 'And this has led to an increase in Mac sales. We have always seen a very healthy step-by-step entry into the Apple ecosystem.' The first point of entry into the Apple ecosystem is the iPhone, which is followed by the AirPods, Apple Watch, iPad, and eventually a Mac. 'We are seeing that transition of such users who entered through iPhone a couple of years back and now they are reaching the level three or four to buy a Mac,' explains Pathik. While Apple is focusing on the education segment with its new ad, the Cupertino giant is also forming corporate partnerships that have contributed to its Mac growth. 'Indian companies like Zoho and Wipro have integrated Macs into their operations, which has increased Apple's enterprise adoption,' he said. With education and enterprise both driving momentum, Apple's Mac strategy in India seems to be working. The new Lessons ad is a timely push to deepen that growth.
Yahoo
15 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Apple EPS Faces 2--3% Hit After Epic Ruling
Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) is bracing for a 23% EPS headwind after a federal appeals court upheld an injunction requiring link-out payments in the App Store, potentially shifting billions in developer fees over the next two years. Despite this ruling taking effect April 30, May App Store revenue climbed 13% overall (10% in the U.S.), suggesting many developers won't abandon Apple's ecosystem due to the convenience and trust of its billing. Evercore ISI's Amit Daryanani notes the App Store generates about $21 billion in annual sales, with roughly $7 billion of that coming from U.S. developer fees; while a complete fee loss would imply a 6% EPS hit, he expects a more modest impact as developers weigh higher alternative fees against Apple's seamless experience. J.P. Morgan's Samik Chatterjee agrees on a 2%3% EPS drag, citing an AlphaWise survey where 28% of U.S. iPhone users say they'd be extremely likely to link outputting roughly $3.7 billion in revenue at risk and translating to a worst-case 16-cent EPS hit (2%). Morgan Stanley's data also points to a 2% EPS exposure. Gaming accounts for about 65% of U.S. App Store sales, mostly $0.99 one-time purchases; if users switch to payment platforms like Stripe, they could end up paying 3% plus 30 cents per transactionoften more than Apple's 27% commission. Apple insists that over 90% of 2024 billings incurred no commission and emphasizes the App Store's role in helping developers reach a global audience. CEO Tim Cook highlighted that so many developers design great apps, build successful businesses, and reach Apple users through this platform. Investors should watch June App Store metrics and upcoming appellate developments to gauge the long-term financial fallout, since even a small EPS hit matters given Apple's $3 trillion valuation. In other news, Apple has tapped India's Tata Group to handle after-sales repairs for iPhones and MacBooks in India, taking over from Taiwan's Wistron unit, ICT Service Management Solutions. Tata already assembles iPhones at three South India facilitiesone of which produces certain partsand will now carry out repairs at its Karnataka assembly site. This ongoing transition underscores Apple's confidence in Tata as it diversifies manufacturing beyond China, where Tata also assembles devices for domestic and export markets. Apple, Wistron and Tata declined immediate comment. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Introducing Emma: The AI Event Planner from Events in Minutes
Begin with a quick call; Emma does the research, pricing, and availability checks, then hands you a concise shortlist so you can choose—minus the hassle. San Francisco, CA , June 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Events in Minutes, the AI-powered marketplace trusted by PayPal, Google, LinkedIn, Uber, and Meta, today launched Emma, a conversational AI Event Planner that takes the grunt work out of organizing gatherings of any size while keeping the host firmly in in Minutes introduces Emma, AI Event PlannerHow Emma Works Call +1 (415) 634-4617 and describe the event you have in mind—whether it's a ten-person workshop or a thousand-person conference. Emma searches reviews, verifies quality, and checks real-time availability and pricing across a rigorously screened vendor network. She delivers a concise shortlist (2-4 best options per category) so you make the final calls without drowning in research. Approve and book through Events in Minutes; contracts, receipts, and messages live in one tidy dashboard. Why It Matters 'Planning an event shouldn't feel like a second job,' said Hojr Pisheh, Co-Founder & CEO. 'Emma handles the scouting, vetting, and scheduling so hosts can focus on creative choices, confident they're choosing from the best, most reliable vendors.' Any event, big or small: professional planning isn't just for large budgets anymore. Time saved: Emma replaces hours of Google searches and phone tag with one streamlined conversation. Quality assured: only vendors meeting strict reliability and review thresholds appear on your shortlist. All-in-one checkout: pay once, track everything, skip the paperwork chaos. A Market Ripe for Reinvention The global events industry tops $1 trillion annually, yet booking remains fragmented and manual. By adding AI automation with a vetted vendor marketplace, Events in Minutes compresses what used to take weeks into a painless, guided workflow. About Events in Minutes Founded in 2023 and headquartered in San Francisco, Events in Minutes is an AI-native marketplace that makes booking events as easy as ordering take-out. The platform pairs event hosts with top-tier vendors through transparent pricing, real-time availability, and one-click checkout—delivering a delightful planning experience for every occasion. Media Contactpress@ in Minutes Introduces Emma, AI Event Planner A video accompanying this announcement is available at in to access your portfolio