Apple and Google Dodge Texas Age Verification Law as Judge Blocks It

Tech giants sidestep Lone Star State's latest regulatory push—for now.
The Legal Blockade
A federal judge slammed the brakes on Texas' controversial age verification mandate, handing Apple and Google a temporary reprieve. The ruling halts enforcement while courts weigh constitutional challenges—a move that keeps app stores operating business-as-usual.
Privacy vs. Protection
Texas lawmakers pitched the law as a shield for minors. Tech companies fired back, calling it a surveillance overreach that tramples user privacy and First Amendment rights. The judge's injunction suggests the legal arguments have teeth.
The Compliance Dodge
Neither Apple nor Google had implemented the verification systems. Now they won't need to—unless the state wins on appeal. That means no new hoops for users, no costly infrastructure builds for the platforms, and another regulatory headache deferred.
Broader Implications
This isn't just a Texas story. The case tests how far states can go in dictating tech platform operations—and whether age-gating mandates can survive judicial scrutiny. A final ruling could ripple across other states crafting similar laws.
The Bottom Line
For now, the tech titans avoid another compliance tax. But the fight's far from over. Texas officials already vow to appeal, setting up a longer legal war where the only guaranteed winners are the lawyers billing by the hour—a growth sector more reliable than crypto.
First legal challenge sets stage for national debate
This ruling matters because Texas was first in line with this type of law. Utah and Louisiana passed similar ones, and Congress is now looking at doing this nationwide. So what happens here could set the tone for what comes next everywhere else.
So how the law would work? App stores like Apple and Google would have to check ages, then pass that information along to app developers. The goal is keeping kids away from apps they shouldn’t be using. Parent advocacy groups came up with this idea originally, though Meta and other big tech companies like Snap and X ended up lobbying for it too.
The Computer & Communications Industry Association sued to stop the law. Their members include Apple, Google, and Meta. They claimed the law “imposes a broad censorship regime on the entire universe of mobile apps” and WOULD make teens jump through hoops to access online content. Kids and their parents would have to give up personal data just to use apps.
A student advocacy group filed their own lawsuit too. They argued the law violates the constitution by limiting what speech kids can see. Texas officials say the law is constitutional and should be allowed.
The state can appeal to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, which has overturned similar blocks on internet rules before. Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office hasn’t said yet whether they’ll appeal.
Judge says law fails constitutional test
Judge Pitman said the law has to pass the strictest First Amendment test. That means Texas must prove it’s “the least restrictive means of achieving a compelling state interest.” He found the state didn’t meet that bar. In fact, he said it wouldn’t even pass a lower standard because Texas hasn’t shown their methods actually connect to their goals.
The judge acknowledged protecting kids online is important. But he added, “the means to achieve that end must be consistent with the First Amendment. However compelling the policy concerns, and however widespread the agreement that the issue must be addressed, the Court remains bound by the rule of law.”
Apple really didn’t want this law to happen. CEO Tim Cook reportedly called Governor Greg Abbott himself to try talking him out of signing it. The company has previously faced antitrust scrutiny in various jurisdictions over its app store policies.
Google opposed the Texas version too but recently supported California’s different approach, which collects less user data.
A House Energy and Commerce subcommittee just advanced two bills that mix ideas from both the Texas and California versions. This push for a national law worried Apple enough that Cook met with committee leaders the day before they voted on the bills.
With all these laws moving forward in different states and Congress, app store companies are starting to make their own changes. Apple rolled out new kids safety features this year, including letting parents share their children’s age ranges with app developers.
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