People demonstrate as Apple CEO Tim Cook visits a store, as the iPhone 17 series goes on sale, in New York City, U.S., September 19, 2025. (Reuters File)
Share
|
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
Apple CEO Tim Cook met U.S. House members on Wednesday to push back against federal legislation that could require the iPhone maker to authenticate users’ ages and possibly collect sensitive data on children, lobbying instead to put the onus on parents to decide whether to tell app stores about a child’s age.
The bill, called the App Store Accountability Act, is aimed at making sure that minors are not using harmful content online.
Texas has already signed a similar bill into law, requiring parental consent to download apps or make in-app purchases for users aged below 18. Utah was the first U.S. state to pass a similar law earlier this year and Australia introduced a nationwide social media ban on under-16s this week.
While the notion of age limits for online content has broad U.S. public support, legislative efforts have kicked off a behind-the-scenes brawl between Apple and Google and tech rivals such as Meta Platforms. Apple and Google, which own the largest app stores in the world, say verifying the age of minors could entail mass collection of children’s birth certificates and other sensitive documents, while Facebook and Instagram owner Meta has argued that requiring app stores to check ages is the only effective way to enforce limits.
Apple, which has long resisted government interference in data privacy matters, has expressed concerns that the federal U.S. legislation would require it to collect identifying information about virtually every Apple user, including children. Cook met House Energy and Commerce Committee members on Capitol Hill on Wednesday to discuss the concerns, Apple said.
“Not all legislative proposals are equally protective of privacy or focused on holding all players in the ecosystem accountable,” Apple’s global head of privacy, Hilary Ware, said in a letter to the committee last week. “Some well-intended proposals for age verification at the app marketplace level … would require the collection of sensitive information about anyone who wants to download an app, even if it’s an app that simply provides weather updates or sports scores.”
A Pew Research poll in 2023 found that 81% of Americans support requiring parental consent for children to create social media accounts and 71% support age verification before using social media.
—
(Reporting by Sayantani Ghosh and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Lincoln Feast)
RELATED TOPICS:
Categories
Fresno Train-Vehicle Collision Causes Traffic Disruptions
US Dollar Tumbles After Fed Cuts Rates, Powell Comments




