Debian Project Leader Andreas Tille has addressed the ongoing debate over age-verification laws and their potential impact on free software operating systems. Long story short: he clarified that Debian has not adopted a position and is awaiting legal analysis.

In his latest “Bits from the DPL” message, Tille stated that the main question is whether operating systems and package distribution mechanisms might be required to provide age-related information to applications.

He noted that Debian and other projects are discussing the issue, and that Software in the Public Interest, a non-profit corporation founded to act as a fiscal sponsor for organizations that develop open-source software and hardware, has begun seeking legal guidance.

  • quick_snail@feddit.nl
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    5 hours ago

    He also noted that, from a non-lawyer perspective, it remains uncertain how these regulations would apply to a non-commercial, volunteer-driven project like Debian, which does not sell software and distributes it in a decentralized manner.

    FUCKING THANK YOU.

  • someone@lemmy.today
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    6 hours ago

    The problem isn’t the specific nature of the rule: having an api call in the background that can broadcast a user’s age range (if it isn’t a clearly identifiable marker) makes sense.

    The problem is that if the government is able to tell open source developers “YOU MUST INSERT THIS CODE OR ELSE!!!” then what’s next?

    Will in 5 years they require Persona in order to install an Operating System to combat terrorism?

    Will in 7 years they require a closed source module created by the government to be running at all times and the kernel must check to make sure if the closed source module is running?

    Part of open source software is creativity, freedom, and freedom of speech. Some software is created because developers like creating things.

    I hope Debian fights back against this on first amendment grounds. Great code is not that different from a great work of art, there is unique creativity in something elegantly coded that functions well, and telling developers they can’t code how they want is the path toward totalitarianism.

    It’s one thing to force this into Microslop and Android and iOS because those are large profitable companies who don’t actually care as long as they make money. It’s another thing to force FOSS developers who develop for free because of the love of software and great code that they must change their code in a certain way.

    • ATS1312@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 hours ago

      The problem is that if the government is able to tell open source developers “YOU MUST INSERT THIS CODE OR ELSE!!!” then what’s next?

      What’s next is that code gets a build flag that’s turned off in the makefile, and maintainers have to explicitly turn it on for that code to compile in. Distros maintain patches that add this sort of thing all the time, even if upstream refuses to do so.

      And Debian is saying that, as a non-profit, all volunteer org? This bullshit doesn’t apply to them. They are building a legal basis for the makefile solution I’m describing above, and its default-off state in their repositories.

      All of your catastrophising can be addressed this way. We need devs like you who can help make sure this solution is implemented exactly as described.

      Debian repos are great - we can even blacklist official repos and replace them with bare, sketchy IP addresses if we like, and share binaries through them.

      You cannot stop the signal. Quit thinking like a voter trapped in a Fascist hellscape, and start thinking like a hacker that the state cannot outmaneuver.

    • UNY0N@feddit.org
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      6 hours ago

      That does nothing to address the issue. What happens when the requirement is adopted elsewhere? Just keep excluding territories?

      It seems like a simple fix, but this would play right into the hands of the corporate overlords. And California is not some tiny state.

      If California were an independent nation, it would rank as the fourth largest economy in the world in nominal terms, behind Germany and ahead of Japan.

      • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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        6 hours ago

        Slap a label on it that it’s not legal to use in those areas and move on while they fight it out legally. It’s distributed via p2p anyway so if people in those places still want to use it they can. Absolutely no reason to bend on this.

        • UNY0N@feddit.org
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          6 hours ago

          I agree that that solves some problems, 100%. But I’ve seen the downward slide of society take hard-fought civil rights away for several decades now. It’s never a sudden process, it always starts small and then slowly grows.

          This is just the beginning, and it should be fought against with tooth and nail now, not just postponed so that we have to deal with this issue once the fascists already have some momentum.

          • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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            6 hours ago

            Which is why I included the bit about fighting it out legally.

            But I’ve seen the downward slide of society take hard-fought civil rights away for several decades now. It’s never a sudden process, it always starts small and then slowly grows.

            That’s what happens by adding features that comply with these stupid laws. Step one is NOT doing that. People can still use the software even if it doesn’t comply. What is the government going to do break into everyone’s home and look at their computers?

    • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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      12 hours ago

      Dont they just have to put a disclaimer saying that usage of the OS isnt legal in those places? That works for all sorts of other stuff so why not here?

    • ATS1312@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 hours ago

      Choosing to claim a niche where the law doesn’t apply is… A choice in favor of the law, instead of a circumvention method?

      You’re thinking like a voter instead of a hacker. Stop that.

  • panda_abyss@lemmy.ca
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    18 hours ago

    I’m against these laws, strongly, but I think sending vitriol at systemd and distrust is not constructive.

    The battle is legal and pretending it isn’t and fighting our maintainers who realistically can’t afford to be sued over good, is not helping the cause.

    It’s humans at the end of the pipe. Thoughtful and vulnerable humans.

    • Senal@programming.dev
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      13 hours ago

      I’d say it’s less a legal fight than it is a fight for control , using the law this time.

      Pretending that what people are upset about is the field rather than the pre-capitulation is not helping the cause.

      Most of the hate isn’t for the technical implementation of a field, though some FOSS people are upset at that as well.

      You can sidestep the legal fight by not serving the places where it is illegal.

      That’s doesn’t necessarily align with the goals of whatever project, but it is possible.

      • Stitch0815@feddit.org
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        13 hours ago

        The dude literally added an optional birthday field next to an optional full name field and an optional adress field

        Then he got death threats

        If you think that is an appropriate response you are a litteral child, mentally speaking.

        • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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          6 hours ago

          It’s not so simple as that, the dude provided a framework for privacy abusers to use to force us into their bullshit. If that framework did not exist they wouldn’t be able to do that so easily. There is absolutely zero reason for there to be a centralized location on an operating system that just hands out your demographic information to whoever asks for it and yes, that includes the fields that already existed. None of it should be in there. This is not something we should be compromising on. There are enough invasions into our privacy as it is.

          Doesn’t deserve death threats but he does deserve hate.

        • Senal@programming.dev
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          13 hours ago

          Figurative, unless you’re actually proposing a real, measurable, testable large scale mental deficit.

          but yeah, death threat are stupid.

          • Stitch0815@feddit.org
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            12 hours ago

            unless you’re actually proposing a real, measurable, testable large scale mental deficit.

            I do if you think death threats are appropriate

              • Stitch0815@feddit.org
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                11 hours ago

                So you think there is a world where death threats are warranted for a… Pull request?

                That seems like a stretch… But you do you i suppose.

                • Senal@programming.dev
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                  11 hours ago

                  I’ll assume you pulled that mental gymnastic routine out of the same place you store how you think the word literally is supposed to work.

                  At no point was “pull requests deserve death threats” even hinted at.

                  Semi-reasonable takes wrapped in logically dubious arguments is snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

                  Doubling down with a retort that only requires you to read 5 lines to see it isn’t true is wandering in the fields of free and easy victory and choosing to drown yourself in the 2 inch puddle of defeat.

            • Mubelotix@jlai.lu
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              12 hours ago

              I’m telling you that you did not understand what the guy you replied to really meant

              • Stitch0815@feddit.org
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                11 hours ago

                Oh I know what he meant

                I just think he relativizes how the discussion was going.

                Constructive critizism is of course fine But this whole thing was the exact opposite

        • Avicenna@programming.dev
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          13 hours ago

          Death threats are stupid and indicate severe mental problems. This does not change the fact that the author explicitly mentioned that the aim was compliance with possible age verification laws. Just because he received death threats from some idiot man child does not mean he is right or what he did is inconsequential. It is a statement that they are willing to accept possible future identity verification laws without any legal fight and resistance.

  • Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.net
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    21 hours ago

    TL;DR they are lawyering up and hasn’t said for or aginst

    Fair enough, that means they’re probably gonna sue over it.

    • quick_snail@feddit.nl
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      5 hours ago

      I read it as “we’re not gonna do it, and we’re getting the lawyers to tell us what we have to do to to avoid this bullshit”

    • plz1@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      Eh, more like they are having a lawyer help determine whether they comply or not (to avoid being sued/held liable for non-compliance).

        • Onno (VK6FLAB)@lemmy.radio
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          15 hours ago

          Asking an expert for their opinion, even if that expert is a lawyer, is not “lawyering up”, nor is their any evidence whatsoever that the Debian Project or the SPI is going to “probably sue over it”.

          The summary under the heading “TL;DR” was nothing more than an inflammatory opinionated interpretation of the headline and as interpretations go, it was not in any way, shape, or form, anything that might be considered a summary, which is what the “TL;DR” implied.

          Hence my “WTF?” response and subsequent top level reply with the actual text and its source as sent by the DPL.

          I note that the issue of “age verification” is an extremely troubling trend and I think that discussion about it needs to be considered and nuanced, neither of which were in evidence.

          • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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            7 hours ago

            There was nothing inflammatory about that comment. It was just reasonable speculation and not harmful at all.

  • Pommes_für_dein_Balg@feddit.org
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    21 hours ago

    Software in the Public Interest is a US- based non-profit organization that legally represents and handles donations for Debian, Arch, LibreOffice, systemd and a lot of other projects. And if they’re in violation of US law, they can unfortunately be sued into oblivion. So they’re right to check with their legal team before making an informed decision.

    • quick_snail@feddit.nl
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      5 hours ago

      And fortunately they can just change their fiscal host. That’s one thing the lawyers will tell them, if needed

  • Onno (VK6FLAB)@lemmy.radio
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    21 hours ago

    This is what the DPL actually wrote on the subject:

    Recent discussions have started around new age verification legislation that may affect free software operating systems. In particular, the California Digital Age Assurance Act (AB 1043), expected to take effect in 2027, raises questions about whether operating systems and package distribution mechanisms could be required to provide age-related information to applications. In parallel, a recently adopted law in Brazil appears to introduce similar requirements and is already in force, with initial interpretations suggesting it could apply to components such as package management tools. These developments are currently under discussion within Debian and other projects, and SPI has initiated efforts to obtain legal guidance. At this stage, the situation remains unclear, and further analysis is ongoing.

    From a non-lawyer perspective, it is not yet clear how such regulations apply to a non-commercial, volunteer-driven project like Debian, which does not sell software and provides it in a highly decentralized way. It seems plausible that obligations, if any, may primarily affect redistributors or commercial entities building products on top of Debian. In such cases, Debian would as usual be open to contributions that help downstreams meet their requirements, while keeping such features optional and respecting the needs of users in other jurisdictions. However, this is an area where proper legal analysis is still required.

    Source: https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-announce/2026/04/msg00001.html

    • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      From a non-lawyer perspective, it is not yet clear how such regulations apply to a non-commercial, volunteer-driven project like Debian, which does not sell software and provides it in a highly decentralized way. It seems plausible that obligations, if any, may primarily affect redistributors or commercial entities building products on top of Debian. In such cases, Debian would as usual be open to contributions that help downstreams meet their requirements, while keeping such features optional and respecting the needs of users in other jurisdictions. However, this is an area where proper legal analysis is still required.

      I found this part very reassuring. Being neither a lawyer nor having read any of the legislation (of which I am not a subject, anyway), the “it’s not our job” approach seems very reasonable. Facilitating downstream vendors who do want/have to comply seems like an exceptional effort to show good faith to local legal processes, while remaining, fundamentally, just people freely sharing knowledge.

      I hope their lawyers can make that work.

    • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      I wonder what the perspective is on Systemd, which debian uses, starting to implement this shit already, with the same bootlicker already ruining XDG

  • yesman@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    I read that as “new-age” verification. LOL

    We gotta inspect your Chakra dude.