Current:Home > InvestUtah law requiring age verification for porn sites remains in effect after judge tosses lawsuit -Triumph Financial Guides
Utah law requiring age verification for porn sites remains in effect after judge tosses lawsuit
View
Date:2025-04-14 03:54:30
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Utah law requiring adult websites to verify the age of their users will remain in effect after a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit from an industry group challenging its constitutionality.
The dismissal poses a setback for digital privacy advocates and the Free Speech Coalition, which sued on behalf of adult entertainers, erotica authors, sex educators and casual porn viewers over the Utah law — and another in Louisiana — designed to limit access to materials considered vulgar or explicit.
U.S. District Court Judge Ted Stewart did not address the group’s arguments that the law unfairly discriminates against certain kinds of speech, violates the First Amendment rights of porn providers and intrudes on the privacy of individuals who want to view sexually explicit materials.
Dismissing their lawsuit on Tuesday, he instead said they couldn’t sue Utah officials because of how the law calls for age verification to be enforced. The law doesn’t direct the state to pursue or prosecute adult websites and instead gives Utah residents the power to sue them and collect damages if they don’t take precautions to verify their users’ ages.
“They cannot just receive a pre-enforcement injunction,” Stewart wrote in his dismissal, citing a 2021 U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding a Texas law allowing private citizens to sue abortion providers.
The law is the latest anti-pornography effort from Utah’s Republican-supermajority Legislature, which since 2016 has passed laws meant to combat the public and mental health effects they say watching porn can have on children.
In passing new age verification requirements, Utah lawmakers argued that because pornography had become ubiquitous and easily accessible online, it posed a threat to children in their developmentally formative years, when they begin learning about sex.
The law does not specify how adult websites should verify users’ ages. Some, including Pornhub, have blocked their pages in Utah, while others have experimented with third-party age verification services, including facial recognition programs such as Yoti, which use webcams to identify facial features and estimate ages.
Opponents have argued that age verification laws for adult websites not only infringe upon free speech, but also threaten digital privacy because it’s impossible to ensure that websites don’t retain user identification data. On Tuesday, the Free Speech Coalition, which is also challenging a similar law in Louisiana, vowed to appeal the dismissal.
“States are attempting to do an end run around the First Amendment by outsourcing censorship to citizens,” said Alison Boden, the group’s executive director. “It’s a new mechanism, but a deeply flawed one. Government attempts to chill speech, no matter the method, are prohibited by the Constitution and decades of legal precedent.”
State Sen. Todd Weiler, the age verification law’s Republican sponsor, said he was unsurprised the lawsuit was dismissed. He said Utah — either its executive branch or Legislature — would likely expand its digital identification programs in the future to make it easier for websites to comply with age verification requirements for both adult websites and social media platforms.
The state passed a first-in-the-nation law in March to similarly require age verification for anyone who wants to use social media in Utah.
veryGood! (5237)
Related
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- The Vatican broadens public access to an ancient Roman necropolis
- Arkansas man used losing $20 scratch-off ticket to win $500,000 in play-it-again game
- American arrested in Venezuela just days after Biden administration eases oil sanctions
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Miss Universe 2023 Winner Is Miss Nicaragua Sheynnis Palacios
- 5-year-old boy fatally stabs twin brother in California
- Federal authorities investigate underwater oil pipeline leak off the coast of Louisiana
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- 'What is this woman smoking?': How F1 turned a pipe dream into the Las Vegas Grand Prix
Ranking
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Cheers! Bottle of Scotch whisky sells for a record $2.7 million at auction
- Investigators identify ‘person of interest’ in Los Angeles freeway arson fire
- UK Treasury chief signals tax cuts and a squeeze on welfare benefits are on the way
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Sam Altman leaving OpenAI, with its board saying it no longer has confidence in his leadership
- Russian doctors call for release of imprisoned artist who protested Ukraine war
- Argentine presidential candidate Milei goes to the opera — and meets both cheers and jeers
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
From soccer infamy to Xbox 'therapy,' what's real and what's not in 'Next Goal Wins'
The Vatican broadens public access to an ancient Roman necropolis
Albania’s former health minister accused by prosecutors of corruption in government project
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
An orphaned teenager who was taken to Russia early in the Ukraine war is back home with relatives
Q&A: The Hopes—and Challenges—for Blue and Green Hydrogen
Kaitlin Armstrong, convicted of killing pro cyclist Mo Wilson, sentenced to 90 years in prison