Online age checks are proliferating, but so are concerns they curtail internet freedom

posted in: All news | 0

By BARBARA ORTUTAY

Online age checks are on the rise in the U.S. and elsewhere, asking people for IDs or face scans to prove they are over 18 or 21 or even 13. To proponents, they’re a tool to keep children away from adult websites and other material that might be harmful to them.

But opponents see a worrisome trend toward a less secure, less private and less free internet, where people can be denied access not just to pornography but news, health information and the ability to speak openly and anonymously.

“I think that many of these laws come from a place of good intentions,” said Jennifer Huddleston, a senior technology policy fellow at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank. “Certainly we all want to protect young people from harmful content before they’re ready to see it.”

More than 20 states have passed some kind of age verification law, though many face legal challenges. While no such law exists on the federal level in the United States, the Supreme Court recently allowed a Mississippi age check law for social media to stand. In June, the court upheld a Texas law aimed at preventing minors from watching pornography online, ruling that adults don’t have a First Amendment right to access obscene speech without first proving their age.

Elsewhere, the United Kingdom now requires users visiting websites that allow pornography to verify their age. Beyond adult sites, platforms like Reddit, X, Telegram and Bluesky have also committed to age checks. France and several other European Union countries also are testing a government sponsored verification app.

And Australia has banned children under 16 from accessing social media.

“Platforms now have a social responsibility to ensure the safety of our kids is a priority for them,” Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters in November. The platforms have a year to work out how they could implement the ban before penalties are enforced.

To critics, though, age check laws raise “significant privacy and speech concerns, not only for young people themselves, but also for all users of the internet,” Huddleston said. “Because the only way to make sure that we are age verifying anyone under the age of 18 is to also age verify everyone over the age 18. And that could have significant impacts on the speech and privacy rights of adults.”

The state laws are a hodgepodge of requirements, but they generally fall into two camps. On one side are laws — as seen in Louisiana and Texas — that require websites comprised of more than 33% of adult content to verify users’ ages or face fines. Then there are laws — enacted in Wyoming or South Dakota — that seek to regulate sites that have any material that is considered obscene or otherwise harmful to minors.

What’s considered harmful to minors can be subjective, and this is where experts believe such laws run afoul of the First Amendment. It means people may be required to verify their ages to access anything, from Netflix to a neighborhood blog.

“In places like Australia and the U.K., there is already a split happening between the internet that people who are willing to identify themselves or go through age verification can see and the rest of the internet. And that’s historically a very dangerous place for us to end up,” said Jason Kelley, activism director at the nonprofit digital rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation.

What’s behind the gates is determined by a “hundred different decision-makers,” Kelley said, from politicians to tech platforms to judges to individuals who have sued because they believe that a piece of content is dangerous.

While many companies are complying, verifying users’ ages can prove a burden, especially for smaller platforms. On Friday, Bluesky said it will no longer be available in Mississippi because of its age verification requirements. While the social platform already does age verification in the U.K., it said Mississippi’s approach “would fundamentally change how users access Bluesky.”

That’s because it requires every user to undergo an age check, not just those who want to access adult content. It would also require Bluesky to identify and track users that are children.

“We think this law creates challenges that go beyond its child safety goals, and creates significant barriers that limit free speech and disproportionately harm smaller platforms,” the company said in a blog post.

Some websites and social media companies, such as Instagram’s parent company Meta, have argued that age verification should be done by app store owners, such as Apple and Google, and not individual platforms. This would mean that app stores need to verify their users’ ages before they allow them to download apps. Unsurprisingly, Apple and Google disagree.

“Billed as ‘simple’ by its backers, including Meta, this proposal fails to cover desktop computers or other devices that are commonly shared within families. It also could be ineffective against pre-installed apps,” Google said in a blog post.

Nonetheless, a growing number of tech companies are implementing verification systems to comply with regulations or ward off criticism that they are not protecting children. This includes Google, which recently started testing a new age-verification system for YouTube that relies on AI to differentiate between adults and minors based on their watch histories.

Instagram is testing a similar AI system to determine if kids are lying about their ages. Roblox, which was sued by the Louisiana attorney general on claims it doesn’t do enough to protect children from predators, requires users who want to access certain games rated for those over 17 to submit a photo ID and undergo a face scan for verification. Roblox has also recently begun requiring age verification for teens who want to chat more freely on platform.

Face scans that promise to estimate a person’s age may address some of the concerns around IDs, but they can be unreliable. Can AI accurately tell, for instance, if someone is 17.5 or just turned 18?

“Sometimes it’s less accurate for women or it’s less accurate for certain racial or ethnic groups or for certain physical characteristics that then may mean that those people have to go through additional privacy invasive screenings to prove that they are of a certain age,” Huddleston said.

While IDs are a common way of verifying someone’s age, the method raises security concerns: What happens if companies don’t delete the uploaded files, for instance?

Case in point: the recent data breaches at Tea, an app for women to anonymously warn each other about the men they date, speak to some of these concerns. The app requires women who sign up to upload an ID or undergo a scan to prove that they are women. Tea wasn’t supposed to keep the files but it did, and stored them in a way that allowed hackers to not only access the images, but also their private messages.

Gophers to pay Buffalo $1.45 million to play season opener

posted in: All news | 0

When enormous underdog Bowling Green came to Minnesota and stunned the Gophers with a 14-10 win in 2021, the Mid-American Conference school received a $1.45 million payday to travel here and play in the nonconference game.

Buffalo will receive the same amount to be the Gophers’ season-opening opponent at 7 p.m. Thursday at Huntington Bank Stadium. That sum was revealed in a 2020 contract obtained by the Pioneer Press via a data records request to the U this week.

The Gophers were a 31-point favorite against Bowling Green four years ago and are a 17½-point favorite Thursday against the Bulls. Buffalo is picked to finish fourth in the MAC this season after after going 9-4 in 2024.

The Gophers will play Northwestern State next weekend and pay the FCS-level Louisiana program $500,000 for the trip north, according to the 2023 contract.

Cal will compensate the Gophers with $300,000 for its nonconference game on Sept. 13 in Berkeley, Calif., and the Gophers will reciprocate that $300,000 payment to Cal following its scheduled game in Minneapolis in 2028.

The Gophers-Bears game in California was originally scheduled for Sept. 1, 2029, but moved to this year in a contract amendment from 2022.

Related Articles


Get to know new Gophers quarterback Drake Lindsey 


Gophers football: 22 former players make NFL rosters


Six burning questions for Gophers football season


Gophers football vs. Buffalo: How to watch, key matchup, who has edge


Charley Walters: Don’t expect J.J. McCarthy to star from the start

Twins leaning into more aggressive base running approach

posted in: All news | 0

When Twins bench coach Jayce Tingler first brought the idea to manager Rocco Baldelli, it set off a long conversation between the two filled with plenty of questions.

The general concept is simple enough: The Twins want to be more aggressive on the base paths. But could they actually do this? What would it look like?

Over the past week or so, players have been more empowered to make their own decisions on the bases rather than waiting for signs from the coaching staff. The Twins are not a particularly fast team — they have ranked near the bottom of the league in sprint speed and stolen bases in recent years — but that doesn’t mean they can’t run the bases smartly and aggressively, taking extra bases when they see chances to.

“You’re not going to begin that process unless you just simply do it one day — you just wake up and do it,” Baldelli said. “As a group, we want to go first to third as many times as we can. We’re going to have more guys with the green light going forward, and we’re going to be making a lot of decisions out there on the field using our vision and our awareness.”

Baldelli first mentioned the concept to the team’s group of position players before the Twins’ Aug. 20 game against the Athletics and has seen an immediate response since then.

It’s also come with more outs on the bases, which is to be expected. The Tampa Bay Rays, a team Baldelli has pointed to as an example, had run into more outs on the bases than anybody as of Thursday morning. They also lead the league in stolen bases by a wide margin — at 172 stolen bases, they have stolen exactly 100 more bags than the Twins — and are near the top of the league in other metrics that measure baserunning aggression.

“Along with some of the extra bases we get, there could be some outs, as well. But I’d rather play aggressive than passively,” Baldelli said.

The new shift has been well-received from the team’s position players.

Kody Clemens, for example, cited the Milwaukee Brewers — the team that has the best record in the majors — and how hard it was to play against them because they were “running everywhere.”

“I do think it’s a plus to have that attribute as a team, to have some good baserunning, first to third and stuff like that,” Clemens said. “It can open a lot of doors.”

Utilityman Austin Martin said he now feels like he has “more free range,” to be himself and “just use more of my instincts.” Martin, who stole two of the Twins’ five bases in their 9-8 loss to Toronto on Wednesday, was one of the players Baldelli said he was hoping could take advantage of this type of opportunity, citing his aptitude and instincts for the game.

Before, Martin said, he would get the green light to steal in certain situations but it could be taken off the very next pitch. Now, it’s more about players being smart and reading the game, he said.

“I think being able to put ourselves in those situations helps long term in terms of learning and understanding the game better,” Martin said. “When’s the right time to run? When’s the wrong time to be too aggressive? I think we can err on the side of being aggressive, but also err on the side of being a lot smarter at the end of it, too.”

And while there may be some growing pains, Baldelli has also said he is encouraged by what he has seen as the Twins try to transform this aspect of their game, a move they believe will benefit them both now and in the future.

“Giving our players responsibility to watch and learn and react and use their awareness, instincts, and show us their ability to play the game … really puts a lot of the onus on them,” Baldelli said. “And I think they want that. I think they actually feel good about it, and it gives them chances to just play, to just show what they can do on the field, show their ability. .. And that’s what we’ve seen.”

Related Articles


Addison Barger hits go-ahead double in 8th as Blue Jays rally to beat Twins 9-8


Brooks Lee adapting as Twins’ every day shortstop


Twins stun Blue Jays with four-run rally in ninth


Here’s a look at the Twins’ 2026 schedule


Blue Jays pound Ryan, Twins from the start

What to know after the US deports more migrants to Africa

posted in: All news | 0

By GERALD IMRAY, Associated Press

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — Rwanda has become the third African nation to receive deportees from the United States as the Trump administration expands its program to send migrants to countries they have no ties with.

Related Articles


Trump administration asks military base outside Chicago for support on immigration operations


Closure of Florida’s ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ immigration detention center can proceed, judge says


Trump’s power challenged in court by a key member of the Federal Reserve that he’s trying to fire


Japan’s chief trade envoy postpones US trip as Tokyo calls for faster action on its tariffs deal


Louisiana urges Supreme Court to bar use of race in redistricting, in attack on Voting Rights Act

A Rwandan government spokesperson said Thursday that seven deportees arrived in the East African country earlier this month. No announcement was made at the time.

Rwanda did say in early August that it had agreed to take up to 250 deportees but declined then to say when the first would arrive.

Two other African nations, South Sudan and Eswatini, have already accepted a small number of deportees from the U.S. in what have also been secretive deals, while Uganda said last week it has an agreement in principle to take deportees.

Here’s what we know about the deportations of migrants from the U.S.

Rwanda

Rwandan government spokesperson Yolande Makolo said the seven deportees are being visited by representatives from the United Nations’ migration agency and Rwandan social services.

Three of them want to return to their home countries while the other four “wish to stay and build lives in Rwanda,” she said. The Rwandan government didn’t say where the deportees are being held.

FILE – Rwandan President Paul Kagame, left, and his wife, first lady Jeannette Kagame arrive for a ceremony to mark the 30th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide, held at the Kigali Genocide Memorial, in Kigali, Rwanda, Sunday, April 7, 2024. (AP Photo/Brian Inganga, File)

There was no information on their identities, nationalities or if they have criminal records.

Deportees previously sent to South Sudan and Eswatini were all described by U.S. authorities as dangerous criminals.

Rwanda’s deal with the U.S. follows a contentious migrant agreement it reached with the U.K. in 2022 that collapsed and was ruled unlawful by Britain’s Supreme Court. That deal was meant to see people seeking asylum in the U.K. sent to Rwanda, where they would stay if their asylum applications were approved.

Uganda

Uganda, which borders Rwanda, said it would accept deportees from the U.S. as long as they don’t have criminal records or are unaccompanied minors.

FILE – Drivers of motorcycle taxis, known locally as boda-bodas, ride with passengers on a street of Kampala, Uganda, on July 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Hajarah Nalwadda, File)

The U.S. has said it wants to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whose case has become a flashpoint in U.S. President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown, to Uganda.

Like the other countries, Uganda didn’t give any other details of its deal with the U.S. or what it might gain from accepting deported migrants. African nations might get a range of benefits for accepting deportees and improving their relations with the Trump administration.

“We are sacrificing human beings for political expediency, in this case because Uganda wants to be in the good books of the United States,” Ugandan human rights lawyer Nicholas Opio said when his country announced it was seeking a deal with the U.S.

South Sudan

The U.S. sent eight men from South Sudan, Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar and Vietnam to South Sudan in July after their deportations were held up by a legal challenge. That led to them being kept for weeks in a converted shipping container at an American military base in nearby Djibouti.

U.S. officials said the men had been convicted of violent crimes in the U.S.

South Sudan’s government said it would ensure their “safety and wellbeing” but has declined to say where the men are being held and what their fate might be.

South Sudan has been wracked by conflict since it gained independence from Sudan in 2011 and is teetering on the edge of civil war again.

Eswatini

Two weeks after the South Sudan deportations, the U.S. announced that it had sent five other men — citizens of Vietnam, Jamaica, Cuba, Yemen and Laos — to the small kingdom of Eswatini, in southern Africa.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security described them as violent criminals whose home countries had refused to take them back.

FILE – Matsapha Correctional Complex is seen in Matsapha, near Mbabane, Eswatini, Thursday July 17, 2025. (AP Photo, File)

Eswatini’s government said the men would be held in solitary confinement until their repatriation, and later said that might take up to a year.

A human rights lawyer in Eswatini has taken the authorities to court alleging the men are being denied legal representation while being held in a maximum-security prison.

Eswatini, which borders South Africa, is one of the world’s last absolute monarchies. King Mswati III has ruled since he turned 18 in 1986 and authorities under him are accused of violently subduing pro-democracy movements.