A mom of seven from Auburn argues for nationwide app store age verification to replace patchwork rules and strengthen parental oversight online.
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As a parent of seven living in Auburn, dealing with technology is a constant conversation in our family. When my teens first started using tablets, phones and smartwatches, I thought mostly about convenience and learning. Educational games, quick communication with family and school-related tools all felt like natural extensions of the world they were already growing up in.
However, over the years, I’ve realized just how complex that environment is — requiring real supervision and preparation.
That’s why I’ve been following the App Store Accountability Act, a bipartisan federal bill introduced by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rep. John James, R-Michigan, which is currently under consideration in Congress. Rather than asking parents to manage dozens of apps individually, this proposal recognizes the role app stores already play as the main gateway to digital content.
By requiring age verification and parental approval at the point of download, it creates a single, consistent checkpoint that families can rely on.
Technology is woven into nearly every aspect of kids’ lives now. As both a parent and a content creator, I pay close attention to the laws shaping how families interact with social media. They affect not only my children’s daily lives, but the digital spaces we all participate in.
I feel a responsibility to understand not only what my children can gain from technology, but what risks come along with it. Social media — in particular — is something that parents need to be prepared to safely introduce their children to when the time is right.
Like many parents, I struggle to keep track of which apps end up on my kids’ devices. Downloads can happen quickly, quietly and across multiple platforms. By the time I discover a new app, it’s often already part of their daily routine.
The reality is that digital safety is fragmented. Each app sets its own policies, designs its own parental controls and defines its own standards for age-appropriate content. Some companies make safety features clear and accessible; others bury them deep in menus or make them easy to bypass entirely.
Children are remarkably tech-savvy, and it doesn’t take long for them to learn how to click past warnings, adjust settings or enter a different birthdate. What’s meant to be a safeguard often becomes a minor speed bump.
Parents can’t monitor every interaction or anticipate every workaround. When safety standards vary from app to app, important protections inevitably slip through the cracks. A centralized system makes sense.
App stores already decide what apps are available and how they’re distributed. Asking them to take responsibility for consistent age checks and parental consent is a logical extension of that role.
A nationwide framework would replace today’s state-by-state patchwork approach with clarity and uniformity. Families shouldn’t face different rules depending on where they live. Parents in California shouldn’t have fewer protections than parents in Utah. And kids shouldn’t be able to easily bypass rules and share inappropriate content at school with others.
With a single, standardized process, parents can manage permissions in one place instead of navigating countless settings across multiple platforms.
This bill is about reinforcing parental involvement at key moments: before an app is downloaded, before content is accessed and before habits are formed. Built-in safeguards allow parents to spend more time having thoughtful conversations about online behavior, rather than constantly playing catch-up.
Other proposals fall short because they leave too much responsibility in the wrong places. Systems that rely on children to self-report their age or that only apply to certain types of apps leave obvious gaps. State-by-state approaches risk creating confusion instead of solutions. When protections are inconsistent or optional, the burden remains squarely on parents, and kids are left vulnerable.
We don’t expect lawmakers to solve every challenge of the digital age. As parents, we are just asking for a system that reflects how families actually live today. We want assurance that when our child downloads an app, there’s a meaningful check in place and a standard that applies across the board.
Justine Young is a mom of seven and the creator of the Little Dove Blog, a motherhood and family travel blog. She is a southern California native who now resides in Auburn.
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