The Supreme Court on June 27th upheld a Texas law requiring pornographic websites to verify users are at least 18, balancing efforts to protect minors against concerns over adults’ First Amendment rights. The Court split 6‑3 on ideological lines, with the three liberal justices dissenting.
In the majority opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas emphasized that Texas’ law serves the important interest of shielding children from sexually explicit content and “doesn’t overly burden adults because it relies on established methods of providing government‑issued identification and sharing transactional data.” He noted, “This social reality has never been a reason to exempt the pornography industry from otherwise valid regulation.”
Justice Elena Kagan, in a dissent, argued the State should have shown no less restrictive means existed to block minors while better protecting adult free speech. She wrote, “a State cannot target that expression, as Texas has here, any more than is necessary to prevent it from reaching children.”
Eighteen other conservative states have since enacted similar statutes, citing the explosion of online pornography and increasingly graphic content. Free-speech advocates and a trade group representing adult entertainment warn that requiring users to upload government IDs or use approved age-verification systems may expose them to data breaches. They advocate for content-filtering technology to protect minors without infringing on adult privacy.
Texas countered that parental content-filtering tools have existed for decades and “hasn’t worked,” an argument resonating with some justices. “Content filtering for all those devices, I can say from personal experience, is difficult to keep up with,” said Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a parent of seven.
Initially blocked by a federal judge, the law took effect after the 5th Circuit reversed the ruling, citing precedent from 1968’s Ginsberg v. New York, which permitted restricting minors’ access to explicit material. But in 2004’s Ashcroft v. ACLU, the Court emphasized that protecting children can’t come at the expense of adults’ rights, back when the internet was in its infancy.
Today, with high-speed internet, social media, and smartphones ubiquitous, society’s relationship with online content has fundamentally shifted. Syracuse University law professor Roy Gutterman said this decision “marks a significant shift in how the courts evaluate laws governing the internet. … We will now have to wait and see how the enforcement of this law plays out.”
Under the Texas law, websites with at least one-third sexual content “considered harmful to minors” must verify user age or face fines up to $10,000 per day, and up to $250,000 if a minor accesses the site. In response, Pornhub has ceased operations in Texas and several other states.
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