A Reddit researcher just dropped a bombshell, exposing how Meta allegedly funneled over $2 billion through a network of shadowy nonprofits, as reported by Yahoo News. This massive lobbying effort, it seems, aims to push for age verification laws that would force giants like Apple and Google to bake surveillance infrastructure right into every single device they make. The kicker? Meta’s own platforms would conveniently be exempt from these very same requirements.
The investigation, spearheaded by GitHub user “upper-up,” meticulously traces the money trail through a labyrinth of organizations designed to avoid transparency. Meta’s lobbying operation stretches across 45 states, using these nonprofit shells to keep its activities under wraps. We’re talking about groups like the Digital Childhood Alliance (DCA), which launched on December 18, 2024, and then, just days later, was already testifying in favor of Utah’s SB-142.
It’s pretty clear Meta has been backing DCA, and this whole strategy is reportedly part of a $70 million fragmented super PAC approach specifically designed to dodge FEC tracking and traditional election spending disclosure rules.
So, what exactly does a “Get Age Category API” mean for your phone or tablet?
Well, the proposed laws aren’t just about simple age gates. The technical reality here is much more invasive. These bills would mandate operating system-level APIs that apps could query for age data. This isn’t just a pop-up asking your birthdate; it’s about creating a permanent identity layer baked right into your device’s core functions. Meta’s Horizon OS for Quest VR already uses a similar system with its Family Center controls. Now, they’re pushing for Apple and Google to build these kinds of systems, making age verification a form of persistent device fingerprinting that every app could potentially access.
These proposed age verification bills specifically target competitors like Apple’s App Store and Google Play with stringent compliance requirements. But they reportedly spare social media platforms, which is, of course, Meta’s bread and butter. It’s like Spotify lobbying for new streaming regulations that somehow only apply to Apple Music. This isn’t about genuine “child safety” as much as it is a calculated competitive strategy, shifting the liability from platforms to the very operating system makers.
It’s worth noting that there’s a much better path forward being explored elsewhere. The European Union’s eIDAS 2.0 offers a radically different, privacy-preserving approach to age verification. Their Digital Identity Wallet uses zero-knowledge proofs, which let you verify your age without revealing any personal data. It’s open-source, self-hostable, and critically, it only applies to large platforms, exempting smaller entities and free and open-source software (FOSS) projects. Meanwhile, US lawmakers seem to be getting bamboozled into a system that could lead to complete privacy annihilation.
The trustworthiness of your device hangs in the balance with these kinds of legislative pushes. These laws could force every Linux distribution and privacy-focused Android fork to implement identity verification or face serious legal liability. The choice between surveillance-free computing and regulatory compliance is coming faster than you think, and we all need to be paying attention.
Published: Mar 18, 2026 05:15 pm