Computer systems have had parental controls forever already. They are the once that should be used.
Yes, I too remember navigating to whitehouse.com (wiki link) on school computers in elementary school, while linux-focused websites were blocked as being “hacking-related”. Also whoops, now you have an idea of my age bracket.
This design is much more resilient because it (a) takes advantage of user account systems on computers which a child will have a harder time bypassing, since accounts permissions are generally hardened already (b) is much more resilient, because the onus is not on Kaspersky spyware to maintain a blacklist and naughty sites which will constantly be out of date © is dead simple for parents to set up.
I appreciate that this law allows us to separate the issue of content moderation for children from censorship. No more can politicians use “protect the children” as an excuse to censor adult conversations about war, sexuality, and other controversial topics.
And yes, “terrorism” will be an excuse for some time. Still lots of work left to undo the erosion of civil liberties caused by “anti-terrorism” laws. People are still having their phones searched without a warrant when traveling U.S. -> Canada -> U.S.



Doing a more exact calculation of Shannon’s entropy with U.S. demographic information gives actually closer to 1 bit of information. The < 3 upper bound was just a rough upper bound.
It’s a fair concern. However, I would note that the law forbids third party transmission of this data. That is unike browser fingerprints, data brokers, ad servers, etc. are legally forbidden from capturing that information by this law.