

You’re right that mostly the reasonable thing was related to previous law.


You’re right that mostly the reasonable thing was related to previous law.


But embedded computing devices these days are regularly general computing devices, and have been for a long time. If my insert appliance x with an ARM processor isn’t a general computing device, then why is my raspberry pi?


But also, every FreeDos install ,server, managed network switch, IoT device, gas pump, etc. now needs to verify user age.
Also, it has to make “reasonable” effort to verify the age. Maybe just asking your age isn’t considered reasonable by the state. Since the law doesn’t lay out what to do, anything you do might become unreasonable depending on the winds of the day.


It goes way beyond Linux. Think any device that could download something at some point. Gas station pump, calculator, FreeDos, VxWorks, etc.
There is a lot of language like “or can download an application”, so if you can download something, then that thing could be an application, and thus that device and it’s OS is covered.


Well… Unless those blocking bugs relate to getting new Wayland protocols approved.
They basically defined curl as an app store: “facilitates the download of applications”