The California Age-Appropriate Design Code
***Update: On September 15, 2022, Governor Newsom signed AB 2273, establishing the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act.
Who It Covers, What It Requires & How It Compares to the UK
Effective July 1, 2024, the California Age-Appropriate Design Code imposes obligations on businesses [1] that provide an “online service, product, or feature” that is “likely to be accessed by children.” [2] Children are defined as California residents [3] “who are under 18 years of age.” [4] The law provides factors for whether an online service, product, or feature (S/P/F) is “likely to be accessed” by California residents under the age of 18: [5]
[1] The law applies to “businesses” as defined by the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), 1798.140(c). [2] 1798.99.31(a). [3] The law incorporates the CCPA’s definition for “consumer,” 1798.140(g). [4] 1798.99.30(b)(1). [5] 1798.99.30(b)(4). [6] Which means:
- It is directed to children as defined by COPPA. [6]
- It is determined, based on competent and reliable evidence regarding audience composition, to be routinely accessed by a significant number of children, or it is substantially similar to an online S/P/F that meets this factor.
- It displays advertisements marketed to children.
- It has design elements known to be of interest to children, including games, cartoons, music, and celebrities who appeal to children.
- Based on internal research, a significant amount of the audience is children.
- If an online S/P/F is the kind “you would not want children to use in any case,” then the business should focus on preventing children from accessing the online S/P/F, rather than making it child friendly. [13]
- If a business’s common-sense analysis reveals that children make up a “substantive and identifiable user group” routinely accessing the online S/P/F, then the “likely to be accessed” definition will apply. [14]
- If that analysis does not reveal such a group yet causes the business to “think that children will want to use it,” then the business “should conform to the [law’s] standards.” [15]
- If a business decides that the online S/P/F is not likely to be accessed by children, the business should “document and support” the reasons for such a determination, and incorporate such evidence as “market research, current evidence on user behaviour, the user base of similar or existing service,” and more. [16]
- Data Protection Impact Assessments & Risk Mitigation Plans
- Estimate Age of Child Users or Treat All Consumers as Children
- High Privacy & Tracking Signals as Default Settings for Children
[1] The law applies to “businesses” as defined by the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), 1798.140(c). [2] 1798.99.31(a). [3] The law incorporates the CCPA’s definition for “consumer,” 1798.140(g). [4] 1798.99.30(b)(1). [5] 1798.99.30(b)(4). [6] Which means:
- A commercial website or online service that is targeted to children; or
- That portion of a commercial website or online service is targeted to children. 15 U.S.C. § 6501(10)(A).
