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Florida Tightens Grip on Teen Social Media Use

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis recently signed HB 3 into law, a move that empowers parents with more oversight over their teenagers’ social media use and mandates age verification on numerous websites. This legislation aims to safeguard minors by prohibiting the creation of social media accounts by children under 14 and obliging platforms to delete any existing accounts within this age group. Furthermore, 14- and 15-year-olds must obtain parental or guardian approval to create or maintain accounts. Social media platforms are now under legal pressure to comply, facing potential lawsuits and damages of up to $10,000 per instance for failures to delete underage accounts.

Ron DeSantis


The law also targets commercial websites and apps, requiring them to verify the age of their users. This is particularly directed at sites hosting a significant amount of content deemed harmful to minors, mandating an 18+ age confirmation. However, news sites are exempt, and websites must provide an anonymous age verification option to balance privacy concerns.

The tech industry, represented by groups such as NetChoice, has criticized the legislation, arguing it effectively demands an ID verification for internet use in Florida. This legislation contrasts with a previously vetoed bill by DeSantis, which proposed a ban on social media accounts for children under 16 without providing an option for parental consent for 14- and 15-year-olds.

Governor DeSantis emphasizes the law’s focus on protecting children from the potential dangers of social media, championing parental rights, and safeguarding adult anonymous speech rights. This law aligns with DeSantis’ broader agenda to prioritize parental rights in the regulation of information accessible to children, including educational content and social media interaction.

Similar legislative efforts have emerged in other states, aiming to increase parental involvement in minors’ online activities. Florida’s law, which introduces requirements for content moderation consistency and prohibits the deplatforming of political figures by social media companies, reflects a growing trend to regulate digital platforms’ interactions with young users.

The law, which avoids addressing speech content to sidestep First Amendment issues, instead focuses on social media’s addictive features. Florida House Speaker Paul Renner highlighted the importance of protecting children from these addictive technologies due to their developing ability to self-regulate.

As the debate around social media regulation continues, Florida’s new law, effective from January 1st next year, represents a significant step toward increased parental control and child safety online, setting a precedent for potential nationwide changes.

Tech & IT

Italy (AGCOM): Mandatory age checks on adult sites start Nov 12

Italy’s communications regulator, AGCOM, will enforce mandatory age verification for pornography websites starting November 12, 2025. The system is designed to block access by minors and relies on certified third parties (such as banks or mobile operators) to confirm whether a visitor is 18+. After verification, the third party issues an access code that lets the user proceed to the site.


AGCOM describes a “double anonymity” model: adult sites receive only an “of-age” confirmation and never the user’s identity, while verifiers do not see which website the person is trying to access. According to the rules, the check is required on every visit, not just once.

An initial enforcement list covers around 50 services, including major platforms that host or distribute pornographic content in Italy. Sites found non-compliant can face penalties of up to €250,000.

What changes in practice

  • Start date: November 12, 2025.
  • Who verifies: Certified third parties that already hold user identity data.
  • What sites see: Only that a user is of age, not who they are.
  • Frequency: Verification is required each time a covered site is accessed.
  • Enforcement: Fines up to €250,000 for failures to comply.

Italy’s move aligns with broader European efforts to implement age-assurance on adult content. Platforms operating in the country are expected to finalize integrations with certified providers and update user flows to meet the deadline, while users should anticipate an extra verification step before entering affected sites.

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Discord: ID photos of 70,000 users may have been exposed via third-party breach

Discord says official ID photos and other data tied to about 70,000 users may have been exposed after a cyber-attack on an external provider used for age verification and customer support. The company, which reports more than 200 million users globally, said on 9 October 2025 that its own platform was not breached and that access for the affected vendor has been revoked.


According to Discord, the leaked information could include personal details, ID images submitted for age checks, partial credit-card data, and messages exchanged with customer support agents. The company added that no full card numbers, account passwords, or messages beyond support conversations were involved. Impacted users have been notified, and the firm says it is cooperating with law-enforcement authorities.

Discord did not name the third-party provider. A representative from Zendesk, which provides customer-service software to Discord, told the BBC its systems were not compromised and that the incident was not caused by a Zendesk vulnerability. Discord also rejected online claims that the breach was larger than stated, calling them inaccurate and “part of an attempt to extort payment,” and clarified that the incident was not a ransomware attack: “We will not reward those responsible for their illegal actions,” a spokesperson said.

The incident underscores why attackers target high-value personal data—such as full names and government-issued identifiers—that tend to remain constant over time and are useful in scams. Discord has tightened age-verification practices in recent years amid concerns about the distribution of prohibited content on some servers and says it continues to invest in safety and verification controls.

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Tech & IT

Valve Deckard: What It Could Mean for VR Adult Content

The Deckard is an upcoming VR headset from Valve, expected to launch in the next few months. If current leaks hold, it could be a major upgrade for immersive adult viewing.


Launch timeline. Chinese analyst group XR Research Institute suggests Deckard is targeting the holiday season, with projected annual production of 400k–600k units, comparable to early Vision Pro volumes.

Pricing. Expectations point to a premium ($1,000+) price tier paired with high-end performance.

Why it matters for VR erotica (platform-agnostic):

  • Display tech. High-resolution OLED/LCD panels with strong contrast and color should elevate skin tones, low-light scenes, and fine detail.
  • Input & tracking. Newly referenced “Roy” touch-style controllers in SteamVR code hint at better ergonomics and precision—useful for interactive experiences.

Deckard features (per code dives/leaks):

  • Standalone + PCVR hybrid. Emphasis on wireless PC streaming for 6K/8K playback without tether drag, alongside native PCVR.
  • Comfort & design. Ergonomic improvements aim at longer, more comfortable sessions.

App compatibility. Popular VR video apps (e.g., PCVR players and standalone viewers) are expected to work seamlessly with Deckard, based on typical SteamVR support patterns and developer indications.

Bottom line: if Valve delivers on display quality, wireless PCVR, and ergonomics, Deckard could become a flagship device for high-bitrate adult VR—without locking users to any single platform.

Source: sexlikereal.com

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