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Supreme Court upholds Texas' online age verification for porn sites

3:11
Supreme Court upholds online age verification for porn sites
Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Devin Dwyer, Senior Washington Reporter, ABC News.
ByDevin Dwyer
June 27, 2025, 6:06 PM

The Supreme Court ruled Friday that a Texas law that mandated websites with "sexual material harmful to minors" have age verification is constitutional.

The court's conservative judges ruled 6-3.

An adult entertainment industry trade group challenged a 2023 Texas law that requires sites with more than a third of content containing "sexual material harmful to minors" must receive electronic proof that a patron is 18 or older.

The Pornhub logo is displayed on a smartphone screen in Athens, Greece, on May 31, 2024.
Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto via Getty Images

The law requires users to provide digital ID, government-issued ID or other commercially reasonable verification methods, such as a facial scan or credit card transaction data.

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The court's decision only affects the Texas law -- not similar laws instituted in other states.

The trade group alleged the verification law uniquely threatens individual privacy and data security for millions of adults who otherwise have a First Amendment right to view the material.

Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the majority, ruled that "the decades-long history of some pornographic websites requiring age verification refutes any argument that the chill of verification is an insurmountable obstacle for users."

"The statute advances the State's important interest in shielding children from sexually explicit content. And, it is appropriately tailored because it permits users to verify their ages through the established methods of providing government-issued identification and sharing transactional data," he wrote in his decision to uphold the Fifth Circuit's ruling that sided with the state.

The Supreme Court is seen, June 20, 2025 in Washington.
Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

Justice Elena Kagan wrote in her dissent that while protecting children from explicit online material is an important task, the state could have accomplished its objectives and "better protect adults' First Amendment freedoms."

"Many reasonable people, after all, view the speech at issue here as ugly and harmful for any audience. But the First Amendment protects those sexually explicit materials, for every adult. So a State cannot target that expression, as Texas has here, any more than is necessary to prevent it from reaching children," she wrote.

Kagan -- joined in her dissent by justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson -- said no one disagrees with the paramount importance of protecting children from viewing porn but asks "what if Texas could do better?"

"What if Texas could achieve its interest without so interfering with adults constitutionally protected rights in viewing the speech that HB 1181 covers?"

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MORE: Supreme Court hears porn sites' bid to strike down online age-verification laws

The American Civil Liberties Union, which was representing the adult entertainment industry, called the decision a big setback for free speech and First Amendment rights of adults.

"The Supreme Court has departed from decades of settled precedents that ensured that sweeping laws purportedly for the benefit of minors do not limit adults' access to First Amendment-protected materials," said Cecillia Wang, national legal director of the ACLU said in a statement. "The Texas statute at issue shows why those precedents applying strict scrutiny were needed. The legislature claims to be protecting children from sexually explicit materials."

A person uses a computer in this undated stock photo.
STOCK PHOTO/Getty Images

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation, which has been the leading advocacy group in pushing for more restrictions nationwide, celebrated the decision and said they hope it sets a bigger precedent.

"This ruling paves the way for other states to pass similar legislation and will have a profound positive impact on preventing children from being exposed to pornography online," Dani Pinter, senior vice president and director of the Law Center at the National Center on Sexual Exploitation, said in a statement.

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