My games will no longer be available to download after January 1, 2027 due to the California Digital Age Assurance Act AB 1043; however, I'm leaving this page up for now as a notice to users.
Due to the California Digital Age Assurance Act AB 1043 this license amendment takes effect on all my games after January 1, 2027.
I still plan to remove all my programs before the deadline but this license amendment is for added protection.
I wish all I had to do was just add this amendment to my user license and it would protect me from California but it is my understanding that this is not enough to prevent being fined.
Even programs that are are suitable for children of all ages are required to request an age signal even though it would not need to use that age signal for anything which makes no sense to me but that is how the government law works.
If an app incorrectly categorizes the age it could result in a $7500 fine per download; therefore, all of my new games that request an age single, even if suitable for children of all ages, will still require being 18 or over because I can't afford to risk liability.
People that run open source Unix based OSs are saying they will just use a version that does not check for age but then my program will assume you are under 18 and won't run because they need an age signal of 18 or over.
I liked giving away free games that I made for fun; however, now giving away a free game risks up to a $7,500 fine for each download; therefore, I don't know if I can take that risk in the future.
Even if I was charging for the game the $7,500 fine could bankrupt anyone and the amount I would charge for the game would be about $10 or less.
One possible solution to protect myself from the government would be to create an LLC for games I want to distribute but if not making any money from the game it would be very costly. If the government fined the LLC then I could just put the LLC into bankruptcy. However, using an LLC is going to be costly and require a lot of work compared to before when I just released games as sole proprietor for free.
When the government imposes a financial penalty that is so large it is crazy or grossly out of proportion, it is legally referred to as an excessive fine.
These exorbitant penalties can be challenged in court using the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which applies to both the federal and state governments. Under this constitutional protection, fines must be proportional to the gravity of the offense and should not deprive someone of their livelihood.