Garuda Linux Draws a Line on Age Verification as Arch Stays Keeps Mum
Age verification is sadly here to stay, as the politicians pushing these laws don’t seem to care much about what people actually think. Open source projects have been left to deal with the fallout, either by starting compliance work, taking a public stance, or outright blocking users from affected regions.
Garuda Linux is one of the latest projects that has had to address this publicly via an official statement, answering the age verification question directly.
Age verification can’t touch this

As it turns out, the Garuda Linux team is not losing sleep over California or Brazil’s laws. The project’s servers are hosted in Finland and Germany, its donation funds are held in Germany, and each contributor is expected to comply with the laws of their own country.
For TNE, the Garuda team member who put out the statement, that translates into compliance with Austrian law. They have gone further to express their personal take on the situation with the Linux community hounding distribution maintainers over age verification.
The people building these distributions in their spare time are staring down fines that could financially ruin them as individuals or jail time if they defy a court order. Some have already been personally attacked for their contributions, and when those attacks got removed, the community turned around and called it censorship.
What TNE is trying to say here is that the anger is real, but it’s aimed at the wrong people. Politicians, local representatives, and the organizations lobbying for these laws are the actual targets worth going after.
To make that last bit simpler, it’s like you were wronged by someone breadcrumbing you, and you went up in arms to blame the messaging app provider. You have to see who’s the party to blame here.
What’s Arch Linux doing?
While Garuda is a downstream Arch-based project, the broader Arch family is worth looking at here because the picture there is much messier.
Arch Linux 32, an independent fork that maintains support for 32-bit x86 systems, has already taken action. The project has blocked access for people in Brazil due to the Digital ECA, which came into effect on March 17, 2026.

And what is Arch Linux doing? Not much, at least publicly. Many on Reddit and elsewhere have noticed that posts asking about age verification on the official Arch Linux forums are being deleted. The general sentiment in the thread (linked above) points to the fear of legal action as the likely reason behind the removals.
The situation has not been much clearer on the Arch Forums. Someone recently posted asking for Arch’s official stance on the new age verification laws, as their previous post on the same topic had already been deleted.

Forum moderator V1del responded by saying the following:
It was well detailed why it was deleted, there’s no stance (neither for nor against at the current point in time): https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php … 0#p2292040
Previous threads have shown that preemptive speculation will spiral out of control and not lead to fruitful discourse, as you will notice there have been lots of threads on this already, official stances will be announced when they’ve been made. (and most of the actual decision makers do not frequent this board – this will not be the place were any “official” announcement is made)
So there you have it. Arch Linux has no official stance, is actively shutting down community discussions about it, and by a moderator’s own admission, the people who would actually make that call are not regulars of the forums.
At this point, age verification laws have done a better job of creating chaos in open source communities than actually protecting any children.
Projects are blocking entire countries, developers are being attacked by their own community, and one of the most influential Linux distributions out there is deleting the conversation entirely.
Quite the outcome for legislation that was supposedly about safety. 😑
This article first appeared on Read More

