littlerack firstly, this pertains to "app stores" (which is already a super vague term - how are you going to precisely define that? A centralised, managed repository? I dont know, sounds stupid.), not explicitly adult content sites. Secondly, this, in coalescence with legislative changes concerning the data protections of children, would perpetuate a system where companies or potentially even repositories or decentralised "app stores" (in collaboration with the state) would, at scale, begin to profile users with new, deregulated vectors for identification, that would most definitely be integrated in various data sets, allowing invasive deductions about people's lives, in most cases tied to their real identity, by political figures who have proven themselves apathetic - if not a greater threat - to the wellbeing of children. The implications for surveillance, software distribution and legal definition are huge long-term, and quite frankly, given the trajectory, most users entire lives will be regulated unnoticed by them like slowly boiling a frog in water; the most suggestible, even to the extent of children, will be targeted by aggressive conditioning in alignment with states who do not accurately represent their populations and wish to curtail civil liberties to use technology as an alternative to social incentive. This might seem like a leap forward, but believe me, if you don't take that leap sooner, we might all stay in the pot boiling slowly, until it is too late.