State legislatures from Louisiana to Arkansas are tightening enforcement on digital age mandates, forcing companies to choose between legal compliance and user privacy. Traditional verification methods—often requiring scans of passports or driver's licenses—frequently create high-risk data repositories that attract cybercriminals. L8P8, Inc. argues that its new architecture removes this liability by acting as a binary bridge: the platform receives only a pass-fail signal confirming adult or minor status, rather than sensitive identity documents.
Built on the OAuth 2.0 standard, the system operates in under a second, aiming to minimize user attrition during the sign-up process. Founder and CEO Zarik Megerdichian noted that the platform was engineered specifically to address the friction and privacy trade-offs inherent in current regulatory compliance. By removing personal data from the verification loop, the company hopes to provide a scalable framework for firms struggling to adapt to the patchwork of state-level child safety laws across the country.





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