- An industry group representing Apple and Google withdrew its complaint against Utah’s App Store Accountability Act.
- Lawmakers changed the law during the 2026 session to make it only enforceable through private lawsuits.
- Several states are following Utah’s lead as courts decide whether age verification laws violate speech rights.
Utah
Alabama gymnastics, Utah in NCAA Tournament: Live second-round updates
Alabama gymnastics and Utah are getting ready to take on the NCAA Championships regional final.
The Crimson Tide and Utes both advanced out of the first session. No 4 UCLA and No. 13 Minnesota advanced out of the second session and now will meet on Sunday.
The meet will start at 7 p.m. CT and 6 p.m. MT. The event will stream on ESPN+.
Alabama gymnastics in NCAA Tournament: Live scoring updates
It’s anyone games with just .125 separating first and fourth after the first rotation.
- Minnesota – 49.450
- UCLA – 49.350
- Alabama 49.325 (-0.025)
- Utah – 49.325 (-0.025)
Alabama starts strong on beam
- Chloe LaCoursiere – 9.850
- Gabby Gladieux – 9.850
- Gabby Ladanyi – 9.850
- Kylee Kvamme – 9.900
- Azaraya Ra-Akbar – 9.875
- TOTAL – 49.325
Fuller scored a 9.825 after three straight 9.85 by Alabama to start the day on beam.
LaCoursiere gets Alabama started with a 9.85 on the beam. The Crimson Tide will go beam, floor, vault and finish on bars today.
What time is Alabama, Utah gymnastics NCAA regional semifinal?
- Date: Sunday, April 5
- Time: 7 p.m. CT/6 p.m. MT
What TV channel is Alabama gymnastics, Utah NCAA meet on?
- TV Channel: None
- Streaming: ESPN+
The Crimson Tide and Utes will face off with No. 4 UCLA and No. 13 Minnesota The meet will air on ESPN+.
Maxwell Donaldson covers high school sports, Jax State athletics, the outdoors in Alabama and more for the Gadsden Times and USA TODAY Network. Find him on Twitter/X @_Max_Donaldson and contact him at MDonaldson@usatodayco.com.
Utah
Utah Rallies From Three Goal Deficit, Falls in Overtime | Utah Mammoth
Utah kept pushing and tied the game 1:45 into the third period with Michael Carcone’s first of the series. Less than five minutes later, Captain Clayton Keller’s goal gave the Mammoth its first lead of the game. Throughout this playoff series, plenty of different players have stepped up in a variety of ways. Having this depth, and plenty of impactful performances, has been a strength of the Mammoth.
“It’s playoff hockey, you kind of expect bigger games from everybody,” Sergachev explained. “And guys are providing, and they’re playing well. (Karel Vejmelka) is standing on his head, saving crazy shots, and facing a lot of traffic in front.”
Brett Howden’s second goal of the night tied the game, 4-4 halfway through the third. After neither team was able to convert in the final nine and a half minutes of the third period, Game 4 went to overtime. Both teams generated multiple chances; however, Shea Theodore’s goal with 52 seconds left in the first overtime period secured the win for Vegas.
“We had lots of good looks early,” Keller said of overtime. “They did too. Lots of back and forth and I think, for a lot of us, it’s probably the first game in overtime we’ve had in the playoffs, and to feel that’s good and it’s experience. It’s only going to help us moving forward.”
As they have done throughout the playoffs and the regular season, Utah will use this experience to their advantage while remaining even-keeled. It’s a best of three series with Game 5 on Wednesday and Game 6 on Friday. The Mammoth have plenty of leaders in their locker room to keep them focused and encouraged moving forward.
“Yeah, that’s something that we’ve worked at all year,” Keller shared. “We’ve gotten better, and this is the time when we need to be even keeled the most, each team is going to have a push, until you rebound and take the other team’s push. I think we’ve done a great job all year, and we’ve got to continue to work at that.”
“There is plenty of hockey left in this series; a tied series going back,” Cole explained. “It’s a three-game series. (We’re) focusing on what we can control and where we stand right now. I think that will do us well.”
Additional Notes from Tonight
- Six of Utah’s 12 forwards recorded over 20 minutes of ice time: Lawson Crouse (28:56), Logan Cooley (27:58), Schmaltz (27:46), Keller (25:40), Dylan Guenther (24:34), and Alexander Kerfoot (21:40). All six of Utah’s defenseman recorded over 20 minutes of playing time. Sergachev led all Mammoth skaters with 30:32 TOI.
- The Mammoth set a new franchise high for hits in a single game with 57. Kailer Yamamoto and MacKenzie Weegar each recorded nine hits, which led the team.
- With three Mammoth defenseman recording points in Game 4, Utah’s blueliners have combined for 11 points (3G, 8A) through the first four games of the series. Sergachev (1G, 2A), Cole (1G), and Sean Durzi (1A) all had points in the loss.
- With three assists in Game 4, Sergachev became the first Mammoth skater to post a three-point game in the playoffs.
Game 5 is on Wednesday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Game 6 is on Friday at the Delta Center. If Game 7 is needed, the series will shift back to Vegas on Sunday.
Upcoming Schedule
- May 3: UTA vs VGK – TBD
Utah
Why America’s biggest companies gave up the fight against Utah’s app store law protecting kids
One of the largest technology groups in the country backed off from challenging Utah’s age verification requirement for app stores last week.
The Computer & Communication Industry Association withdrew its complaint after confirming the law could not be enforced by government prosecution.
But that was never the main intent of Utah’s first-in-the-nation policy.
The groundbreaking law, which was passed in 2025 and updated in 2026, relies on the threat of private lawsuits to shift corporate behaviors regarding children.
“They’re terrified of the private right of action,” bill sponsor Sen. Todd Weiler, R-Woods Cross, told the Deseret News. “Good fences make good neighbors. I think good potential for liability makes good corporate neighbors.”
Utah’s law orders app stores to verify users’ ages and to request a parent’s consent before a minor can download an app, agree to terms of service or make an in-app purchase.
Parents must be informed of whether the app has an age rating and how it will use their child’s information. Parents of harmed minors may sue app stores for violations.
The principle that minors are unable enter into contracts is respected in most commercial settings, according to Weiler. Starting May 6, 2027, that will also apply to app stores.
Why did Big Tech drop their lawsuit?
Despite CCIA’s lawsuit filed in February, the Utah Legislature didn’t narrow or reverse the law during the 2026 legislative session — they strengthened it.
Lawmakers expanded the App Store Accountability Act to cover pre-installed apps, apps that change to include ads and accounts created before the law goes into effect.
In reaction to CCIA’s lawsuit, they did remove a provision that allowed state agencies to enforce parts of the law under Utah’s deceptive trade practices statute.
The CCIA recognized this change when the updated bill became law in March, but continued to allege constitutional First Amendment violations for another month.
On April 21, the Utah Attorney General’s Office reaffirmed the law does not authorize enforcement by a government entity; it only creates a private right of action.
After suing the state, allegedly over free speech concerns, the industry group, representing Amazon, Apple, Google and Meta, withdrew its complaint the same day.
“With the state’s confirmation that it will not and cannot enforce this statute, the Association’s complaint has achieved its objective,” CCIA President & CEO Matt Schruers told the Deseret News in a statement.
Leading the nation in child protection
Utah’s law, empowering parents to sue Big Tech giants who fail to get parental consent for app downloads, emerged almost entirely intact from the legal battle.
CCIA’s decision to drop its lawsuit before a judge ruled on the law cements Utah’s status as a leader on child-protection policies and signals a national shift, Weiler said.
“It was a victory for the law,” Weiler said. “ I think that the day of reckoning, it’s not coming, it’s already here. And I think that we need to see a lot of reform. We’ve got to do a better job of protecting our kids.”
In 2023, Utah passed landmark legislation forcing social media to verify users’ ages, to give maximum privacy to minors and to remove addictive engagement features.
The law quickly invited litigation from NetChoice, representing Google, Meta and Snapchat, and was enjoined in 2024 while its constitutionality is litigated.
During the legislative session, lawmakers postponed implementation of the App Store Accountability Act from May 2026 to 2027 to see how tech companies respond.
Weiler expects Utah to become the first state with app store age verifications next year after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld similar requirements for porn websites in June.
What’s next for Utah’s law?
But the national legal environment is still far from settled on the question of age verification measure.
In December, CCIA successfully pushed for an injunction on a similar law in Texas as part of a national push to discourage states from pursuing age verification proposals.
Texas has appealed the ruling. It is expected to end up before the United States Supreme Court, which has signaled a desire to balance free speech with child protection.
The Digital Childhood Institute, the Utah-based group behind the App Store Accountability Act, filed an amicus brief in support of the Texas law, which it also helped to craft.
The Texas law, passed a few months after Utah’s, has stricter requirements around age ratings, and tasks the attorney general, instead of private citizens, with holding companies liable.
But, according to the amicus brief, which was filed with the Utah conservative think tank Sutherland Institute, lawsuits against app store age restrictions dodge the main question:
Should apps make contracts with minors without a parent being informed about what their child is agreeing to?
Corinne Johnson, executive director of Utah’s Child First Policy Center, said the fact that more than a dozen other states are following Utah’s lead suggests that the answer is clear.
“Big Tech spent enormous resources trying to kill a law that simply asks them to be accountable to Utah families,” Johnson said in a statement. “They failed. The App Store Accountability Act stands.”
Utah
Where to watch Vegas Golden Knights vs Utah Mammoth playoffs: TV channel, start time, streaming for April 27
The 2026 NHL postseason is finally here as 16 teams begin their battle for the Stanley Cup. That action continues on Monday as the Vegas Golden Knights visit the Utah Mammoth for Game 4 of the first round with Utah up 2-1 in the series. We’ve got you covered on everything you need to know to tune in for puck drop.
Want to see the full National Hockey League schedule for April 27 and how to watch all the games? Check out our sortable NHL schedule to filter by team or division.
What time is Vegas Golden Knights vs Utah Mammoth Game 4?
Puck drop between the Utah Mammoth and Vegas Golden Knights is scheduled for 9:30 p.m. (ET) on Monday, April 27.
How to watch Vegas Golden Knights vs Utah Mammoth on Monday
All times Eastern and accurate as of Monday, April 27, 2026, at 10:28 a.m.
Watch the NHL all season with Fubo
NHL scores and results
See scores, results for all of today’s games.
See NHL scores, results from April 26
Odds for NHL games today
The latest NHL odds can be found below from the best sports betting apps . Some odds may include games scheduled on future dates.
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