Social Media Age Verification Laws In The United States
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In 2022 California passed The California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act or AB 2273 which requires websites that are likely to be used by minors to estimate visitors ages to give them some amount of privacy control and on March 23, 2023, Utah Governor Spencer Cox signed SB 152 and HB 311 collective known as the Utah Social Media Regulation Act which requires age verification and if they are under 18 they have to get parental consent before making an account on any social media platform.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] Since then multiple bills have been introduced or passed in multiple states however very few gone into effect mainly due to court challenges including both laws in California and Utah.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20]
Social Media Age Verification Laws
editArkansas
editOn April 11, 2023, The Governor of Arkansas Sarah Huckabee Sanders signed SB 396 also known as The Social Media Safety Act. The law requires certain social media that make over 100 million dollars per year to verify the age of new users by a third party and if they are under 18 years of age to get parental consent before being an account holder. It excludes platforms that social media company that allows a user to generate short video clips of dancing, voice overs, or other acts of entertainment in which the primary purpose is not educational or informative, it also excludes interactive and virtual games.[20][18] The law was set to go in effect in September 2023 and is enforced by the attorney general of Arkansas.[21]
On June 29, 2023 The Trade Association NetChoice would sue the Attorney General of Arkansas Tim Griffin to The Western District Court of Arkansas to block him from being able to enforce the law.[22][23] Later on July 7, 2023, NetChoice would file its motion for a preliminary injunction to block enforcement of the law.[24] The American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Fontier Foundation would file a brief in the lawsuit in support of NetChoice.[25][26] On July 27, 2023, Tim Griffin and Tony Allen would file briefs in opposition to the preliminary injunction.[27][28] A hearing for the preliminary injunction would be held on August 15, 2023, the judge for the hearing was Timothy L. Brooks.[29] The Preliminary Injunction was later granted by Judge Timothy L. Brooks on August 31, 2023 with his reasoning being that the law was too vague and that Netchoice's members will suffer irreparable harm if the act goes into effect and that age-gating social media platforms for adults and minors didn't appear to be an effective approach.[30][31][32]
California
editCalifornia Age-Appropriate Design Code (AB 2273)
editOn September 15, 2022, Governor Gavin Newsom signed AB 2273 also known as The California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act or CAADCA.[33][34][7] The most controversial parts of the law were that it requires online services that are likely to be used by children which is defined as anyone under 18 years of age to estimate the age of child users with a "reasonable level of certainty". It also requires theses online services to fill out Data Protection Impact Assessments or DPIAs to the attorney general of California with one of the DPIA requirements being wither or not an online product, service, or feature could harm children, including by exposing children to harmful, or potentially harmful, content on the online product, service, or feature. the law doesn't define what content is harmful or potentially harmful to minors.[5] Before the law took effect the Electronic Fontier Foundation sent a veto request to Gavin Newsom against him to veto the bill before it became law.[35]
On December 14, 2022 NetChoice would file a lawsuit against Rob Bonta who is the attorney general of California to The District Court for the Northern District of California.[36] After this on September 18, 2023, Federal Judge Beth Labson Freeman granted a preliminary injunction against the law blocking it from taking effect.[37][38][10][39] The law was appealed to the 9th Circuit on October 23, 2023.[40] The 9th Circuit would later on August 16, 2024, affirm the injunction against the DPIA section of the law and would send the rest of the law back down to the district court because the argument in the 9th circuit was mainly focused on the DPIA and not sections of the law such as its "dark patterns" section.[41][9][42][43]
Protecting Our Kids from Social Media Addiction Act (SB 976)
editOn September 20, 2024, Gavin Newsom signed SB 976 or Protecting Our Kids from Social Media Addiction Act.[44][45] The law requires online platforms to not give anyone under 18 years of age an "addictive" feed unless they have verified parental consent. It also requires online platforms to not send notifications to someone under 18 between 12:00 am and 6:00 am any day without parental consent or between 8:00 am – 3:00 pm without parental consent between the months of September and May, however the law doesn't define what a "notification" is. The law's rule making and enforcement is by The attorney general of California and is set to take effect on January 1, 2027.[46][47]
On November 12, 2024 the trade association NetChoice sued the California Attorney General Rob Bonta to block SB 976 from taking effect. The case is in the Northern District Court of California and the Judge for the case is Edward John Davila.[48][49][50][51]
Florida
editOn January 5, 2024, Tylor Sirois would introduce HB 1 which would ban anyone under 16 from using any social media platform and would require platforms to verify the age of users to make sure they weren't under 16.[52][53] Right after the bill passed the Florida State House The American Civil Liberties Union would make a blog post being in opposition to the bill claiming the bill violates the rights of minor and adults.[54][55] The law would later be vetoed by the governor of Florida Ron DeSantis on March 1, 2024, claiming that the State Legislature was going to enact a "superior" bill to HB 1.[56][57] The "superior" Bill was HB 3 which decreased the minimum age from 16 to 14 and allowed minors aged 14 and 15 to make social media accounts with parental consent it later signed on March 25, 2024, and is expected to make effect in January 2025.[58][59]
On October 28, 2024, The Trade Associations NetChoice and Computer and Communications Industry Association would file a lawsuit against the law. The Judge for the case is Mark E. Walker.[60][61][62]
Oral Argument for the case challenging HB 3 will take place on either February 27 or 28, 2025.[63]
Georgia
editOn April 23, 2024, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp signed SB 351 into law which became Act 463 after signing it.[64][65] Act 463 requires platforms to verify the age of users of social media platforms and if that user is under 16 years of age that must have parental consent before making an account, it also requires schools to ban all social media platforms including YouTube.[66][67] Before the law was signed The Trade Assocation NetChoice would send a veto request to The Governor of Georgia claiming the law was unconstitutional and was bad policy.[68] After the bill was signed the American Civil Liberties Union and NetChoice criticized the bill.[69][70]
Louisiana
editSecure Online Child Interaction and Age Limitation Act (SB 162)
editOn June 28, 2023, John Bel Edwards signed SB 162 also known as the Secure Online Child Interaction and Age Limitation Act.[71] It requires social media platforms to verify the age of users and if that user is under 16 to get parental consent before they can be an account holder and prohibits account holders under 16 from messaging adults on the service unless they are already connected, display of advertising based on user data, The collection or use of personal information from the posts, content, messages, text, or usage activities of the account other than what is necessary. A parent or guardian of a user under 16 can doing the following view privacy settings of the minor's account, set daily time limits for the service, schedule breaks, and offer the minor the option to set up parental notifications when the minor reports a person or issue.[15][72][73]
The law defines social media platform as the following, connects users in order to allow users to interact socially with each other within the service, construct a public or semipublic profile for purposes of signing into and using the service, populate a list of other users with whom an individual shares a social or virtual connection within the system, including subscribing to content related to another user, create or post content viewable by other users, including but not limited to, on message boards, in chat rooms, on video channels, or through a landing page or main feed that presents the user with content generated by other users. The bill excludes online email, video games, streaming services, news, sports, and entertainment as long as the content isn't user generated. The bill is enforced and guided by the Department of Justice of Louisiana and it took effect on July 1, 2024.[15][72][73]
HB 61
editon June 28, 2023, John Bel Edwards signed HB 61 the same day he signed SB 162 the law requires parental consent for anyone under 18 before making an account on an "interactive computer service" and it took effect on August 1, 2024.[74][75][76][77]
NetChoice would make a testimony being in opposition against both laws and would send a veto request for HB 61, however they have yet to sue the state of Louisiana over them.[78][79]
Mississippi
editOn April 30, 2024, Tate Reeves who is the Governor of Mississippi signed HB 1126 also known as The Walker Montgomery Protecting Children Online Act.[80]
Section 4 of the law requires "digital service providers" to make a commercially reasonable effort to verify the age of anyone who wants to make an account in the state of Mississippi and if that user is under 18, they must have consent from a parent or guardian.[81]
Section 5 of the law requires digital service providers to limit collection of the known minor's personal data, collect a minor's geolocation data, display targeted advertising involving harmful material to the known minor.[81]
Section 6 of the law requires digital service providers to "prevent and mitigate" which is "consistent with evidence-informed medical information", the law defines harmful material minors as the following self-harm, eating disorders, substance use disorders, and suicidal behaviors as well as patterns of use that indicate or encourage substance abuse or use of illegal drugs, stalking, physical violence, online bullying, or harassment, grooming, trafficking, child pornography, or other sexual exploitation or abuse Incitement of violence; or any other illegal activity.[81]
On June 7, 2024, The Trade Association NetChoice sued the Attorney General of Mississippi Lynn Flitch to the Southern District Court of Mississippi to block her from being able to enforce the law before it took effect on July 1 of the same year.[82] On June 18, 2024 The Electronic Fontier Foundation filed a brief in the case in favor of NetChoice for a Preliminary Injunction.[83] The state of Mississippi would file its brief in opposition to NetChoice's motion for a Preliminary Injunction on June 18, 2024, the same day when the Electronic Fontier Foundation filed its brief in support of NetChoice.[84] On June 21, 2024, NetChoice filed its reply brief to Mississippi's opposition brief.[85] Later on July 1, 2024, Federal Judge Halil Suleyman Ozerden granted NetChoice's motion for a Preliminary Injunction against the law blocking it from going into effect.[86][87][88][89]
The case was appealed to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals on July 5, 2024, and is wanting a decision from the court.[90]
New York
editOn June 20, 2024, The Governor of New York Kathy Hochul signed S7694A or the SAFE For Kids Act into law.[91][92][93] The law requires operators to use age determination technology on users and not to give "addictive" feeds to anyone under 18 years of age unless they have parental consent. It also requires operators to not send notifications to a minors account between 12:00 AM – 6:00 AM Eastern Standard Time unless they have verified parental consent.[94] The law takes effect 180 days after the Attorney General of New York promulgates rules and regulations on how to follow the law, the penalty for violating the law is a fine up to 5,000 dollars per violation.[94][92]
The law has been criticized by the Electronic Fontier Foundation and NetChoice because the law requires age verification, however neither the Electronic Fontier Foundation nor NetChoice has yet sued New York over the law yet.[95][96][97]
Ohio
editOn July 4, 2023, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine signed HB 33 which was the bill for the fiscal years of 2024-2025 in Ohio a part of that bill was the Social Media Parental Notification Act which requires online gaming and social media platforms that are likely to be used by minors under 16 and requires users under 16 years of age to have verified parental consent before they can making a contract on a social media or online gaming platform and was going to take effect on January 15, 2024, the law is enforced by the Attorney General of Ohio.[98][99][100][101] Mike DeWine and Jon Husted both advocated for the law to be added in the fiscal years 2024-2025 bill.[102]
On January 5, 2024, NetChoice sued Dave Yost, who is the Attorney General of Ohio to the Southern District Court of Ohio claiming the law was unconstitutionally vague and was in violation of the First Amendment and Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution.[103] Four days later after NetChoice make its complaint on January 9, 2024, Chief Judge Algenon L. Marbley granted a Temporary Restraining Order, temporally blocking the law from going into effect.[104][105][106] On January 19, 2024 Lieutenant Governor Jon Husted filed a brief in opposition to a Preliminary Injunction against the law claiming that the law protects the welfare of minors, protected minors from mental health issues as well as the privacy of minors and protecting them from predators and that Ohio had a compelling government interest in the law.[107] NetChoice on January 26, 2024, filed another brief in the support of a Preliminary Injunction.[108] The Attorney General of Ohio made a brief replying to NetChoice's brief in support of a Preliminary Injunction.[109]
On February 7, 2024, a hearing was held for NetChoice's motion for a Preliminary Injunction against the law.[110] 5 days later after the hearing on February 12, 2024, Chief Judge Algenon L. Marbley granted NetChoice's motion for a Preliminary Injunction.[111][112][8][113]
Tennessee
editOn May 2, 2024, Tennesse Governor Bill Lee signed HB 1891 also known as the Protecting Kids From Social Media Act.[114][115][116] The law requires social media companies to verify by a third party the age of all users within 14 days of them attempting to access an existing account and if the person attempting to access that account is under 18 years of age, then they must get parental consent. Parenta are allowed to view privacy settings on the account, set daily time restrictions, and implement breaks during which the minor cannot access the account of account holders under 18. The law takes effect January 1, 2025, and is enforced by the Attorney General of Tennesse.[117][118]
On October 3, 2024, The Trade Association NetChoice sued Tennesse Attorney General Johnathan Skrmetti to The Middle District Court of Tennessee.[119][120][121] The case is still wanting a decision in the District Court and Chief Judge William L. Campbell Jr is assigned to the case.[122][123]
Texas
editOn June 13, 2023, Texas Governor signed HB 18 also known as The SCOPE Act.[124][125][126][127] The law requires minors under 18 to have verified consent from a parent or guardian. Section 509.101 of bill requires that this verification should be done by using a commercially reasonable method.[128]
In Section 509.052 of the law Minors aren't allowed to make purchases or engage in other financial and digital service providers aren't allowed to collect the known minor's precise geolocation or display targeted advertising to the known minor.[128]
Section 509.053 of the law requires digital service providers are required to prevent the known minor's exposure to harmful material and other content that promotes, glorifies, or facilitates the following suicide, self-harm, or eating disorders; substance abuse; stalking, bullying, or harassment; or grooming, trafficking, child pornography, or other sexual exploitation or abuse.[128]
The bill was criticized by the Chamber of Progress because the bill required platforms to filter out "grooming" content which could be used to censor LGBTQ content and claim that the bill with have an isolating effect on LGBTQ Minors.[129]
On July 30, 2024, the Computer and Communications Industry Association and NetChoice would sue Ken Paxton who is the Attorney General of Texas in the Western District Court of Texas.[130]
Later on, August 16, 2024, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression helped four plaintiffs sue Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton as well.[131]
On August 30, 2024, Federal Judge Robert Pitman would grant Computer and Communications Industry Association and NetChoice a Preliminary Injunction against the laws "harmful to minors" section of it.[132][133][134][135]
Utah
editOn March 23, 2023, Utah's Governor Spencer Cox signed SB 152 and HB 311 collective known as the Utah Social Media Regulation Act.[1][3][4][2] SB 152 requires social media platforms with at least 5 million accounts worldwide to verify the age of all account holders and if they are under 18, they must have consent from a parent or guardian and the parent or guardian of a minor is allowed to view all their post and messages sent to them.[2] SB 152 also prohibits direct messaging between other users if that user hasn't been linked to the account already as well as display targeted advertising to minors, it also requires that between 10:30 AM – 6:30 PM Mountain Standard Time a minor cannot access social media.[2]
HB 311 creates a private right of action for parents to sue social media companies from causing "addiction" and harm to minors with a rebuttable that if the minor was under 16 that the social media platform actually caused the harm.[1]
On December 18, 2023, The Trade Association NetChoice sued Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes and Katherine Hass arguing the law was preempted by federal law, unconstitutionally vague and was in violation of the First Amendment and Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, two days later on December 20, 2023 NetChoice filed made a request for a Preliminary Injunction against the law.[136][137][138][139] Shortly after the case started Sean Reyes announced to the court on January 19, 2024, that the laws effective date was delayed from March 2024 to October 2024 and that they would appeal and replace the law, the hearing would have happened on February 12, 2024, if the law wasn't delayed.[140]
The bills that amended the Utah Social Media Regulation Act were SB 194 and HB 464 and were signed on March 13, 2024. the amendments removed the 10:30 pm – 6:30 pm curfew and changed it so that parental consent would only happen if a minor changed their privacy settings, it also replaced the age verification to age assurance that was at least 95% accurate.[141][142]
NetChoice would make an updated complaint and motion for a Preliminary Injunction against the amendments on May 3, 2024.[143][144] The state of Utah would make its brief in opposition to the Preliminary Injunction on May 31, 2024.[145] On July 22, 2024, Chief Judge Robert J Shelby would grant in part the states motion to dismiss saying that the law didn't violate Section 230 and there for wasn't preempted by federal law.[146][147] However later on September 10, 2024, NetChoice's motion for a Preliminary Injunction would be granted anyway by Robert J Shelby.[148][149][11][150] The case was appealed to the 10th circuit court of appeals on October 11, 2024, a week after the case was appealed to the 10th circuit the case was put on stay in the district court.[151][152]
Proposed Legislation
editAlaska
editOn January 16, 2024, The Alaska Legislature introduced HB 271 also known as the Alaska Social Media Regulation Act. The law requires social media platforms verify the age of users and if that user is under 18 years of age they must have consent from a parent before they can make an account, and this parental consent can be revoked at any time as seen Section 45.50.650 of the bill.[153]
Section 45.50.670 of the bill prohibits an online platform from displaying, sending, or targeting an advertisement to a minor user or using data collected from a minor user for advertising purposes.[154][155]
Section 45.50.680 of the bill prohibits an online platform from using an algorithm, artificial intelligence, machine learning, or other technology to select, recommend, rank, or personalize content for a minor user based on the minor user's profile, preferences, behavior, location, or other data.[154][155]
Section 45.50.690 of the bill prohibits an online platform from may not employ a feature, design, or mechanism that encourages or rewards a minor user's excessive or compulsive use of the platform or that exploits the psychological vulnerabilities of a minor.[154][155]
Section 45.50.700 of the bill sets up curfew for minors where they cannot use the platform between 10:30 pm – 6:30 am Alaska Standard Time.[154][155]
The bill would be enforced by a private right of action and by the Attorney General of Alaska.[154][155]
The bill had its first reading on January 16, 2024, and was referred to the Labor & Commerce and Judiciary Committee, however didn't progress any further in the Legislator and died in committee.[153][156]
Arizona
editOn February 8, 2024, Seth Blattman introduced HB2858 to the Arizona State Legislature also known as the Protecting Children on Social Media Act. The bill requires social media platforms to do the following.[157][158]
Establish default settings for the online service product or feature that provide the maximum degree of privacy protections to each user of the online service, product or feature.[158]
Allow minors to opt out of the collection and use of the minor's personal information.[158]
Prohibit a platform from using a minor's personal information for the use of targeted advertising.[158]
Develop content filters for users to limit cyberbullying on the provider's social media platform, the bill doesn't define what "cyberbullying" is.[158]
For each business day a platform is in the state of Arizona that are also required to do the following.[158]
to use protections that prohibit any user on the platform who is at least 18 years of age from sending a message on the platform to a minor who is under 18 years of age.[158][159]
prohibit a minor who is under 16 years of age from using the social media platform without first receiving approval from the minor's parent or guardian.[158][159]
Later the bill was amended to exclude the parental consent for minors under 16, prohibiting anyone over 18 from messaging anyone under 18 as well as requiring platforms to filter cyberbullying.[160][161][162]
The bill had made it to its second reading the Arizona State House, however, did progress much further than that and didn't make out of the House.[163]
Idaho
editSenate Bill 1417 also known as the Parental Rights in Social Media Act was introduced to the Idaho State Legislature on March 8, 2024.[164]
Section 48-2101 of the bill defines a social media company as a platform that has at least five million account holders worldwide and a social media platform is defined as an online forum that a social media company makes available for an account holder to create a profile upload posts, view the posts of other account holders, and interact with other account holders or users, however excludes email, streaming services, online gaming, cloud storage services, academic or scholarly research as well as news, sports, or entertainment as long as it's not user generated.[165][166]
Section 48-2103 of the bill requires social media companies to not allow anyone under 18 years of age to have an account unless they have expressed consent from a parent or guardian.[165][166]
The bill would be enforced by a private right of action by any person or the Attorney General of Idaho, penalties for violating the law are up to $5,000 per violation or $2,500 for each incident of harm or actual damages for addiction, financial, physical, and emotional harm incurred by the Idaho minor account holder.[165][166]
The law was referred to State Affairs on March 11, 2024, and died in committee after that. If the law had been enacted it would have taken effect on January 1, 2025.[164][165][166]
Illinois
editParental Consent for Social Media Act (SB 3440)
editOn February 8, 2024, Willie Preston introduced SB 3440 also known as the Parental Consent for Social Media Act. the bill requires social media companies who make more than 100 million dollars per year to perform reasonable age verification by a third party either by a government-issued identification or any commercially reasonable age verification method, and if the person trying to make an account is under 18 years of age, they must have consent from a parent or guardian.[167][168]
it excludes email, direct messaging, streaming services, online shopping or e-commerce, cloud storage, visualization platforms, libraries, or hubs, providing or obtaining technical support for a social media company's platform, products, or services, academic or scholarly research or providing news, sports, entertainment, or other content that is preselected by the provider and not user generated. the bill permits comments on a digital news website, as long as the news content is posted only by the provider of the digital news website.[167]
The bill also has a curfew of to not allow minors on social media platforms between 10 pm to 6 am Central Standard Time.[168][167] The same day the bill was introduced it had its first reading and was referred to assignments.[168]
Minor User of Social Media Protection Act (SB 3510)
editOn February 9, 2024, Laura Fine introduced SB 3510 also known as the Minor User of Social Media Protection Act.[169] The bill requires social media platforms if they make more than 100 million dollars per year to verify the age of users and if that user is under 13 years old, they must have parental consent before making an account and prohibit the online platform from using the information of a minor under 13 for the use of targeted advertising as well as prohibit minors under 13 from having access to the platform between 10 pm - 6 am Central Standard Time.[170] The bill appears to be very similar to SB 3440 except for the age it covers SB 3440 covers minors under 18 were as SB 3510 covers minors under 13.[167][170] The same day the bill was introduced it had its first reading and was referred to assignments, the bill later on February 22, 2024, would gain its second cosponsor Rachel Ventura, however the bill hasn't progressed any further than that.[169]
Indiana
editOn January 10, 2024, Johanna King introduced HB 1314 to the Indiana State House.[171] The bill requires social media services to use a reasonable age verification method to verify the age of users if they want to make an account and of accounts existing before July 1, 2024, and if the user is under 18 years of age, they must suspend the account within 14 days or get consent from a parent or guardian.[172]
Social media services aren't allowed to recommendations for content to minor accounts, social media services may not disseminate advertising to minors, have a curfew for minors from 10:30 pm - 6:30 am Eastern Standard Time where they aren't allowed to use the platform, minors aren't allowed to change or configure an account.[172]
a parent or guardian of a minors account is allowed to view all account activity, modify the account configuration, set a limit on the number of hours per day during which the minor may access the account.[172]
The bill would be enforced by a private right of action and by the Attorney General of Indiana.[172]
The bill had its first reading on January 10, 2024, and was referred to Committee on Judiciary, the bill died in committee after that.[173]
Iowa
editOn February 14, 2024, House File 2523 was introduced to the Iowa House of Representatives.[174] The bill requires what it calls "social media platforms" which the bill defines as any platform that allows the following, creating personal profiles or accounts that include the person’s name, age, location, and other personal information, connect with other social media platform users as friends, followers, or any other means of connecting that allows other users to access shared content, facilitate public access to content, including text, images, videos, internet site links, or any other information, send private messages to other social media platform users, create groups for the purpose of communicating about shared interests.[175]
The bill excludes interactive gaming, virtual gaming, or an online service that allows the creation and uploading of content for the purpose of interactive gaming, educational entertainment, or associated entertainment, and the communication related to such content.[175]
The bill requires social media platforms to not allow anyone under 18 from having an account unless they have parental authorization to do so.[175]
Social media platforms are also required to allow the parent or guardian of a minor to view all posts created by the minor on the social media platform, view all messages sent by, and responses received by the minor on the social media platform, Control the privacy and account settings of the minor’s account on the social media platform, monitor and limit the amount of time the minor may spend using the social media platform.[175]
The bill would be enforced by the Attorney General of Iowa and by a private right of action.[175]
The had passed the Iowa House of Representatives by a vote of 88-6. The six no votes were Monica Kurth, Brian K. Lohse, Shannon Lundgren, Megan L. Srinivas, Phil Thompson, and Ross Wilburn.[176][177][178] The next day on March 7, 2024, the bill had its first reading in the Iowa Senate and was referred to Technology, later on March 11, 2024, the bill went to the subcommittee, however died in the legislature after this.[174][179][180]
Kentucky
editOn February 1, 2024, House Bill 450 was introduced to the Kentucky Legislature.[181]
The bill requires social media platforms to verify the age of new and existing accounts by a digitized identification card, including a digital copy of a driver's license, government issued identification, financial documents or other documents that are reliable proxies for age, or any other reliable age authentication method, this verification is done by a trusted third-party vendor and if the user that has been verified is under 18 they are not permitted unless they have consent from a parent or guardian.[182]
Parents and guardians are allowed to view all posts the minor makes on the social media platform, view all messages sent to or by the minor on the social media platform, control privacy and account settings of the minor's account and monitor and limit the amount of time the minor account holder spends on the platform.[182]
The bill excludes email, search engines, cloud storage, product review sites, broadband internet services, or an online service that consists primarily of information or content that is not user-generated from its definition of a social media platform.[182]
The bill would be enforced by the Attorney General of Kentucky and by a right of action by citizens.[182]
References
edit- ^ a b c HB0311
- ^ a b c d SB0152
- ^ a b Utah social media law is ambitious, but is it enforceable? | AP News
- ^ a b Utah social media law requires parental permission for kids : NPR
- ^ a b Bill Text - AB-2273 The California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act.
- ^ California Governor Signs Law Aimed at Protecting Children's Online Privacy | PCMag
- ^ a b Gavin Newsom signs California social media overhaul for minors - The Verge
- ^ a b A judge has blocked enforcement of an Ohio law limiting kids’ use of social media during litigation | AP News
- ^ a b A key part of California’s online safety law for kids is still on hold after appeals court ruling - The Verge
- ^ a b Court blocks California’s online child safety law - The Verge
- ^ a b Federal judge temporarily blocks Utah social media law aimed at protecting children | AP News
- ^ Federal judge blocks Arkansas social media age verification law to have gone into effect Friday | CNN Business
- ^ Tennessee lawmakers seek to require parental permission before children join social media | AP News
- ^ SB 162 Louisiana
- ^ a b c New Louisiana law will require kids under 16 get parent approval to access social media
- ^ Ohio social media parental consent act may soon become law
- ^ New Ohio law calls for parental consent before using social media
- ^ a b SB396 as engrossed on 04-04-2023 10:19:13
- ^ SB396 Bill Information - Arkansas State Legislature
- ^ a b Arkansas governor signs sweeping bill imposing a minimum age limit for social media usage | CNN Business
- ^ Arkansas social media restrictions for minors exempts most platforms - The Verge
- ^ Tech group sues Arkansas over law requiring parental OK for minors creating social media accounts
- ^ NetChoice-v-Griffin_-Complaint_2023-06-29.pdf
- ^ NetChoice_Griffin_Motion-for-Preliminary-Injunction_July-7-2023.pdf
- ^ NetChoice v. Griffin | American Civil Liberties Union
- ^ gov.uscourts.arwd.68680.31.0.pdf
- ^ Tony Allen brief in opposition 7/27/2023
- ^ Tim Griffin 2023/7/27
- ^ August 15, 2023, preliminary injunction hearing
- ^ Federal judge blocks Arkansas law requiring parental OK for minors to create social media accounts – NBC4 Washington
- ^ Judge blocks Arkansas law requiring parental OK for minors to create social media accounts | AP News
- ^ GRIFFIN-NETCHOICE-GRANTED.pdf
- ^ Bill History - AB-2273 The California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act.
- ^ Newsom signs bill to make tech companies protect kids online - POLITICO
- ^ AB 2273: Veto Request Letter | Electronic Frontier Foundation
- ^ NetChoice-v-Bonta_-Official-AB-2273-Complaint-final.pdf
- ^ Judge blocks California law meant to protect children's online safety | Reuters
- ^ Judge blocks California law meant to increase online safety for kids - The Washington Post
- ^ NETCHOICE-v-BONTA-PRELIMINARY-INJUNCTION-GRANTED.pdf
- ^ NetChoice, LLC v. Bonta, 23-2969 – CourtListener.com
- ^ Court blocks key part of California law on children's online safety | Reuters
- ^ gov.uscourts.ca9.618ad422-a2c1-4e13-9573-1f9a922ea055.121.1.pdf
- ^ 23-2969.pdf
- ^ Bill History - SB-976 Protecting Our Kids from Social Media Addiction Act.
- ^ California governor signs law to protect children from social media addiction | AP News
- ^ Newsom signs bill to regulate social media use among children | CNN Politics
- ^ Bill Text - SB-976 Protecting Our Kids from Social Media Addiction Act.
- ^ 2024-11-12-NetChoice-v-Bonta-2024-Complaint-FILED.pdf
- ^ Tech industry lobbying group sues to block California social media addiction law
- ^ NetChoice Sues to Block California Social Media Addiction Law
- ^ NetChoice v. Bonta, 5:24-cv-07885 – CourtListener.com
- ^ Florida HB 1 passes: Bill prevent kids 16 and under from having social media – NBC 6 South Florida
- ^ House Bill 1 (2024) - The Florida Senate
- ^ HouseVote_h00001e1552.PDF
- ^ ACLU of Florida Condemns House Passage of Social Media Censorship Bill | ACLU of Florida | We defend the civil rights and civil liberties of all people in Florida, by working through the legislature, the courts and in the streets.
- ^ HB 1 Veto Letter
- ^ DeSantis vetoes bill that would ban social media for children 16 and under - CBS Miami
- ^ Florida governor signs law restricting social media access for children | CNN Business
- ^ Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs bill that bans children under 14 from having social media accounts
- ^ Microsoft Word - CCIA and Netchoice HB3 Complaint.docx
- ^ COMPUTER & COMMUNICATIONS INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION v. MOODY, 4:24-cv-00438 – CourtListener.com
- ^ Internet groups sue Florida over social media law
- ^ gov.uscourts.flnd.527923.34.0.pdf
- ^ Kemp signs bill requiring kids to have parental permission to join social media | FOX 5 Atlanta
- ^ Georgia General Assembly - SB 351
- ^ Georgia joins states seeking parental permission before children join social media | AP News
- ^ Georgia eyes parental consent for kids' social media use: Could this hinder the classroom?
- ^ GA SB 351_Veto Request
- ^ Gov. Kemp Signs New Law Jeopardizing Georgians’ Security & Freedom Online - NetChoice
- ^ SB 351 - PROTECTING GEORGIA'S CHILDREN ON SOCIAL MEDIA ACT OF 2024 | ACLU of Georgia
- ^ SB162
- ^ a b Louisiana Enacts Law Regulating Social Media Use for Minors | Practical Law
- ^ a b SB 162 bill text
- ^ HB 61 Bill Text
- ^ Louisiana passes bill banning kids from the internet without parental consent - The Verge
- ^ HB61
- ^ Louisiana law would require parental permission to use social media
- ^ Gov. Edwards Should Veto Unconstitutional Age Verification Bill in Louisiana - NetChoice
- ^ Testimony re: HB 61 & SB 161 relating to Social Media Age Verification
- ^ HB 1126 - History of Actions
- ^ a b c HB1126 (As Sent to Governor) - 2024 Regular Session
- ^ NetChoice v. Flitch complaint
- ^ NetChoice v. Fitch - EFF amicus brief | Electronic Frontier Foundation
- ^ Mississippi Opposition brief NetChoice v. Flitch June 18, 2024
- ^ NetChoice-Reply-ISO-PI-Motion_MS.pdf
- ^ gov.uscourts.mssd.125118.30.0.pdf
- ^ Judge blocks Mississippi law that required age verification on social media - The Verge
- ^ https://www.reuters.com/legal/mississippi-law-restricting-childrens-social-media-use-blocked-2024-07-01/
- ^ Federal judge halts Mississippi law requiring age verification for websites | AP News
- ^ NetChoice v. Fitch, 24-60341 – CourtListener.com
- ^ New York governor signs bill regulating social media algorithms, in a US first | CNN Business
- ^ a b New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signs bill targeting addictive social media platforms: "Our kids are in distress" - CBS News
- ^ NY State Senate Bill 2023-S7694A
- ^ a b S7694A Bill Text
- ^ NetChoice Condemns New York’s New Unconstitutional Internet Censorship Law - NetChoice
- ^ EFF comments to NY AG on SAFE for Kids (Sept. 2024) | Electronic Frontier Foundation
- ^ EFF to New York: Age Verification Threatens Everyone's Speech and Privacy | Electronic Frontier Foundation
- ^ HB 33 Text Section Section.1349.09.
- ^ Parents respond to social media consent law | News, Sports, Jobs - Tribune Chronicle
- ^ Section 1349.09 - Ohio Revised Code | Ohio Laws
- ^ House Bill 33 | 135th General Assembly | Ohio Legislature
- ^ Ohio leaders discuss Social Media Parental Notification Act included in State Budget | 10tv.com
- ^ Microsoft Word - NetChoice Ohio - Complaint FINAL
- ^ Federal judge pauses Ohio social media law requiring parental consent for kids’ accounts | CNN Business
- ^ Ohio’s social media parental law blocked by judge
- ^ Microsoft Word - 2024 01 9 NetChoice TRO OO.docx
- ^ Jon Husted opposition brief to NetChoice v. Yost
- ^ reply brief NetChoice January 26, 2024
- ^ gov.uscourts.ohsd.287455.30.0.pdf
- ^ gov.uscourts.ohsd.287455.32.0.pdf
- ^ Judge blocks Ohio law requiring parental consent for teen social media use
- ^ Federal judge blocks Ohio law regulating kids’ access to social media | CNN Business
- ^ Microsoft Word - 2024 02 09 NetChoice PI OO.docx
- ^ Tennessee General Assembly Legislation HB 1891
- ^ Tennessee governor signs bill requiring parental consent for child's social media use
- ^ Social Media Restrictions for Teens Signed Into Law in Tennessee
- ^ TN Gov. Bill Lee signs social media age verification bill into law
- ^ HB1891.pdf
- ^ NetChoice-v.-Skrmetti_Tennessee_Complaint_FINAL_Oct-3-2024.pdf
- ^ Microsoft Word - NetChoice MISO Motion for Prelim Injunction.docx
- ^ Tech Group Netchoice Targets Tennessee Kids' Social Media Law
- ^ NetChoice v. Skrmetti, 3:24-cv-01191 – CourtListener.com
- ^ NetChoice v. Skrmetti (3:24-cv-01191), Tennessee Middle District Court
- ^ Monday, May 29, 2023 — 75th Day
- ^ Texas Legislature Online - 88(R) History for HB 18
- ^ Texas bans kids from social media without parental consent - The Verge
- ^ Texas will require parental consent for kids to use social media - Ars Technica
- ^ a b c 88(R) HB 18 - Senate Committee Report version - Bill Text
- ^ TX Gov. Signs Social Media Parental Control Bill - Chamber of Progress
- ^ HB-18-Complaint_As-Filed.pdf
- ^ Students Engaged in Advancing Texas v. Ken Paxton - Complaint | The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression
- ^ 2024-08-30-Order-Granting-In-dckt-25_0.pdf
- ^ New Texas law requires parental approval for child social media accounts | FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth
- ^ Texas social media parental consent law partially blocked | wfaa.com
- ^ Social networks can’t be forced to filter content for kids, says judge - The Verge
- ^ NetChoice-v-Reyes_Official-Complaint_FINAL-Filed.pdf
- ^ NetChoice-v.-Reyes-PI-Motion.pdf
- ^ https://www.ksl.com/article/50822901/tech-industry-group-sues-utah-over-its-social-media-regulations
- ^ NetChoice challenges Utah Social Media Regulation Act in new suit – Deseret News
- ^ Attorneys' Planning Meeting Report
- ^ SB0194
- ^ HB0464
- ^ https://netchoice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/NetChoice-v-Reyes-MOTION-for-Prelimary-Injunction.2024.05.03-ECF-52-pdf
- ^ Update on lawsuits challenging Utah's social media law – Deseret News
- ^ 2024.05.31-ECF-59-MTD-Def.-Motion-to-Dismiss.pdf
- ^ Microsoft Word - v3 223cv00911 Order gtg MTD
- ^ Utah wins legal victory in bigger lawsuit battle with NetChoice – Deseret News
- ^ NetChoice-v-Reyes-2024.09.10-ECF-86-ORDER-Granting-PI.pdf
- ^ https://thehill.com/policy/technology/4877108-utah-social-media-law-blocked/
- ^ Utah's social media law put on hold by federal judge
- ^ NetChoice v. Reyes, et al 24-4100 | U.S. Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit | Justia
- ^ Attorneys' Planning Meeting Report 10/18/2024
- ^ a b Alaska State Legislature HB 271
- ^ a b c d e Microsoft Word - HB0271A.DOC
- ^ a b c d e Alaska State Legislature HB 271 2
- ^ Alaska State Legislature Page 1285
- ^ HB 2858 Arizona
- ^ a b c d e f g h Microsoft Word - HB2858P.docx
- ^ a b H.HB2858_021624_APPROP.pdf
- ^ Bill Status HB 2858
- ^ Microsoft Word - HB2858H.1.docx
- ^ H.HB2858_022724_HOUSEENGROSSED.pdf
- ^ Bill Status HB 2858 history
- ^ a b SENATE BILL 1417 – Idaho State Legislature
- ^ a b c d Senate Bill 1417 Text
- ^ a b c d SENATE BILL NO.1417 (2024) - Parental rights in social media act
- ^ a b c d Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of SB3440
- ^ a b c Illinois General Assembly - Bill Status for SB3440
- ^ a b Illinois General Assembly - Bill Status for SB3510
- ^ a b Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of SB3510
- ^ IGA | House Bill 1314 - Social media use by minors
- ^ a b c d HB1314.01.INTR.pdf
- ^ IGA | House Committee on Judiciary
- ^ a b Iowa Legislature - Bill History House File 2523
- ^ a b c d e Iowa Legislature - BillBook House File 2523
- ^ 03-06-2024
- ^ Parents' permission would be required under new social media bill
- ^ Iowa legislature: House passes parental OK for youth social media use
- ^ 03-07-2024
- ^ 03-11-2024
- ^ 24RS HB 450
- ^ a b c d orig_bill.pdf HB 450 Kentucky