Kids Online Safety Act: Difference between revisions
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==Current Status== | ==Current Status== | ||
A bill called the "Protecting Kids on Social Media Act" has been introduced in the 118th Congress. Due to the likelihood that it may be amended in committee, it will not be analyzed until and unless it has been reported from committee. | A bill called the "Protecting Kids on Social Media Act" has been introduced in the 118th Congress. Due to the likelihood that it may be amended in committee, it will not be analyzed until and unless it has been reported from committee. | ||
The "Kids Online Safety Act" has also been reintroduced. | |||
==Definitions== | ==Definitions== | ||
Anyone 16 or under is a "minor". (2(5)) | Anyone 16 or under is a "minor". (2(5)) |
Revision as of 08:25, 26 July 2023
In 1997, the Supreme Court of the United States unanimously struck down two provisions of the Communications Decency Act, which made "the knowing transmission of obscene or indecent messages to any recipient under 18 years of age" and "knowing[ly] sending or displaying of patently offensive messages in a manner that is available to a person under 18 years of age" felonies[1]. "The level of discourse reaching a mailbox simply cannot be limited to that which would be suitable for a sandbox", quoted the Court; "the Government may not 'reduce the adult population . . . to . . . only what is fit for children.'"[2]
It's been 25 years and a bill pending in the Senate hasn't learned this lesson. The bill is entitled the "Kids Online Safety Act"[3]. The following summarizes and analyzes this Act; numbers and letters in parentheses indicate particular clauses of the bill.
Current Status
A bill called the "Protecting Kids on Social Media Act" has been introduced in the 118th Congress. Due to the likelihood that it may be amended in committee, it will not be analyzed until and unless it has been reported from committee.
The "Kids Online Safety Act" has also been reintroduced.
Definitions
Anyone 16 or under is a "minor". (2(5))
A "covered platform" is an "online platform" that "is reasonably likely to be used, by a minor." (2(3))
Duty of Care
This Act requires a "covered platform...to act in the best interests of a minor that uses [its] products or services." (3(a))
It must "take reasonable measures...to prevent and mitigate:"
- "mental health disorders" (3(b)(1))
- "addiction-like behaviors" (3(b)(2))
- bullying and harassment (3(b)(3))
- "sexual exploitation" (3(b)(4))
- advertising of illegal drugs, gambling, tobacco, and alcohol (3(b)(5))
- "financial harms" (3(b)(6))
Restrictions
Safeguards for Minors
A covered platform must have "readily accessible and easy-to-use safeguards" for minors and their parents to:
- stop other people, especially "adults with no relationship to" them, from finding them (4(a)(1)(A))
- "prevent other users, registered or not from viewing" and "restricting public access to" their personal data (4(a)(1)(B))
- limit features that make them want to use the covered platform more (4(a)(1)(C))
- opt out of, or limit recommendations from, algorithms (4(a)(1)(D))
- delete their account and all its data (4(a)(1)(E))
- restrict sharing of their geolocation, and tell them when it's tracked (4(a)(1)(F))
- limit the time they spend there (4(a)(1)(G))
If a platform "knows or reasonably believes" a user to be a minor, these settings must be "the strongest option available" (4(a)(2)).
Parental Tools
A covered platform must provide "readily accessible and easy-to-use" tools for parents of minors to:
- "control" their "privacy and account settings" including the above "#Safeguards for Minors" (4(b)(2)(A))
- restrict their purchases (4(b)(2)(B))
- track the time they spend (4(b)(2)(C))
- turn off parental controls (4(b)(2)(D))
- "allow [them] to address the harms" covered in "#Duty of Care" (4(b)(2)(E))
A minor will be told when those tools are in effect (4(b)(3)).
If a platform "knows or reasonably believes" a user to be a minor, these tools must be in effect by default (4(b)(4)).
Reporting Mechanisms
A covered platform has to have "a readily accessible and easy-to-use" way to report "harms to minors" (4(c)(1)(A)), an "electronic point of contact" specific to them (4(c)(1)(B)), and a way to confirm and track reports (4(c)(1)(C)). It has to respond "in a reasonable and timely manner", within 14 days of getting them (4(c)(2)).
Exceptions
This Act doesn't:
- stop a covered platform from limiting their algorithms from recommending "harmful, obscene, or unlawful content to minors" (4(e)(3)(A)(i)), or blocking or filtering spam or protecting their security (4(e)(3)(A)(ii))
- force a covered platform to disclose the content of a minor's communications (4(e)(3)(B))
- stop a covered platform from cooperating with law enforcement agencies regarding activity that it "reasonably and in good faith" believes is illegal (4(e)(3)(C)(i))
Disclosure
Before a person "a covered platform reasonably believes is a minor" signs up for it, it must get them and their parents to acknowledge
- how it looks after their personal data (5(a)(1)(A))
- how to access the #Restrictions (5(a)(1)(B))
- whether it poses any "heightened risk of harm" to them (5(a)(1)(C))
The terms and conditions of any covered platform that uses an algorithm for recommendations must describe
- how the system uses personal data belonging to minors (5(b)(1))
- how minors and their parents can control the system (5(b)(2))
Any "advertising aimed at minors" on a covered platform must
- tell them why they've been targeted for the ad including what personal data was used (5(c)(1)(B))
- explicitly say that it is an ad (5(c)(1)(C))
All these disclosures must be "clear, accessible, and easy-to-understand".
Transparency
Every year a covered platform that has at least 10 million "active users on a monthly basis in the United States" has to get an "independent, third-party...reasonable inspection" (6(a)(1)).