Categories: News

Dozens of states ask Congress to un-doom the Kids Online Safety Act

A group of state attorneys general are pushing Congress to pass the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), which has stalled in the House of Representatives thanks to concerns over online censorship. An open letter published today is signed by 32 attorneys general, including those of 31 states and the District of Columbia. It urges leaders of both parties in the House and Senate to vote on the bill before the current congressional session ends early next year.

“While an increasingly online world has improved many aspects of our material well-being, prolific internet usage negatively impacts our children,” reads the letter, whose signatories include the attorneys general of Florida, New Mexico, and New York. “KOSA will establish better safeguards for minors online.” It also urges Congress to pass final text that wouldn’t prohibit states from enacting and enforcing stricter rules.

Moving the bill forward at all would be an uphill battle. KOSA (along with a related bill dubbed COPPA 2.0) passed the Senate nearly unanimously in July, but this lockstep bipartisan support broke down in the House, where a committee passed it to the House floor reluctantly with numerous complaints and promised amendments. Among other provisions, KOSA would establish that large social media platforms bear a legal “duty of care” for children. But amid lobbying against the bill from tech companies, both Republican and Democratic critics argue it could easily become a vehicle for censoring content their opponents dub harmful — including LGBTQ posts for Democrats and anti-abortion content for Republicans.

One particularly contentious question has been whether state attorneys general can bring suits under the law; the Senate version allows states to enforce some portions of KOSA but not the central duty of care rule. Several states have already filed numerous — but largely preliminary — lawsuits against companies like Snap, Meta, and TikTok under consumer protection laws.

Original Author: Adi Robertson | Source: The Verge

Akshit Behera

Share
Published by
Akshit Behera

Recent Posts

Trump administration’s deal is structured to prevent Intel from selling foundry unit | TechCrunch

The deal allows the U.S. to take more equity in Intel if the company doesn't…

8 months ago

3 Apple Watches are rumored to arrive on September 9 – these are the models to expect

We're expecting two new models alongside the all-new Apple Watch Series 11. | Original Author:…

8 months ago

Fujitsu is teaming with Nvidia to build probably the world’s fastest AI supercomputer ever at 600,000 FP8 Petaflops – so Feyman GPU could well feature

Japan’s FugakuNEXT supercomputer will combine Fujitsu CPUs and Nvidia GPUs to deliver 600EFLOPS AI performance…

8 months ago

Microsoft fires two more employees for participating in Palestine protests on campus

Microsoft has fired two more employees who participated in recent protests against the company’s contracts…

8 months ago

Microsoft launches its first in-house AI models

Microsoft announced its first homegrown AI models on Thursday: MAI-Voice-1 AI and MAI-1-preview. The company…

8 months ago

Life 3.0 – Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence by Max Tegmark

A comprehensive review of Max Tegmark's Life 3.0, exploring the future of artificial intelligence and…

8 months ago