Meta Seeks Immunity in Kids Online Safety Act
Meta is seeking federal immunity from state lawsuits over child safety and privacy claims as lawmakers weigh stronger online protections and possible limits on platform liability.
- Meta is lobbying lawmakers to secure legal immunity from state-level lawsuits alleging child harm as part of ongoing negotiations for the Kids Online Safety Act .
- The lobbying effort follows a Los Angeles jury verdict earlier this year that ordered Meta and Google to pay $6 million in damages for negligent design that harmed a young user.
- Proposed language for the legislation would make online companies "immune from suit or liability under state law" regarding claims of harm to individuals under the age of 18.
- Julia Duncan of the American Association warned the provision could kill pending lawsuits, though Meta spokesperson Stephanie Otway claimed it "does not extinguish existing lawsuits, nor does it represent blanket immunity."
- Reintroduced this year with support from Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, KOSA is currently the subject of negotiations between Marsha Blackburn and the White House.
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30 Articles
S.1748 - Kids Online Safety Act
This bill requires covered online platforms, including social media platforms, to implement tools and safeguards to protect users and visitors under the age of 17. Covered platforms are online platforms, video games, messaging applications, or video streaming services used or likely to be used by individuals under the age of 17, with specified exceptions. The bill generally requires covered platforms to exercise reasonable care in the design and use of features that increase minors’ online activity in order to prevent and mitigate harm to minors (e.g., mental health disorders and severe harassment). Covered platforms are also required to provide certain safeguards to minors, such as protections for minors’ data; tools for parents of minors, such as access to minors’ privacy settings; and a mechanism for account holders and visitors to report harm to minors on the platform. Covered platforms are prohibited from conducting market or product research on children under the age of 13, and may only conduct such research on those under the age of 17 with parental consent. The bill provides for enforcement through the Federal Trade Commission and states. The bill also requires online platforms to meet certain requirements before using algorithms that select, order, or prioritize information presented to users based on user-specific data not provided for that purpose. Specifically, such platforms must (1) provide users with notice of the use of such algorithms, and (2) permit users to switch to an algorithm that does not rely on such user-specific data.
Meta Wants a Get-Out-of-Jail Card from Child-Harm Lawsuits, Asking Immunity from Child Safety Laws
Meta is quietly lobbying for legal protections that critics say could dramatically weaken efforts to hold social media companies accountable for harm to children. The proposal has surfaced as Congress debates one of the most consequential internet safety bills in decades, setting up a battle over whether stronger protections for young users should come with new protections for the platforms themselves. According to proposed legislative language …
Meta wants a child safety bill rewritten to shield it from lawsuits over harm to kids
The proposal comes as lawmakers and courts increasingly scrutinize how social media platforms are designed and used by minors. Features such as infinite scrolling, activity notifications, and appearance-altering photo filters – key tools for driving user engagement – have become central to legal and regulatory battles over youth safety. Critics...Read Entire Article
Meta Seeks Legal Shield From Child-Harm Lawsuits Amid KOSA Talks
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