The
House
Committee
on
Energy
and
Commerce
has
advanced
two
high-profile
child
safety
bills
that
could
remake
large
parts
of
the
internet:
the
Kids
Online
Safety
Act
(KOSA)
and
the
Children
and
Teens’
Online
Privacy
Protection
Act
(COPPA
2.0).
The
proposed
laws
passed
on
a
voice
vote
despite
discontent
over
last-minute
changes
to
KOSA,
in
particular,
that
were
aimed
at
quelling
persistent
criticism.
KOSA
and
COPPA
2.0
would
give
government
agencies
more
regulatory
power
over
tech
companies
with
users
under
18
years
of
age.
The
former
imposes
a
“duty
of
care”
on
major
social
media
companies,
making
them
potentially
liable
for
harm
to
underage
users.
The
latter
raises
the
age
of
enforcement
for
the
1998
COPPA
law
and
adds
new
rules
around
topics
like
targeted
advertising.
Versions
of
both
bills
were
passed
by
the
Senate
in
July.
Now
that
they’ve
passed
a
House
committee,
they
can
proceed
to
a
vote
on
the
floor,
after
which
they
may
need
to
be
reconciled
with
their
Senate
counterparts
before
passing
to
President
Joe
Biden’s
desk
—
where
Biden
has
indicated
he’ll
sign
them.
Earlier
this
year,
it
wasn’t
clear
KOSA
would
get
a
vote
in
the
House.
While
it
passed
in
the
Senate
by
an
overwhelming
majority,
a
Punchbowl
News
report
suggested
House
Republicans
had
concerns
about
the
bill.
The
House’s
version
of
KOSA
diverges
sharply
from
its
Senate
counterpart,
however,
and
numerous
lawmakers
expressed
a
desire
for
changes
before
a
full
House
vote.
Both
KOSA
and
COPPA
2.0
saw
last-minute
changes
that
were
voted
on
in
committee,
leading
some
lawmakers
to
protest
or
withdraw
support.
The
House’s
KOSA
amendment
modified
a
list
of
harms
that
large
social
media
companies
are
supposed
to
prevent.
It
removed
a
duty
of
care
for
mitigating
“anxiety,
depression,
eating
disorders,
substance
use
disorders,
and
suicidal
behaviors”
and
added
one
for
clamping
down
on
the
“promotion
of
inherently
dangerous
acts
that
are
likely
to
cause
serious
bodily
harm,
serious
emotional
disturbance,
or
death.”
The
change
garnered
significant
criticism.
Rep.
Dan
Crenshaw
(R-TX),
who
said
he
would
vote
for
the
bill
“reluctantly,”
complained
that
the
amendment
could
lead
to
regulatory
agencies
censoring
potentially
“disturbing”
content.
“Doesn’t
all
political
speech
induce
some
kind
of
emotional
distress
for
those
who
disagree
with
it?”
he
contended.
(Crenshaw
supports
a
flat
ban
on
social
media
access
for
younger
teens.)
Conversely,
a
number
of
lawmakers
were
concerned
that
removing
conditions
like
depression
would
make
the
bill
useless
for
addressing
the
alleged
mental
health
harms
of
social
media
for
kids.
KOSA
cosponsor
Rep.
Kathy
Castor
(D-FL),
who
backed
the
amendment,
said
it
offered
a
“weakened”
version
of
the
bill
with
the
aim
of
passing
it
to
a
full
House
vote.
But
neither
version
seems
likely
to
satisfy
critics
who
argue
the
bill
could
let
regulators
pressure
companies
into
banning
kids’
access
to
content
a
particular
administration
doesn’t
like.
The
Electronic
Frontier
Foundation
and
others
have
raised
concerns
it
could
let
a
Republican
president
suppress
abortion-
and
LGBTQ+-related
content,
while
some
Republican
lawmakers
are
concerned
a
Democratic
president
could
suppress
anti-abortion
messaging
and
other
conservative
speech.
The
vote
on
COPPA
2.0
was
less
contentious.
But
Rep.
Frank
Pallone
(D-NJ)
questioned
a
House
provision
that
would
let
parents
obtain
information
about
their
teen’s
social
media
use
from
the
site
operators,
even
against
the
child’s
wishes.
Pallone
warned
the
rule
could
let
abusive
parents
monitor
a
child’s
access
to
the
internet.
“In
a
bill
purportedly
providing
more
privacy
protection
for
teens,
Congress
is
creating,
in
my
opinion,
a
backdoor
by
which
their
parents
can
snoop
on
their
teens’
every
click
online,”
he
said.
“Teens
have
a
right
to
privacy
as
well.”
Original author: Adi Robertson
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