A Ham-Handed Bill Attacks the First Amendment in the Name of Protecting Minors From Online Harm
The Kids Online Safety Act imposes an amorphous "duty of care" that would compromise anonymous speech and restrict access to constitutionally protected content.

Late last month, a Senate committee considered a 50-page bill with a name that includes the word kids and approved it unanimously. Those two facts alone are enough to raise the suspicion that legislators are heading down a winding road toward a destination they only dimly perceive.
That suspicion is amply supported by the text of the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), which ham-handedly aims to shield children and teenagers from vaguely defined dangers lurking on the internet. The unintended but foreseeable results are apt to include invasions of privacy that compromise First Amendment rights and a chilling impact on constitutionally protected speech, both of which will harm adults as well as the "kids" whom the bill is supposed to protect.
KOSA imposes an amorphous "duty of care" on platforms, online games, messaging applications, and streaming services, demanding "reasonable measures" to "protect" against and "mitigate" various "harms" to users younger than 17. The targeted dangers include anxiety, depression, suicide, eating disorders, substance abuse, "addiction-like behaviors," physical violence, online bullying, harassment, sexual exploitation and abuse, "financial harms," and promotion of "narcotic drugs," tobacco products, alcohol, or gambling.
That's a tall order, and it is not at all clear what meeting this obligation would entail. Nor is it clear when the duty of care applies.
As amended by the Senate Commerce Committee, KOSA applies to any "covered platform" that "knows" its users include minors. But no one knows what "knows" means.
In addition to "actual knowledge," that condition can be satisfied by "knowledge fairly implied on the basis of objective circumstances." KOSA directs the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), within 18 months of the bill's passage, to issue "guidance" about how to understand the latter phrase.
That guidance, however, would not bind the FTC, which is charged with investigating and penalizing platforms that it thinks have violated KOSA. Nor would it constrain state attorneys general, who would be authorized to independently enforce KOSA through "civil actions."
An earlier version of KOSA provoked criticism from civil libertarians who warned that it would effectively require platforms to verify users' ages, which would entail collecting personal information. That was a clear threat to internet users of all ages who want to engage in speech without revealing their identities, a well-established First Amendment right.
In response to that concern, the latest version of KOSA revises the duty-of-care test and explicitly says it does not require "age gating or age verification." But given the burdens the bill imposes and the uncertainty about what counts as "knowledge fairly implied," platforms still would have a strong incentive to exclude minors or minimize the number of users who are younger than 17.
"The only way to accomplish either is to age-verify all users," TechFreedom notes. "These changes merely trade a clear, explicit mandate for a vague, implicit one; the unconstitutional effect on anonymous expression will be the same."
Nor does the new, supposedly improved bill solve the central problem of how to assess and "mitigate" potential harms to minors who vary widely in age and personal characteristics. Content that might foster problems such as anxiety, depression, suicidal behavior, eating disorders, or substance abuse for one teenager could have the opposite effect for another.
The vast majority of speech that people might consider unsuitable for minors is protected by the First Amendment, which means restricting access to it based on a government mandate is constitutionally problematic. The Supreme Court has repeatedly made that point in cases involving the internet and violent video games.
The powers granted by KOSA would invite more unconstitutional mischief, especially in the hands of ideologically driven, politically ambitious attorneys general, who could decide to target "hate speech," discussions of sexual orientation and gender identity, or other controversial content they view as harmful. Although that might not be the destination that KOSA's supporters have in mind, the road they are paving with their good intentions includes dangerous detours with clearly marked signs.
© Copyright 2023 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Thank goodness that this is the only attack on the 1st Amendment going on currently. And the most important. As the only one.
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Simply criminalize lying, not anything more complicated and obscure that can be manipulated with double speak.
Lying is coercion. It compels people with the falsified authority of truth to act in the liars interest instead of their own.
Lying is not protected by the first amendment. If it were, perjury and fraud wouldn’t be crimes.
Lies are determined when truth exposes them. When we criminalize lying we will need to codify in law that truth is determined only with correctly applied logic and science. Not belief. Not votes. Not hearsay. Not mandate.
None of these woke cancel culture champions of censorship want lying to be criminalized because they simply want to coerce everyone to comply with their lies.
Only when the crime is lying and the evidence against it truth discerned with logic and science will we finally enjoy freedom from coercion.
If lying could be criminalized to the extent you want, you would be in a SUPERMAX cell.
Did a Jewish girl turn down your sexual advances?
Or was that a Jewish boy?
When lying is criminalized you’re going to need to find a new religion Kol Nidre boy.
And once again, the stormfag shows his open hatred for the first amendment.
If you "simply criminalize lying", you will go from 3 felonies a day to hundreds. That's absurd. It would criminalize telling my wife that "no, those pants don't make you look fat" and every "I'm fine" answer to "how are you today".
It is yet another "solution that is simple, neat—and wrong" (most often attributed to HL Mencken but could have been Mark Twain).
Lying is coercion-that’s wrong.
People will learn not to.
Maybe your fat wife will stop asking.
Words and ideas are dangerous. We all need to live in a curated Disney land type society.
With a name like "Kids Online Safety Act" I just assumed the intent of the law was to authorize retroactive abortion up to the age of 25.
Is this the same people who are outraged by ads "targeting children" for sugary foods, or vape, or any number of other products?
Let's just say that the Venn diagram would make Kamala cackle.
Watching a kitten being skinned alive would make Kammy cackle.
Call it the "Kids Act for Online Safety". The acronym would be more appropriate.
The "take responsibility away from parents and give it to platforms" bill.
The 'TRAFPAGITP' bill does not have the same ring to it as the 'KAOS' bill suggested by Jerry B. directly above. Even the KOSA one the actual congress critters settled on sounds better.
One of the things that you need to learn about American politics, is that it's MUCH more important that your bill have a catchy name than it is that it describe what it actually does. In fact, in most cases, it's better that the catchy name describes something more like the opposite of what if actually does.
That way, when your political opponent objects to the actual contents of the bill, you can point at them and say, 'Can you believe that Senator X actually voted against my 'Saving Cats and Dogs Act'?! What a monster!'
an amorphous "duty of care" - - - -
How about we place the amorphous "duty of care" on the parents?
My thought is that if the kids are old enough to change their sex, they are old enough for everything on the web.
But then, I am a mean old man.
No physician in the United States will perform a sex change operation on a minor. It’s a right-wing bugaboo.
And that fib has been debunked over and over. Repeating it doesn't make it any more true than the first time.
Where did Jazz Jennings go for his, North Korea?
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
"Those aren't YOUR kids those are OUR kids!!", says the ever-growing authoritarian and [Na]tional So[zi]alist government.
KOSA imposes an amorphous "duty of care" on platforms
PLACE THE DUTY OF CARE ON PARENTS.
At least the third amendment is still in good shape.
A Ham Handed Federal Prosecutor Attacks the First Amendment in the Name of Protecting Brandon, Inc.
This has been your Libertarian for pedophile priorities message for the morning.