Senate To Vote on Web Censorship Bill Disguised as Kids Safety
The Kids Online Safety Act would have cataclysmic effects on free speech and privacy online.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) will force a vote this week on the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), a measure certain to seriously restrict free speech and privacy online for everyone.
The meat of the bipartisan bill is creating a "duty of care" for a huge swath of digital companies (any "online platform, online video game, messaging application, or video streaming service that connects to the internet and that is used, or is reasonably likely to be used, by a minor"). This means they're legally required to protect minors from exposure to anything that could contribute to a host of "harms," including anxiety, depression, eating disorders, suicidal behaviors, being online too much, physical violence, harassment, online bullying, sexual exploitation, sexual abuse, promotion of gambling, alcohol, drugs, or tobacco, and "predatory, unfair, or deceptive marketing practices, or other financial harms."
You are reading Sex & Tech, from Elizabeth Nolan Brown. Get more of Elizabeth's sex, tech, bodily autonomy, law, and online culture coverage.
That's an enormous array of issues, rooted in an even more enormous array of causes. The only way to "prevent and mitigate" services from contributing to these harms is for companies to either drastically censor every user's speech or to block minors from using your service, which means checking IDs for everyone.
Even if used in the most neutral and narrow of ways possible, the potential disruption of free speech and anonymity online is cataclysmic. And I'm highly skeptical that KOSA—which would be enforced by the political appointees at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)—will wind up being used in the most narrow and neutral of ways.
The potential is great to use KOSA to further specific political agendas—including crusades against abortion, LGBTQ rights, second-amendment rights, sex worker rights, big businesses, language that progressives deem disrespectful, and sexuality broadly.
All of this is likely without even accomplishing the (alleged) goal of keeping kids "safe" online. The KOSA regime will almost certainly block a huge array of helpful and supportive content related to things like mental health, sexuality, and addiction, while also sending kids fleeing to services that are harder to monitor.
But don't take my word for it. Let's look at what people across the political spectrum are saying about KOSA's duty of care plank and its other requirements.
Why People Are Criticizing KOSA
"This internet censorship bill will impact everyone who uses social media," the digital rights group the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) posted on X. "We heard from thousands of young people who don't support KOSA: it will censor the internet but won't help them." (Read the group's interviews with young people here.)
"Paradoxically, what KOSA does is it removes the ability for teens and children to find information when they are experiencing the very sort of health problems and other problems that KOSA is trying to address," EFF lawyer Aaron Mackey told NPR.
KOSA "forces companies to tie parent to child social media accounts and the only way to do that is age and identity verification. Last month, we learned big tech's age/identity verifier left everyone's IDs/SSNs open and accessible for over a year," notes Shoshana Weissmann, digital director and fellow at the R Street Institute.
KOSA "could prevent kids from watching PGA golf or the Super Bowl on social media because of gambling and beer ads," but "those kids could just turn on the TV and see those exact same ads," Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.) told TIME magazine.
"This is not about protecting kids. This is about Senators getting to claim they're protecting kids ahead of the election. It makes me sick to my stomach. Experts have repeatedly warned that KOSA would make kids less safe, rather than more safe," said Evan Greer, director of Fight for the Future. "Under a potential Trump administration, the FTC could easily use KOSA to target content related to gender affirming care, abortion, racial justice, climate change, or anything else that Project 2025 infused agency is willing to claim makes kids 'depressed' or 'anxious.'"
"Bills like KOSA cynically hide censorship behind the mantle of child protection. Tell Sen. Schumer and other lawmakers to reject KOSA," urged the Freedom of the Press Foundation.
"KOSA would trigger mandatory uploading of government id's, face scans or social security numbers of parents. In light of recent major security fail from firm that does that, how is this a good solution for parents?" asks Jessica Melugin, director of the Center for Technology and Innovation at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
"Virtually every time a bill is named 'Keep Kids Safe' or 'Protect Children' or similar, it's the stupidest and slimiest bill you've ever read," New Liberals founder Jeremiah Johnson posted. "KOSA is a disaster. It's unconstitutional…Kill it."
"Tellingly, nothing in the bill sends resources to law enforcement or mental health professionals, so the bill cannot reasonably be interested in shifting safety outcomes for children," writes Patrick Hedger, executive director of the Taxpayers Protection Alliance, in The Washington Times. "Instead, the bill is stuck on an unconstitutional path to bully companies into censoring speech and violating the privacy of every American including children."
KOSA's Fundamental Flaw
There's a lot more to KOSA than just the "duty of care" requirement. But basically, all of it comes down to the same fundamental flaw. At the heart of KOSA—and so many online child "protection" bills—is the pretense that it's possible to eradicate problems associated with young people if only big tech companies would do better.
Online bullying is bad, of course. But bullying in general is bad, and bullying existed long before the internet. So did teens with eating disorders, problematic media habits, mental health issues, and risky or dumb decisions regarding sex and intoxicating substances.
Try as they might, people haven't been able to find more than a correlation between issues like these and the rise of smartphones and social media. And, no, anecdotes don't count, even when those anecdotes are very sad.
It's understandable that parents and politicians want somebody to blame. And it's easy to blame social media, video games, and kids' online interactions with peers. But for every tale of a young person who was bullied or encouraged to engage in undesirable antics online, there are countless teens whose online experiences are a mix of good and bad, and yet others for whom online communities or information can be a lifeline and a way out of bad places.
"Kid would be fine if it weren't for the pesky internet" makes a good political narrative, but it's ridiculously oversimplified to consider complex and intersectional issues.
Substance abuse, eating disorders, suicidal thoughts, etc. are rooted in so much more than what teens see or say online, even if the things they see or say online are most visible and most readily vilified. You simply can't solve these sorts of social, environmental, and medical problems by telling tech companies to "care" more. What you can do, however, is sweep things under the rug—or create a legal scheme that gives the government massive power over the internet broadly.
Today's Image

Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
…
That’s like trying to make car makers take care to prevent drivers from going to places where they might waste their time or money, or bus operators ditto, or just staying aboard their respective vehicles too far or long.
One of Jean Shepherd’s Car and Driver articles (collected in The Ferrari in the Bedroom) consisted of future vignettes in which “consumer advocate Ralph Nader” and later “president Nader” decried various situations leading to collisions, leading eventually to such legislation as a ban on Democrats and Republicans riding together (too distracting for the driver).
The connections to the listed harms are so laughable that I must conclude the only reason these "digital companies" are targeted, rather than any other aspect of society that might similarly be connected to such harms, is that people can remember a time before this technology existed, and therefore conclude that it is an unnecessary branch of the tree which may therefore be pruned. I mean, if people didn't have access to food, they wouldn't be able to get into the problems listed either — they'd be dead — but everyone sees food as vital and therefore wouldn't try to legislate against its general availability.
I can't wait until Uncle Sam rolls out his government mandated monopoly social media platform. We need something about as awful as WeChat here in the United States.
In 20 years, we can call this the "3rd amendment of the Internet!"
"... under a Trump administration ..." You had to get that in, didn't you? What would be worse is its use under an openly totalitarian administration, like Biden, Obama and god save us, Kamel-toe Hair-ass. Oh, and the group is pushing the legislation? Of course, the very same totalitarian-pigs across the lawn, Schumer and his Nazi's, seeking to act as if they are about children, just before the election.
There are three choices coming 1) Trump, 2) Harris, and 3) a throw-away protest vote, or top stay home and whine. Only one of these offers more freedom and Constitutionalist SCOTUS. ONLY ONE. Whining doesn't count and tearing him down in favor of a totalitarian is NOT a Libertarian position. It is nothing but spiteful bullshit.
he did a couple things that were not completely wrong" =/= "you must support him or you are not a libertarian."
some of us just don't think we should fall for the bullshit that we must support someone who wants to fuck us over because the person on the other "side" wants to fuck us over in different ways.
but then, some of us also understand that fixating on what you hate about the other "side" more than acknowledging and trying to correct the ways your "side" is fucked up is kind of why our society is so broken right now. we also understand that holding your nose for the lesser of two evils is not how you get a president to come to your convention, make promises to some things you care about, and beg for your votes. voting for the lesser of two evils means those two evils can ignore you and take your vote for granted.
Blah, blah, blah, I want to scream at the world, blah, blah, blah.
Just show us all what freedoms are better supported by Biden/Kamala/et al, aside from abortion, and all your BS is released for discussion. 1st? NFW. 2nd? NFFFFFW. 4th? NFW. 16th? Oh, please do come in and take... there are NONE.
Until then, you, and Lizzy Warren-Brown are just spiteful idiots to be ignored, as agents of spite over Liberty. Libertarian, none at all.
you are too stupid to understand the point…. got it.
if we are spiteful idiots to be ignored, then why did trump want to come to our convention to beg for our votes? why did the very person you are claiming can ignore us chose not to ignore us? he chose to give our protest vote group an international spotlight. the fact that Jorgensen pulled more than the margin of victory in stats he lost last time made him desperate to pander to us. (he just didn’t go far enough for most of us.)
those who support freedom are only able to ignored when they sacrifice their principles on the alter of the lesser of two evils. those who will blindly support Trump because they hate Biden are the ones your dear leader can safely ignore. if Trump wins, frees Ross, puts libertarians in his cabinet, whatever else he tries to pander to us….. it will be because we didn’t blindly support him the way you clowns do. (kinda like how prohibition happened with bipartisan support when the prohibition party never grabbed more than 2% of the vote…. not a great example on libertarian principles, but a good example of the power of protest votes.)
".....including anxiety, depression, eating disorders, suicidal behaviors, being online too much, physical violence, harassment, online bullying, sexual exploitation, sexual abuse, promotion of gambling, alcohol, drugs, or tobacco.......)
so.... they think they can protect teenagers from being teenagers? with the exception of maybe online bullying, nothing on this list actually is driven by social media...... it is all teenager bullshit that every generation has dealt with for a long long time.
Hm, looks like a good time to restrict the internet for minors like alcohol or R-rated films, and not let kids drink of the internet without a parental authorization.
Take your UN-CONSTITUTIONAL BS Bill and stick it where the sun doesn't shine.
So sick of [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] conquering the USA with their Nazi-Bills. SCOTUS should slap this down before it ever surfaces.