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Free Speech

KOSA Moves Forward in Congress, Threatening Free Speech and Encryption

Only Sens. Paul and Wyden are expected to vote "no" on Tuesday. Power to stop KOSA now resides with the House.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 7.29.2024 11:34 AM

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Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) during a committee hearing | BONNIE CASH/UPI/Newscom
(BONNIE CASH/UPI/Newscom)

In last Wednesday's newsletter, I discussed the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), noting that this censorship bill disguised as a child protection measure was scheduled to move forward imminently. On Thursday, the Senate held a cloture vote—necessary to move a bill to a full-floor vote when unanimous consent to do so can't be reached—and voted 86 to 1 to move forward with the bill.

Senators are now slated to vote Tuesday whether KOSA should become law.

The one "no" in the cloture vote came from Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul. In a "Dear Colleague" letter, Paul urged his colleagues to reject the bill and protested against the "duty of care" that KOSA would impose on internet platforms:

While proponents of the bill claim that it is not designed to regulate content, imposing a "duty of care" on online platforms to mitigate harms associated with mental health can only lead to one outcome: the stifling of First Amendment protected speech.

Should platforms stop children from seeing climate-related news because climate change is one of the leading sources of anxiety amongst younger generations? Should they stop children from seeing coverage of international conflicts because it could lead to depression? Should pro-life groups have their content censored because platforms worry that it could impact the mental well-being of teenage mothers? This bill opens the door to nearly limitless content regulation.

The bill contains a number of vague provisions and undefined terms. The text does not explain what it means for a platform to 'prevent and mitigate' harm, nor does it define 'addition-like behaviors.' Additionally, the bill does not explicitly define the term 'mental health disorder.' Instead, it references the Fifth Edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Health Disorders or 'the most current successor edition.' As such, the definition could change without any input from Congress.

Paul went on to call the bill "a Trojan Horse."

Alas, Paul's letter is "unlikely to have even the slightest effect," writes Techdirt's Mike Masnick. "KOSA has 70 cosponsors, all of whom want to get nonsense headlines in their local papers about how they voted to 'protect the children' even as the bill will actually do real harm to children."

It's possible the bill's only opponents in the Senate are Paul and the Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden. (Any time Paul and Wyden are the only two senators against a bill, you can bet it's some civil-liberties-squelching nonsense.)

Wyden voted yes in the cloture vote but had said he will vote no when it comes to actually passing the bill. While he thinks the final version of the bill is an improvement over earlier versions, "these improvements remain insufficient," Wyden posted on X.

"I fear KOSA could be used to sue services that offer privacy technologies like encryption or anonymity features that kids rely on to communicate securely and privately without being spied on by predators online," Wyden added.

Some changes made recently include 1) explicitly stating that nothing in the bill expands or limits the scope of the internet liability law known as Section 230, and 2) changing some language related to the duty-of-care requirement.

Before, the bill said "a covered platform shall take reasonable measures in the design and operation of any product, service, or feature that the covered platform knows is used by minors" (emphasis mine). Now it limits the dusty of care to "the creation and implementation of any design feature."

The latter change theoretically limits the duty of care to product design decisions and not the entirety of its operation or services. And applying KOSA's duty of care only to design, not to content, is theoretically good. But because product design decisions—how algorithms work, how content is displayed, suppressed, filtered, etc.—are so intimately tied up in what content gets seen and what doesn't, the practical difference might be nil.

Matthew Lane, senior policy counsel at Fight for the Future, has a lengthy post explaining why "in KOSA's case, it's proven impossible so far to separate the design of content recommendation systems from the speech itself." He writes:

The difference between the aspirations of KOSA and its inevitable impacts work like this: KOSA wants systems engineers to design algorithms that put safety first and not user engagement. While some companies are already pivoting away from pure engagement focused algorithms, doing so can be really hard and expensive because algorithms aren't that smart. Purely engagement focused algorithms only need to answer one question—did the user engage? By asking that one question, and testing different inferences, the algorithms can get very good at delivering content to a user that they will engage with.

But when it comes to multi-purpose algorithms, like those that want to only serve positive content and avoid harmful content, the task is much harder and the algorithms are unreliable. Algorithms don't understand what the content they are ranking or excluding is or how it will impact the mental health and well-being of the user. Even human beings can struggle to predict what content will cause the kinds of harm described by KOSA.

To comply with KOSA, tech companies will have to show that they are taking reasonable steps to make sure their personalized recommendation systems aren't causing harm to minors' mental health and well-being. The only real way to do that is to test the algorithms to see if they are serving "harmful" content. But what is "harmful" content? KOSA leans on the [Federal Trade Commission] and a government-created Kids Online Safety Council to signal what that content might be. This means that Congress will have significant influence over categorizing harmful speech and platforms will use those categories to implement keywords, user tags, and algorithmically-estimated tags to flag this "harmful" content when it appears in personal recommendation feeds and results. This opens the door to government censorship.

But it gets even worse. The easiest and cheapest way to make sure a personal recommendation system doesn't return "harmful" content is to simply exclude any content that resembles the "harmful" content. This means adding an additional content moderation layer that deranks or delists content that has certain keywords or tags, what is called "shadowbanning" in popular online culture.

Lane points out how this may even wind up hurting young people who turn online for help, since "these sorting systems will not be perfect and will lead to mistakes on both sides":

For example, imagine the scenario in which a young user posts a cry for help. This content could easily get flagged as suicide or other harmful content, and therefore get deranked across the feeds of all those that follow the person and care for them. No one may see it.

With senators set to pass KOSA tomorrow, "the real fight now moves to the House," notes Masnick. "It's unclear if there's consensus on moving on the bill there, and if so, in what form. The current House bill is different than the Senate one, so the two sides would have to agree on what version moves forward. The real answer should be neither, but it seems like the ship has sailed on the Senate version."

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NEXT: Biden Now Wants To Force Others To Retire Too

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

Free SpeechFirst AmendmentSocial MediaSafetyChildrenInternetCensorshipFederal Trade CommissionVideo GamesEncryptionRegulationCongressSenateRand PaulRon Wyden
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  1. Liberty_Belle   10 months ago

    KOSA should be 'monitor your kids yourself'. Don't have time ? Parental controls on your internet service, cell phones, etc. You wouldn't buy a gun without learning to use it, would you ? The internet is far more dangerous, and if you have it in your house with your kids ... you should know how to use it.

    1. Don't look at me!   10 months ago

      They better Get Smart about KAOS running through Congress.

  2. Longtobefree   10 months ago

    If they have to put "kids" in the title, it is probably a bad bill.

    1. DesigNate   10 months ago

      Came here to say this.

    2. JohnZ   10 months ago

      "It's for the children....gurrrppp" Nancy.

  3. Longtobefree   10 months ago

    "transgender medical care"

    When it was called female genital mutilation, it was a bad thing.
    Science changing again?

  4. Quo Usque Tandem   10 months ago

    It's for the children...where have I heard that before?

    This law is so vague, you would think it was designed for the Chevron Deference.

  5. shadydave   10 months ago

    I mentioned this a bunch years ago, but Rand Paul talks about things a lot different than his dad, I assume in an attempt to appeal to a wider variety of Republican voters. But he seems to vote almost exactly like his dad. It's an interesting combo.

    1. LIBtranslator   10 months ago

      Mystical girl-bullying republicans are a cloning experiment. The tricky part is finding someone dumb enuf to believe card-carrying, seat-sitting, republicans who believe women are marsupials are "libertarians." Try the Jesus Caucus. Tell 'em Lazarus sent ya.

      1. DesigNate   10 months ago

        Leave it to Hank to shit on the most libertarian senator.

      2. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   10 months ago

        Ok Hank, enlighten us. Which Senator is the most libertarian?

      3. JohnZ   10 months ago

        Oh yes and we can see the results of liberal/Democrat ideals in every major city run by them.
        Philly, Baltimore, Chicago, E. St. Louis, Memphis, L.A. San Francisco, Oakland, Portland, Seattle, Detroit.
        Chicago to date:
        Shot and Killed: 312
        Shot and wounded: 1462
        Total shot: 1774
        Total Homicides: 357....say isn't that the caliber of a certain hand gun?...
        Stats courtesy "Hey Jackass"/ Illustrating Chicago values.

  6. BYODB   10 months ago

    That awkward moment when increasing gender dysphoria disorder can be used as a justification for shutting down commentary in favor of the trans community.

    I mean, we all know it probably won’t be used that way immediately, if at all, but talk about cutting off your…nose to spite your face.

    It’s almost like these idiots truly believe their political views will never be on the fringes of the overton window, and are freely giving away the tools that will be used against them tomorrow.

    And of course Republicans jump on board with this garbage. Who knows what they want to squelch with it, but I imagine Democrats won't be so excited when they realize this tool isn't just for them.

  7. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   10 months ago

    an abortion rights ballot measure should not refer to fetuses as "unborn human beings."

    Are the fetuses of some animal other than humans being addressed by the ballot measure? Unless it does, this judge is just being an asshole.

    I recognized at 5 years old that a properly fertilized egg was an unborn chicken.

  8. SIV   10 months ago

    Factcheck: Senator Ron Wyden supports KOSA.

    Wyden voted yes in the cloture vote but had said he will vote no when it comes to actually passing the bill.

    1. ObviouslyNotSpam   10 months ago

      I'm not sure why he voted yes in the cloture vote, but he said he will vote against the bill itself. I hope more Senators are as "supportive".

      1. JohnZ   10 months ago

        Strategic voting maybe? What's his strategy?
        Another dangerous piece of anti American legislation.

  9. LIBtranslator   10 months ago

    What's wrong with selling eggs as "unhatched chickens"? An egg salad on white could then be an unhatched chicken salad sandwich. Didn't the Babylon Trumpanzee run an entire menu of these newspeak items?

  10. LIBtranslator   10 months ago

    Passage is no problem, if the outcome is seriously desired. Target a facility of some sort in a nuclear-armed country then claim it was a DMT lab. The nice thing about the initiation of deadly force is that you can absolutely count on unequal yet apposite reprisal force. Then when Continental U.S. assets start vaporizing in bright flashes, declare war. THEN pass bans on speech, puzzles, books, Beatles albums and whatnot as espionage act security requirements. Q.E.D.

  11. Super Scary   10 months ago

    " Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA)"

    It's like they weren't even trying with the acronym.

  12. Earth-based Human Skeptic   10 months ago

    'An Arizona judge says the state's official pamphlet describing an abortion rights ballot measure should not refer to fetuses as "unborn human beings."'

    Look, I know our legal system struggles with biology. There's that whole question about what a woman is, and they sometimes confuse bees and fish.

    But have these assholes ever seen anything besides a human come out of a human cooch? Where the fuck DO they think little people come from?

    1. Don't look at me!   10 months ago

      Men?

  13. JohnZ   10 months ago

    Once again, our overlords in D.C. continue to tell us they know what's best for us even if it violates our most basic rights as An American. George Orwell couldn't make this stuff up.
    I strongly suspect this bill (KOSA) has more to do with actually stifling free speech than actually protecting children. The leftists always use camouflage words to hide their actual intentions.
    "If the freedom of speech be taken away, then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter." George Washington.

    1. TJJ2000   10 months ago

      ^THIS... Well Said +10000000000

  14. CopaGent   10 months ago

    Vague provisions = Un-Constitutional.

    1. TJJ2000   10 months ago

      Never-mind that lack of enumerated power to raise everyone's kids for them.

  15. Shoreline1   10 months ago

    Yeah, basically, our government is forcing their beliefs, their religion, on us.

    1. TJJ2000   10 months ago

      It's for [their (politicians)] children.... Oh; and you guys thought those were your kids? Heck they haven't been your kids since the State-owned incubator got pregnant. More great blessing to come from Dobbs. Maybe the State can own people's mouths too soon. You can believe what you want; you just can't use that State-owned mouth on you to say it.

  16. COINTELPRO   10 months ago

    The real danger in the 21st Century is “Covert Censorship” - censorship done by unelected bureaucrats that never inform the speaker or writer.

    By censoring covertly, this also robs Americans of “legal standing” to challenge these practices in court.

    Judges and juries never get to provide constitutional judicial review. The censors very effectively bypassed judges altogether.

    If there are no “overt” rules of censorship and judges are omitted from oversight, censors can block or delay any speech at all. We no longer have a First Amendment!

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