After months of debate, the Kids Online Safety Act and Children and Teens Online Privacy Protection Act have passed the Senate. With both bills now on their way to the House for further consideration, it is important to consider whether such legislation is likely to have its intended effect.

The Kids Online Safety Act, better known as KOSA, would place a duty of care for minors on social media companies. The hope is that such a requirement will reduce the chances of a minor accidentally encountering harmful content and crackdown on social media features seen as manipulative, such as push notifications and endless scrolling. KOSA is being considered simultaneously with a new privacy reform bill for minors called the Children and Teens Online Privacy Protection Act. Together, these bills promise to make the biggest change to U.S. privacy protection for minors since the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) of 1998.

The Children and Teens’ Online Privacy Protection Act, otherwise known as COPPA 2.0, would extend privacy protections — including requiring verifiable parental consent for the collection of personal data — to teenagers between the ages of 13 and 17. It would also lower the standard to enforce the law from one where it can be reasonably assumed that minors are using social media as opposed to the previous standard of actual knowledge.

COPPA 2.0 would not require age verification, which was a major concern with previous proposals. However, it would impose requirements on social media companies and other platforms whose services were never intended for minors. For instance, it would ban targeted advertising toward minors and prohibit companies from collecting data without their consent.

Read the full article here.

Trey Price is a policy analyst with the American Consumer Institute, a nonprofit education and research organization. For more information about the Institute, visit us at www.TheAmericanConsumer.Org or follow us on X @ConsumerPal.

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