By Cristiano Lima-Strong, washingtonpost.com, 7-30-24
The Senate overwhelmingly passed a pair of bills to expand online privacy and safety protections for children on July 30, delivering a major win for parent and youth activists who have clamored for action against tech companies they say are endangering the well-being of kids.
The legislation, approved 91-3, would force digital platforms to take “reasonable” steps to prevent harms to children such as bullying, drug addiction, and sexual exploitation, and it would broaden existing federal privacy protections to include kids and teens 16 years old and younger.
The bills – the Kids Online Safety Act, or KOSA, and the Children and Teens’ Online Privacy Protection Act, referred to as COPPA 2.0 – represent the most significant restrictions on tech platforms to clear a chamber of Congress in decades. » Read More