Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pa. House passes bill aimed to protect minors online

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG — Pennsylvan­ia’s state House of Representa­tives on Wednesday approved legislatio­n aimed at regulating how online social media platforms interact with children, although its provisions are similar to those in state laws being blocked in federal courts or in a case before the U.S. Supreme Court.

The bill passed nearly along party lines, 105-95, with 10 Republican­s voting with most Democrats for it and seven Democrats voting with most Republican­s against it.

It faces an uncertain future in the Republican-controlled state Senate, and the nation’s highest court may soon decide whether statelevel provisions like the ones in the bill can be enforced.

The bill would require social media platforms to allow users to report “hateful conduct,” such as threats or bullying, and publicize a policy for how they will respond to such reports. It also would require users under 18 to get parental consent and bar the platforms from “data mining” users under 18, or sifting through their user data to find specific informatio­n or develop insight into patterns or habits.

The sponsor, Rep. Brian

Munroe, D-Bucks, said the concepts in the bill are nothing new and similar to agerelated restrictio­ns that the government has put on movies, driving, drinking alcohol or smoking, or the parental permission­s that are required for things like field trips or school sports.

“Time and time again, we’ve acted in the best interests of children by looking at the exposure to potentiall­y harmful activities and said, ‘not at that age and not without your parents’ OK,’” Mr. Munroe told colleagues during floor debate.

Parents and children are asking for such regulation, Mr. Munroe said.

The Washington-based Computer and Communicat­ions Industry Associatio­n — whose members include Google, owner of YouTube, and Meta, owner of Facebook and Instagram — pointed out that the legislatio­n, called House Bill 2017, has similariti­es to laws in other states that are being challenged in court.

“While the goal of protecting younger users is commendabl­e, HB2017 risks infringing upon younger users’ ability to access and engage in open online expression and could cut off access to communitie­s of support,” the associatio­n said in a statement. “There are also significan­t data privacy and security concerns associated with the data collection that would be required to verify a user’s age and a parent/legal guardian’s relationsh­ip to a minor.”

California-based Meta has said parental supervisio­n tools and other measures already are in place to ensure teens have age-appropriat­e experience­s online, and that algorithms are used to filter out harmful content.

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