Fort Bragg Advocate-News

California offers bipartisan road map for protecting kids online

- By Mark Kreidler

In California, a Democrat and a Republican figured out how to pass the country’s toughest online privacy law protecting kids. If their experience is any indication, though, federal legislator­s can expect fierce pushback from Big Tech if they heed President Joe Biden’s call for similar action on a national scale.

The law, modeled after legislatio­n in the United Kingdom, will ban websites from profiling users in California under age 18, tracking their locations, or nudging them to provide personal informatio­n. It will also require online services to automatica­lly put privacy settings at their highest levels on sites that kids access when the law goes into effect next year.

Passed with unanimous bipartisan support, the measure presents a road map for federal lawmakers to stop social media companies from targeting kids. But the tech industry’s response, including a recent lawsuit that describes the law as having global ramificati­ons, demonstrat­es how hard its powerful lobby will work to undermine or dilute regulation.

“Big Tech isn’t afraid to throw its weight around, that’s for sure,” said Jordan Cunningham, a Republican former California Assembly member who co-authored the bill. “That’s true in D.C. and Sacramento alike.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom last year signed the law, which imposes strict guardrails on online services that children use. Its greatest reach, some privacy experts believe, lies in the requiremen­t that online services must consider what’s best and safest for kids from the very start — meaning that companies will have to design their websites based on privacy rules to protect users.

“The privacy piece is truly noteworthy,” said Jennifer King, a privacy and data policy fellow at the Stanford University Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligen­ce. “It basically says, ‘You can’t collect data on kids under 18, and you have to consider that in the design of your product.’”

That’s precisely the sort of regulation online services want to avoid. Three months after Newsom signed the bill, the deeppocket­ed tech industry responded with a federal lawsuit in December to block the law from taking effect on July 1, 2024.

One of the industry’s most powerful trade associatio­ns, NetChoice, argues, in part, that the law violates free speech provisions of the U.S. Constituti­on. Members of the associatio­n include giants like Google, Meta (which owns

Facebook and Instagram), TikTok, and Twitter.

Biden, in his State of the Union address on Feb. 7, asked Congress “to pass bipartisan legislatio­n to stop Big Tech from collecting personal data on kids and teenagers online” and to prevent targeted advertisin­g to children.

“We must finally hold social media companies accountabl­e for the experiment they are running on our children for profit,” Biden said.

Multiple studies have found that targeted ads and pushes toward certain online content can be harmful to kids’ well-being, and a 2021 report found that Facebook’s own research indicated nearly a third of teenage girls felt worse about their bodies after using Instagram.

In California, Cunningham and Democrat Buffy Wicks overcame the fierce opposition of an industry that wields immense power in Sacramento by appealing to their colleagues not just as lawmakers but also as parents. The measure drew strong support from the internatio­nal 5Rights Foundation, which pushed for its passage after it helped create the U.K. law, and from Facebook whistleblo­wer Frances Haugen, whose testimony before Congress in 2021 sparked renewed scrutiny of the social media giant’s privacy practices.

“There is a lot of common ground for all of us, Democrats and Republican­s, to come together and say, ‘OK, what’s really going on with our kids when they’re online?’” said Wicks, who has two young children. “Politicall­y, this bill could serve as a model, especially in its bipartisan nature.”

Last year, the pair crafted an aggressive strategy to fend off the industry, authoring two bills that sought to hold social media companies accountabl­e in different ways. Big Tech successful­ly blocked one bill, which would have permitted state prosecutor­s to sue companies that knowingly addict minors.

“We knew they had to oppose a bill that imposes liability, costs, and damages,” said Cunningham, a father of four who served in the Assembly for six years before declining to run for reelection last fall.

That left lawmakers room to approve the other measure, AB 2273, known as the California Age-Appropriat­e Design Code, with little pushback. The measure forbids online services from designing features on their websites that are harmful to children.

And its requiremen­t that online services build safeguards into their sites, such as the default privacy settings for children, represents “an existentia­l threat” to a tech industry that derives massive profit from its ability to mine and monitor user data regardless of one’s age, Cunningham said.

In its lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in San Jose, NetChoice posits the case as one of unfair restrictio­n on free speech guarantees. The associatio­n also claims all users will have to turn over far more personal data for online services to verify who is younger than 18.

Wicks called that assertion “fearmonger­ing,” noting that many sites already use algorithms that assess age with uncanny precision, and said she is “cautiously optimistic” the law will withstand a legal challenge because it focuses on product safety and not free speech. California Attorney General Rob Bonta spokespers­on Joanne Adams told KHN that Bonta’s office would defend “this important children’s safety law in court.”

Newsom also weighed in last month after the industry filed a motion on Feb. 17 to block the law from taking effect this summer while the NetChoice lawsuit is pending. In his statement, the father of four said that no other state is doing more than California to protect kids.

In fact, some lawmakers want to go further. In February, state Sen. Nancy Skinner introduced a bill that would bar social media companies from using algorithms or other technical features that direct content to children and could prompt them to purchase fentanyl, inflict harm on themselves or others, engage in dangerous diets, or take their own lives.

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