Concerns raised that KIDS Act threatens Americans' online privacy, free speech

Concerns raised that KIDS Act threatens Americans’ online privacy, free speech

Spread the love

Legislation meant to protect American teens and children online recently passed the U.S. House with strong bipartisan support, but civil liberties groups are warning that the bill could have unintended consequences.

The Kids Internet and Digital Safety (KIDS) Act, which passed the House in a bipartisan 267-117 vote, is a compilation of bills that, among other things, require companies to implement protective measures for minor users.

Those include barring children under the age of 17 from accessing sexually exploitative content, financial scams, and content involving “the promotion of the distribution, sale, or use” of alcohol, narcotic drugs, tobacco and gambling.

It would also generally prohibit platforms from collecting information on minor users for targeted advertising, ban market and product research on minor users, require AI chatbot disclosures, limit platform design features that encourage compulsive usage, and mandate that platforms install parental controls.

Advocates of the 114-page legislation argue that it provides a multi-pronged approach to addressing safety concerns for children online. Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., the sponsor of the KIDS Act, called it “the strongest approach to protecting kids online that Congress has ever seen.”

But critics like Joe Mullin, a senior policy analyst at the online civil liberties advocacy group the Electronic Frontier Foundation, are concerned that the protective measures come at the expense of Americans’ rights to privacy and free expression.

While the bill package does not outright mandate that companies verify users’ ages, it creates requirements that depend upon companies knowing the age of users on their platforms. The new protective measures apply when a website or app “knows or should have known” a user is under 17 years of age, putting companies at legal risk if they do not verify all users’ ages.

“The fact that basically a website or app, no matter how big or small it is, could get in trouble if a user is a minor — and the knowledge standard is ‘knows or should have known a user’s age,’ and that’s a really low knowledge standard — that’s also going to be a problem for adults, because you’re going to have to start proving that you’re an adult,” Mullin told The Center Square.

Those new requirements will therefore likely lead to widespread adoption of strict age verification measures on major online platforms, such as requiring all users to give up sensitive personal information like drivers’ licenses or passports or submit to facial recognition analyses.

Companies would store that information in massive databases, which are vulnerable to breaches and hackers, Mullin noted.

“They’re prone to exploitation — not only could a foreign hacker get a hold of it, a foreign government could get a hold of it, a criminal hacker domestically or abroad could get a hold of it,” Mullin said. “Once you’re able to crack into a database with 45,000 IDs, there’s a lot of mischief you can do…There’s real privacy benefits that we’re going to be giving up if we accept an age-gating internet.”

Another concern is that because there is currently no federal data privacy law, companies will create highly detailed profiles of millions of adult Americans and sell potentially sensitive information to data brokers, who in turn can sell that to federal intelligence agencies.

“It actually creates a problem when you say ‘this tracking ad is really dangerous and harmful to a 17-year-old, but as to anyone who’s 18 or over, it’s perfectly fine,” Mullin said. “There’s no all-encompassing federal privacy law, so once someone’s 18 or over, it’s like a free-for-all right now.

“If the KIDS Act passes, in a way that can actually make it worse, because with surveillance advertising, the tracking will get better,” he added. “They will know exactly what age you are, because they’ll have to.”

Mullin also highlighted potential dangers the legislation poses to free speech. In particular, the provision preventing minors from seeing content that promotes the sale or use of narcotics, gambling, alcohol, and other age-restricted products “is really open to interpretation,” he said.

“When you say sale or use, that could be a discussion about it, it could be a forum where someone says, ‘I’m concerned about my alcohol use,’ or ‘I’m concerned about the alcohol use of someone in my family’…the idea that you would have to scrutinize everyone who tries to use a forum like that, it will have an effect on people’s right to speak out and also to get information,” Mullin said.

“So if you have a friend you’re worried about, can you discuss addiction and recovery, can you talk about a friend who’s drinking too much? That’s all clearly lawful speech, including speech for minors.”

There are ways the government could protect minors online without jeopardizing millions of Americans’ speech and privacy, Mullin argued, such as banning surveillance advertising for everyone, which would eliminate the need for age verification.

“There’s no reason Congress couldn’t do that. But there’s a reason we’ve never seen that bill introduced, and it’s because they won’t stand up to pressure from companies that like to use that business model.”

Parents should and often do also take a major role in protecting children online, Mullin added, and Congress could change certain laws to make it easier for parents to do so.

“Some of the solutions are so boring that I think lawmakers don’t really like to hear about them, and they also cost money,” he said.

“But they could make the market for parental controls more competitive by doing things like reforming the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. The reason that there’s not a whole array of apps for parents to choose from, like making TikTok safe for your kid, is because TikTok is allowed to sue over that. So we need to reform the law that lets companies attack their competitors.”

Ultimately, Mullin argued that the federal government shouldn’t be involved in actively enforcing online protective measures “beyond a very minimal degree.”

“I think we have a lot of lawmakers that are being talked to right now by people with some legitimately tragic stories that they’re blaming on things that happen on the internet, but they’re just not in touch with how median Americans use these things,” Mullin said.

“We’re not opposed to content moderation for minors, but it should happen within the family. And it’s definitely not in any of our interests for them to start collecting age information on everyone.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois Quick Hits: Toll burden 5th in U.S.

Illinois Quick Hits: Toll burden 5th in U.S.

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – As Illinoisans face the prospect of higher tolls proposed by the state tollway board, a new study...
Complaint: District used tax dollars for referendum campaign

Complaint: District used tax dollars for referendum campaign

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – An ethics complaint filed on Monday is calling for an investigation into whether an Illinois school district...
America 250: Pastors in politics shaped American Revolution and policies today

America 250: Pastors in politics shaped American Revolution and policies today

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square As Americans celebrate the 250th anniversary of independence, many also are celebrating the critical role pastors played in the American Revolution and are still playing...
Supreme Court to hear Chicago assault weapons ban challenge

Supreme Court to hear Chicago assault weapons ban challenge

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Tuesday to hear a case on whether citizens are guaranteed the right to possess semiautomatic weapons, including the popular AR-15....
Study: Warner Bros.-Paramount merger could generate $20B in economic activity

Study: Warner Bros.-Paramount merger could generate $20B in economic activity

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square A proposed merger between Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount Skydance could generate nearly $20 billion in annual economic activity and support over 90,000 jobs across...
Op-Ed: Solving the data center conundrum – America's next boomtowns may be nuclear towns

Op-Ed: Solving the data center conundrum – America’s next boomtowns may be nuclear towns

By Brian GittThe Center Square We were in a grassy field in southern Ohio next to one of the largest nuclear fuel facilities in the US. Severe storms had rolled...
U.S. Supreme Court upholds bans on transgender athletes in female sports

U.S. Supreme Court upholds bans on transgender athletes in female sports

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld state bans on biological men competing in women’s and girls’ sports. The court upheld bans in Idaho and...
Illinois Quick Hits: Chicago TV crew attacked near lakefront

Illinois Quick Hits: Chicago TV crew attacked near lakefront

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Police say charges are pending after a television news reporter and photographer were attacked near Adler Planetarium...
Beecher Graphic.3

Beecher Readies Fourth of July Festival as Water Main Work Begins

Beecher Village Board Meeting | June 22, 2026 Article Summary: Beecher officials said the village's Fourth of July festival will proceed as usual despite a newly started Miller Street water...
beecher ilinois school board graphic.4

Beecher Board Clears FY27 Spending, Fee Schedule, Special-Ed Pact

Beecher 200-U Board of Education Meeting | June 10, 2026 Article Summary: The Beecher 200-U board approved a slate of routine year-end governance items, including authorization to begin spending in...
California Assembly passes $350 billion budget

California Assembly passes $350 billion budget

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square The Assembly on Monday afternoon passed all of the bills making up California's roughly $350 billion budget. Afterward, the bills immediately went to the Senate...
Fetterman and McCormick voted for bipartisan housing reform. Will Trump sign it?

Fetterman and McCormick voted for bipartisan housing reform. Will Trump sign it?

By John ColeThe Center Square A bipartisan piece of legislation that aims to address housing needs cruised through both chambers last week with the support of nearly the entire Pennsylvania...
U.S. Supreme Court to hear asylum, voting, pipeline cases next term

U.S. Supreme Court to hear asylum, voting, pipeline cases next term

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a slew of cases on Monday on issues including immigration, energy and voting rights as it prepares for...
Illinois second in local fines and forfeitures

Illinois second in local fines and forfeitures

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A new report has found Illinois ranks second among all U.S. states in per-capita fines and forfeitures...
Report: Taxpayer dollars help nonprofit hospitals pad executive salaries, pay for lawsuits

Report: Taxpayer dollars help nonprofit hospitals pad executive salaries, pay for lawsuits

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square Waste and abuse take place in prominent nonprofit hospital systems across the country, a new report from conservative watchdog advocacy group Save Our States says...