
Pick one or more. We'll use your choices and the connected bills to help you send a message to your elected officials.
Answer the policy questions below or skip any that don't fit your view. We use only your answers and the bills they connect to for your message.
1 bill on this topic
“Platforms using hidden personalized ranking should tell users it is being used, explain the main data and goals behind it, offer an easy ranking option that uses less hidden personal data, avoid charging more or lowering service because a user chooses that option, and preserve user-directed blocking tools.”
1 bill on this topic
“If Congress creates youth online safety rules, enforcement should be clear and strong, but the law should also protect speech, encryption, and privacy.”
1 bill on this topic
“Youth online-safety protections should not change COPPA, Section 230, or certain FTC rules. Platforms should still be able to work with law enforcement, respond to subpoenas and legal claims, and act against security threats, fraud, harassment, and other harmful or illegal activity.”
1 bill on this topic
“Existing student privacy, child privacy, platform liability, and speech protections should remain in place, government enforcement should not be based on users’ viewpoints, and courts should be able to leave valid online safety provisions standing if one part is struck down.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal agencies should have the power, funding, and reporting duties needed to run and enforce platform transparency and research programs.”
1 bill on this topic
“The FTC should be able to enforce youth online safety violations against platforms, and state attorneys general should also be able to sue when people in their state are harmed or threatened, usually after notifying the FTC and without bringing a separate case if the FTC is already suing the same company for the same violation.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal rules to criminalize sharing intimate images and sexual deepfakes without consent and require platforms to take them down”
1 bill on this topic
“Large online platforms should have to share protected data with approved outside researchers so the public can better understand how those platforms affect society.”
1 bill on this topic
“Journalists and researchers should have legal room to study public information on large platforms when their work informs the public and protects people's privacy.”
1 bill on this topic
“Covered platforms should have to make and enforce policies to reduce serious harms to kids and teens, including abuse, threats, illegal drugs, gambling, alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, and scams. Minors should still be able to look for lawful information or help, and government officials should not target speech because of its viewpoint.”
1 bill on this topic
“Platforms should give users a way to report harm to minors, respond within set timelines, avoid showing known minors ads for drugs, cannabis, tobacco, gambling, or alcohol, label ads, and clearly explain signups, purchases, safety tools, recommendation controls, and reporting options.”
2 bills on this topic
“Covered services should give minors easy controls for contact, data use, recommendations, engagement features, and time online; start known minors with the strongest safety settings on; turn on parent tools for known children under 13 when required; and avoid manipulative designs that push families away from those tools.”
1 bill on this topic
“Large user-generated-content platforms with more than 10 million U.S. monthly users should get outside audits at least once a year and publish privacy-protected reports showing risks to minors, how minors use the service, harmful content, risky design features, ad and recommendation systems, and whether safety and parent tools work.”
1 bill on this topic
“Platforms should have to change how they design and run their services to reduce harms to kids and teens such as bullying, sexual exploitation, addictive use, promotion of drugs or gambling, and certain serious mental health harms, but they should not have to block a minor's intentional searches or access to health, safety, support, or treatment resources.”
1 bill on this topic
“Large online platforms should have to show more information about what spreads on their services, how ads are targeted, how recommendations work, and how rules are enforced.”
1 bill on this topic
“State attorneys general should be able to sue platforms over failures involving safety tools, notices, and transparency, states should be able to give minors stronger protections unless those protections conflict with federal standards, and state claims should not directly use the platform design duty of care as their basis.”
1 bill on this topic
“Online services that kids and teens use should have to reduce serious harms and make safety controls easy to use.”
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