This topic covers the responsibilities of digital platforms to prevent and mitigate harms to minors, including design features and content moderation.
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3 bills on this topic
“Should the federal government set one main national system for enforcing child and teen online privacy rules, or should states keep more room to make and enforce their own laws?”
1 bill on this topic
“Online platforms that minors use should have a legal duty to reduce serious harms to young users.”
3 bills on this topic
“Should what rules websites and apps have to follow when they collect, use, keep, or share personal information from children and teens?”
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A Yale field experiment found legislators shown actual district opinion shifted their votes to match it. The ones kept in the dark? No relationship between constituent views and how they voted.
Offices log, sort, tag, and tally incoming contact, then brief the member. Constituent communications eat roughly a third of House staff resources. Your message gets counted.
92% of staff say individualized messages influence undecided lawmakers — versus 56% for form letters. Naming a specific bill with your own reasoning puts you in a different category entirely.
When offices don’t hear from constituents, they ask lobbyists instead. Not contacting your rep doesn’t leave the scale empty — it hands the weight to someone else.
These are related bills tracked for context. None have a time-sensitive action window on this subject right now.