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Proposed online safety act does not require websites to verify government IDs
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Senate Bill 1409, the Kids Online Safety Act, includes language that says it would not require social media platforms, applications and websites to verify users’ ages or collect more age data than they already do for normal business.
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Experts said if the bill passes, websites and apps could require government ID to better adhere to the law, but that’s neither guaranteed nor what the bill requires.
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There are other ways to assess users’ ages, such as self-reporting and face scanning tools, some of which are already in use.
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Imagine: You try to sign into Facebook, and the platform asks for government identification before you can proceed. Then YouTube does the same. And TikTok, and X and Reddit, and the list goes on.
Social media posts claim that a Senate bill, the Kids Online Safety Act, would mandate that social media platforms, websites and apps use this method to verify users’ ages.
"Hey (by the way) everyone should be panicking about this," read a Feb. 16 X post with 1.8 million views as of Feb. 23. "This bill would require everyone to upload your government ID in order to use most sites on the internet. You can forget about your silly lil stan/fandom accounts if this passes."
Another X post with 1.7 million views as of Feb. 23 focused on the potential implications for online activism.
"If you care about Palestine you NEED to pay attention to KOSA, I’m so serious," the Feb. 17 post read. "It’s a mass censorship bill & forces everyone to upload their govt ID online to access anything. Say goodbye to being anonymous online. Say goodbye to organizing online. #KOSA"
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Social media users have made similar claims about the bill for months.
The claims ignore critical facts.
The Senate bill, S1409, does not require social media platforms, websites or apps to use government identification to verify people’s identities.
If the bill becomes law, though, some experts said companies could possibly use age verification methods, which could include government-issued identification.
The Kids Online Safety Act, sometimes called KOSA, would require social media platforms, websites and apps to take steps to reduce and mitigate harms such as sexual exploitation and online bullying that minors might experience online. Sixty-two senators from both parties have co-sponsored the bill, meaning it will likely head to the House, where its fate is uncertain. The bill’s introduction in 2022 followed months of congressional investigation into how technology and social media companies manage children’s safety.
The bill would cover social media platforms, video games, messaging apps and video streaming services that connect to the internet and are used — or are "reasonably likely to be used" — by minors. It would require that companies:
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Provide safeguards that limit other users’ ability to communicate with minors or access minors’ personal data.
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Provide parental tools to supervise minors’ use and to provide minors with default settings with the most restrictive privacy and security safeguards.
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Provide features that would let minors more easily delete their accounts and the data linked to those accounts.
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Provide features that would let minors set time limits for use.
One section of the bill requires a federal study of "methods and options for developing systems to verify age at the device or operating system level."
Facebook’s Messenger Kids app is displayed on an iPhone in New York, Feb. 16, 2018. (AP)
We contacted Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., the bill’s lead sponsors, and a Blumenthal spokesperson pointed us to information about the bill on Blumenthal’s website.
The website answers questions about whether the bill would require age verification or force users to provide their driver’s license or government ID to create social media accounts.
The answers to these questions is no, both on Blumenthal’s website and a similar section of Blackburn’s website. The bill "does not impose age verification requirements or require platforms to collect more data about users (government IDs or otherwise). In fact, the bill states explicitly that it does not require age gating, age verification, or the collection of additional data from users," according to both Blumenthal’s and Blackburn’s sites.
We verified that the bill says nothing in the legislation should be interpreted as requiring companies to:
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Collect "any personal data with respect to the age of users that a covered platform is not already collecting in the normal course of business."
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"Implement an age gating or age verification functionality."
Experts also told PolitiFact that the bill does not require websites or social media platforms to verify government IDs.
The bill would require companies to treat adults and minors differently for features and functions such as default safety settings and who can contact them through their accounts.
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The bill "does not have an age verification requirement, but most of the bill would only apply to users who are known to be 16 or younger," said John Perrino, a Stanford Internet Observatory policy analyst. He said that if companies must determine who is under a certain age, it raises "legitimate privacy concerns," but added that platforms can use other methods that do not include verifying government IDs to determine users’ ages. Those include self-reporting and face scanning tools, some of which are already in use.
Caitlin Chin-Rothmann, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington, D.C., think tank that receives some funding from tech platforms, said, "It is possible that companies could extend some KOSA provisions to all users regardless of their perceived age." For example, platforms could mitigate "content that glorifies eating disorders, suicidal behaviors or substance abuse" for people of all ages, Chinn-Rothmann said.
To offer parental controls, as the bill requires, companies would have to identify both parents and minors, and "the only way to authenticate that relationship is through identity verification for both users," said Shoshana Weissmann, digital director and Fellow at R Street Institute, a think tank that receives some funding from Google.
On their websites, Blumenthal and Blackburn wrote that the bill says online platforms must provide the safety and privacy protections "if an online platform already knows that a user is underage."
"Online platforms often already request a date of birth from new users, either for advertising and profiling the user, or for compliance with Children's Online Privacy Protection Act," the sites read. "Online platforms also frequently collect or purchase substantial amounts of other data to understand more about their users. But if an online platform truly doesn’t know the age of the user, then it does not face any obligation to provide protections or safeguards under the bill or to collect more data in order to determine the user’s age."
Haley Hinkle, policy counsel at Fairplay, a nonprofit organization that opposes child-targeted marketing and supports the Kids Online Safety Act, said some of the bill’s protections apply only when the platform knows users are minors. The bill defines "knows" as having "actual knowledge or knowledge fairly implied on the basis of objective circumstances."
"If a platform has used technology to determine a user’s age for purposes of delivering advertisements or ensuring advertiser brand safety, it must also apply that determination to KOSA protections," Hinkle said.
Weissmann said the data on who is a minor "is nowhere near" cut and dried, and the issue likely would result in litigation. Weissman and R Street Institute have opposed the bill.
"I’m sure I could be flagged as a minor on some platforms where I search for SpongeBob clips and memes," she said. "Meanwhile, a minor might be searching for information about cancer or even jobs that might make them appear more like an adult."
To avoid lawsuits and liability, platforms covered in the law would likely require all users to verify their ages, Weissmann said.
Chin-Rothmann said because there are few "robust technological methods" for accurate age verification that also protect privacy, verifying government IDs might be the "most straightforward and low-cost" age verification method for platforms to use.
An X user says the Kids Online Safety Act "would require everyone to upload" government identification "in order to use most sites on the internet."
The Senate bill does not include that requirement or say social media platforms, applications or websites must collect more user information than they already do.
Experts did not rule out that companies could turn to methods such as requiring government identification because of the law, but that is speculation.
We rate this claim False.
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Our Sources
Post on X, Feb. 16, 2024
Post on X, Feb. 17, 2024
TikTok video, July 21, 2023
Sen. Blumenthal’s website, Kids Online Safety Act bill, Feb. 15, 2024
Email interview with Ari Cohn, free speech counsel at TechFreedom, a nonprofit think tank that focuses on technology law and policy, Feb. 21, 2024
Email interview with Haley Hinkle, policy counsel at Fairplay, Feb. 21, 2024
Email interview with Caitlin Chin-Rothmann, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Feb. 20-23, 2024
Interview with Andrew Zack, policy manager for the Family Online Safety Institute, Feb. 22, 2024
Email interview with John Perrino, a policy analyst at the Stanford Internet Observatory, Feb. 21-22, 2024
Email interview with Shoshana Weissmann, digital director and Fellow at R Street Institute, Feb. 20, 2024
Email statement from Jason Kelley, Activism Director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Feb. 20-22, 2024
Emailed Statement from the Chamber of Progress, Feb. 21, 2024
Email exchange with Jamie Neikrie, Legislative Manager for the Council for Responsible Social Media at Issue One, Feb. 21, 2024
Email exchange with a spokesperson from Sen. Richard Blumenthal’s office, Feb. 21, 2024
Verify, No, the Kids Online Safety Act does not require people to upload their driver’s licenses before posting online, July 25, 2023
Electronic Frontier Foundation, Don’t Fall for the Latest Changes to the Dangerous Kids Online Safety Act, Feb. 15, 2024
Electronic Frontier Foundation, Age Verification Mandates Would Undermine Anonymity Online, March 10, 2023
NBC News, 200 groups push Senate to vote on Kids Online Safety Act in 2024, Dec. 6, 2023
Time, Utah’s New Law Restricting Social Media Use for Minors Isn’t Clear on Enforcement, March 25, 2023
Reason, Shoshana Weissmann: Online Age Verification Rules Are Unconstitutional and Ineffective, Feb. 14, 2024
Video on TikTok, July 21, 2023
The Harvard Crimson, Tech Experts Debate Strategies to Regulate Social Media, Protect Private Data, Oct. 20, 2021
Congress.gov, S.1409 - Kids Online Safety Act, accessed Feb. 21, 2024
Sen. Marsha Blackburn’s website, What is the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA)? accessed Feb. 20, 2024
Sen. Richard Blumenthal’s website, What is the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA)? accessed Feb. 20, 2024
The Washington Post, Senate poised to pass biggest piece of tech regulation in decades, Feb. 15, 2024
The Center for Strategic & International Studies, Our Donors, accessed Feb. 21, 2024
Gizmodo, Here's Who Funds the Tech Think Tanks Asking Congress to Reconsider This Whole Antitrust Thing, June 21, 2021
TechPolicy Press, Overcoming Fear and Frustration with the Kids Online Safety Act, Nov. 13, 2023
The Center for Growth and Opportunity, Keeping Kids Safe Online: How Should Policymakers Approach Age Verification? June 21, 2023
Digital Trust & Safety Partnership, Age Assurance: Guiding Principles and Best Practices, published September 2023
Fairplay, Amended Kids Online Safety Act Gains Critical Bipartisan Support in the Senate, Feb. 15, 2024
R Street Institute, R Street Institute Concerns About the Kids Online Safety Act, July 27, 2023
The Washington Post, Senate poised to pass biggest piece of tech regulation in decades, Feb. 15, 2024
KFF Health News, ‘Pass It’: Biden Wants Movement On Kids Online Safety, Privacy Bills, July 26, 2023
Sen. Bill Cassidy’s website, Momentum Grows for Kids Online Safety Act with New Cosponsors, Supporters, Feb. 20, 2024
The Washington Post, Senators unveil children’s online safety bill after months of pressure on Silicon Valley, Feb. 16, 2024
The White House, Remarks by President Biden on Expanding Access to Mental Health Care, July 25, 2023
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