May 3, 2024, 4:48 p.m. | Molly Buckley

Deeplinks www.eff.org

A companion bill to the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) was introduced in the House last month. Despite minor changes, it suffers from the same fundamental flaws as its Senate counterpart. At its core, this bill is still an unconstitutional censorship bill that restricts protected online speech and gives the government the power to target services and content it finds objectionable. Here, we break down why the House version of KOSA is just as dangerous as the Senate version, …

act bill censorship flaws free speech house kids kids online kids online safety act kosa online safety online safety act privacy safety senate social networks speech version

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