Tech and AINew NC bill would ban minors from social media

New NC bill would ban minors from social media

-


A new bill filed in the North Carolina House of Representatives aims to ban children under 14 from social media and age-verify some sites — but not like other age-verification laws.

HB 301, called the Social Media Protections for Minors Act, was introduced last Wednesday and passed its first reading, according to North Carolina station WFMY News 2. It’ll now go to a committee for further review.

Similar to Australia’s social media ban for children under 16, this bill would prohibit anyone under 14 from creating an account on social platforms that meet certain criteria (like having 10 percent daily active users under 16 and “addictive” features like infinite scrolling). Children aged 14 to 15 would need parents’ permission to make an account, though it doesn’t detail how this consent would be handled.

Mashable After Dark

Additionally, HB 301 calls for “anonymous” or standard age verification when viewing a site with a substantial portion (over a third) of content deemed “harmful to minors.” The phrase “harmful to minors” harkens back to a Supreme Court case, Ginsberg v. New York, which concluded that content that isn’t obscene (thus protected by the First Amendment) can still be “harmful to minors.”

Typically, in age-verification laws, this means explicit content. This part is in line with other such laws, which require some form of age verification (such as a digital ID or facial scan) in order to visit porn sites.

Unlike other age-verification laws that have passed in the U.S. — including North Carolina’s own age-verification law — this one requires these site visitors to be 16 years or older, not 18, though. In North Carolina, the age of consent is 16.

In January, the Supreme Court heard about age-verification laws in the case Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton, and their ruling will likely come out this summer. Findings from a recent study on age verification laws suggest that these laws don’t work at their proposed aim to keep minors away from explicit websites. This is because they can access websites that don’t comply with the laws, or work around them with a VPN.





Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest news

Elon Musk’s New Political Party Will Embrace Bitcoin 

Elon Musk said that his new party would embrace Bitcoin because “fiat is hopeless,” in a post on...

Imagen Network (IMAGE) to Raise $420 Million for Growth Using Circle’s USDC and Ripple’s RLUSD Stablecoins

Subtitle: Multichain capital elevate will fund AI growth, ecosystem enlargement, and decentralized infrastructure at scale. July 07, 2025 1:00 AM...

The New Era of Work Travel

Don’t sweat the expense reports—from first-class tech to multiday commutes, WIRED and Condé Nast Traveler help you navigate...

Orion leads altcoin rally as Solana falters below $150

While Solana faces pressure below the...

Advertisement

Researchers seek to influence peer review with hidden AI prompts

Academics may be leaning on a novel strategy to influence peer review of their research papers — adding...

US Secret Service Trains 60+ Nations to Track Crypto Scams With Blockchain Tools

The U.S. Secret Service is spearheading a global crackdown on crypto fraud, arming over 60 countries with cutting-edge...

Must read

Elon Musk’s New Political Party Will Embrace Bitcoin 

Elon Musk said that his new party would...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you