KOSA Passes the Senate

House opposition makes full passage unlikely

Jul 30, 2024

On Tuesday, the Senate voted to pass the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) in the first floor vote this Congress for major online content legislation. Chamber of Progress and a coalition of organizations have raised concerns that the legislation empowers far-right policymakers to censor online resources and that the bill will result in the over-moderation of content posted by marginalized communities online.

“Giving the next president the power to crack down on online speech poses a massive threat to our constitutional rights,” said Chamber of Progress Senior Tech Policy Director Todd O’Boyle. “If there’s one thing the far-left and far-right agree on, it’s that the next chair of the FTC shouldn’t get to decide what online posts are harmful. Thankfully, there’s substantial opposition to KOSA in the House.”

During a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing in May, Ranking Member Frank Pallone raised concerns about the impact of the bill on LGBTQ youth. 

This month, Chamber of Progress and organizations including the ACLU, the Center for Democracy & Technology, EFF, and SIIA sent a letter to the Senate urging lawmakers to oppose KOSA.

In May, Chamber of Progress along with groups including Equality New Mexico, Freedom Oklahoma, LGBT Tech, TransOhio, and the Woodhull Freedom Foundation sent a letter to congressional leadership urging opposition to KOSA and highlighting how state attorneys general could use the legislation to censor teens. Notably, primary bill sponsor Sen. Blackburn has applauded the bill’s anti-LGBTQ impacts, highlighting that KOSA would “protect minor children from the transgender [sic] in this culture and that influence.”

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Chamber of Progress (progresschamber.org) is a center-left tech industry policy coalition promoting technology’s progressive future.  We work to ensure that all Americans benefit from technological leaps, and that the tech industry operates responsibly and fairly.  

Our corporate partners do not have a vote on or veto over our positions. We do not speak for individual partner companies and remain true to our stated principles even when our partners disagree.