KOSA is dead! (US)

submitted a month ago by The Nexus of Privacy

www.fightforthefuture.org/news/2024-08-01-kosa-…

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/20332183

Fight for the Future writes:

"The controversial and unconstitutional Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) is officially dead in the House of Representatives. Reporting indicates that there was significant opposition to the bill within the Republican caucus, and it faced vocal opposition from prominent progressives like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) and Rep Maxwell Frost (D-FL)."

Evan Greer:

"KOSA was a poorly written bill that would have made kids less safe. I am so proud of the LGBTQ youth and frontlines advocates who have led the opposition to this dangerous and misguided legislation. It’s good that this unconstitutional censorship bill is dead for now, but I am not breathing a sigh of relief. It’s infuriating that Congress wasted so much time and energy on a deeply flawed and controversial bill while failing to advance real measures to address the harms of Big Tech like privacy, antitrust and algorithmic justice legislation. "

Thanks to everybody who took action ove the last year to stop this bill!

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55 Comments

Admiral Patrick a month ago

Article doesn't say why republicans opposed it, but I guess this is one of those "broken clock" moments where they were accidentally right but for the wrong reasons.

ricecake a month ago

FiniteBanjo a month ago

Yeh tbh not sure why users here are opposed to KOSA.

ricecake a month ago

The condensed version is that it creates a lot of avenues for a very loose definition of "keeping kids safe" that could easily include "information about dealing with bigoted family" being called "dangerous" at the discretion of an executive branch appointee who thinks that lgbtq identity is "unsafe".

It also provides more avenues for the government to remove otherwise legal speech from the Internet entirely on the grounds that they have asserted that it's "bad for children".
This is literally the long running joke about how you pass draconian laws, and would only be made more on the nose if it was "keeping patriotic kids online safe for the future tax cuts of American freedom"

In general, the government should not be able to silence speech that isn't immediately and unambiguously harmful.

KickMeElmo a month ago

It also is written vaguely enough to justify attempts to block VPN access and other forms of anonymous media consumption. Basically under the guise that an anonymous user -could- be a child, so they need to be deanonymized and tracked.

FiniteBanjo a month ago

Well the text does very specifically state it would trigger investigation of things that have caused harm, but yeah it's not worth the risk if the FTC decides what harm is.

samus12345 a month ago, edited a month ago

The members of Congress who vote for this bill should remember—they do not, and will not, control who will be in charge of punishing bad internet speech. The Federal Trade Commission, majority-controlled by the President’s party, will be able to decide what kind of content “harms” minors, then investigate or file lawsuits against websites that host that content.

Ripe, ripe, RIPE for abuse.

schnurrito a month ago

Because I think the government should fundamentally not be in the business of telling us on the Internet what we can talk about, how we have to design our websites, etc etc.

https://www.eff.org/cyberspace-independence

FiniteBanjo a month ago, edited a month ago

Alright but if an entity, for example, teaches children about self harm for pleasure or gambling then that entity should be punishable, imo.

But another user makes a great argument that the FTC could decide anything they want is the definition of harm, which could include LGBT+ and therefor KOSA isn't worth the risks.

catloaf a month ago

Read the article

Snot Flickerman a month ago, edited a month ago

I'm gonna go out on a limb and go with "Can't give Democrats anything that looks like a conservative win" for $500 Alex.

schnurrito a month ago

Then why did they support it in the Senate?

Zorque a month ago

Cause Senators are generally less reactionary than the house. They can usually afford to play a long game that House members can't.

LennethAegis a month ago

That and good old reactive contrarianism. Dems say yes, we say no.

idiomaddict a month ago

They probably opposed the idea of safe kids, given the rest of the platform. That, or there was lobbying money.

IllNess a month ago

Considering the tech industry would need to use more money to enforce the law, it would be cheaper to just buy out politicians.

Crikeste a month ago

Their official line is based in fears of surveillance and government overreach. My state senator Mike Lee was one of them, must have been a cold day in Hell or something.

ayyy a month ago

Please don’t perpetuate “think of the children” nonsense.

idiomaddict a month ago

I’m not, it’s the name. The joke was that they saw the concept of safe kids in the Kids Online Safety Act and never read further.

ayyy a month ago

And you making fun of that is just perpetuating the problem of bullshit law names like “protect the children” or “patriot act” or “freedom blah blah safety blah blah.”

idiomaddict a month ago

I don’t think it does in this context. Not a single person reading this thinks that this was a good bill, whereas in a Facebook comment section, that might be different.

Aniki 🌱🌿 a month ago

Do you know what kosa stands for?

BCX a month ago

You can't go looking for logic in hate

roofuskit a month ago

The reason is obvious, the Democrats wanted it to pass.

conciselyverbose a month ago

I mean, good, but how the hell did it get 90% of the senate?

eestileib a month ago

Senators don't give a fuck about their constituents.

Maybe this is different in Rhode Island and Wyoming, but in Cali the Senators don't even have offices to take your calls if you're a pleb. It's like trying to get customer service from Google.

My US rep actually does constituent services and horror meets with non-rich constituents in person sometimes!

TexasDrunk a month ago

I can always find my senator pretty easily. I just fly to Cancun.

roofuskit a month ago

Only when the power is out.

TexasDrunk a month ago

Who the fuck wants to look at him in the light?

ikidd a month ago

Our Alberta MLA, who was also the Minister of Transportation, would sit in his agricultural equipment dealership about 2 days a week and take meetings all day with anyone that wanted to come in and talk.

He fixed a lot of people's problems with a few phone calls from there.

Revan343 a month ago

I'm curious what riding you're in

ikidd a month ago

That was Yellowhead back in the 90s. Old Pavin' Pete.

Queen HawlSera a month ago, edited a month ago

You want hard mode?

Try to get customer service from Steam, I'm almost convinced Valve doesn't actually have a head quarters and Gabe Newell might be an ancient secret government AI hiding on various reels of magnetic tape in some dank basement at Area 51 that not even the President is allowed to apply to be the janitor of.

Flying Squid a month ago

SAVE THE CHILDREN!!!!

That's how.

roofuskit a month ago

Thank goodness the GOP in the house cares not about the children. They definitely voted against it based purely on the majority of Democrats that voted on favor.

Cryophilia a month ago

Republicans will block anything that Democrats propose, purely out of spite.

Occasionally, when Democrats propose something awful, this actually works in the people's favor.

Queen HawlSera a month ago

I'm seriously never surprised Obama never caught wise to this and started demanding they lower the minimum wage to 50 cents. Republicans would have raised it to 420.69 an hour in a bill that had the most racist fucking dog whistle you've ever seen as the name.

Queen HawlSera a month ago, edited a month ago

The Republicans definitely care about the children, but only in contexts that are deplorable and disgusting. Just ask Epstein's buddy Trump.

ExFed a month ago

This seems like misinformation... The House is in recess until September.

Noxy a month ago, edited a month ago

I'm having a hard time finding any other sources that it's dead in the house. And congress.gov is infuriatingly awful to navigate.

I want to know if my house rep voted for it.

This seems like the most relevant search result but the tracker implies it's *passed* the house? https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/senate-bill/2073?q=%7B%22search%22%3A%22kids+online+safety%22%7D&s=3&r=3

Edit: apparently it's this "amendment": https://www.congress.gov/amendment/118th-congress/senate-amendment/3021/actions?s=a&r=33 but still no house actions

schnurrito a month ago

Your house representative didn't vote for it, nor against it, because the decision was not to bring it up for a vote at all.

You can find sources for this if you search for the #kosa hashtag on Mastodon, e.g. https://www.techdirt.com/2024/08/01/ding-dong-kosas-dead-for-now/

Noxy a month ago

Thank you!

Reminder to always keep up the fight. Even when things seem inevitable, fights can be won. That goes both ways: don't get complacent and don't get despaired

Get active, and get involved

themurphy a month ago, edited a month ago

Great news!

But honestly, when something is voted down, there should be a cooldown period, where you couldn't vote for it again.

It both stops these people making a new bill every year, and at the same time, actually have the people writing the bill doing a good job.

Dark Arc a month ago

It's a weird day when I'm happy the Republicans teamed up with progressives to stopped a bipartisan bill.

I'm pretty irritated with Sherrod Brown on this one for voting for it in the senate.

BlackLaZoR a month ago

Kosa means scythe in Polish. What a name...

Lost_My_Mind a month ago

Wow. Now I know 1 polish word!

schnurrito a month ago

Normally one would expect stupid bills to pass the House, but fail in the Senate.

Has this happened before that it was the other way round?

Queen HawlSera a month ago, edited a month ago

Really? I heard the exact opposite, that it passed the Senate and is expected to breeze through the house.

According to Techdirt , the version that passed the Senate cannot be brought up in it's current form by some of the House Republicans needed to pass it. So it's dead for now.

It does mean it'll have to go through both houses again, and yes, they'll try.

Queen HawlSera a month ago

Thank God, ya know after SOPA was defeated I thought they'd never try to ban the internet again...

I was wrong

We thought SESTA was dead, and then they ambushed us with FOSTA, the Senate version which has fucked the internet ever since for sex workers, LGBT+ folk and people who like porn. So I expect they're going to pull the same kind of thing, distracting opposition groups while passing it in secret.

Ultimately, both parties want to kill the internet, or turn it into Cable TV, because the public dialoging in forums is dangerous to the ownership class.

TheImpressiveX a month ago

Good job, everyone!