SECTION 1.
(a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Social media are internet-based channels that allow users to create profiles and interact, either in real time or asynchronously, with audiences searching for interaction with others or user-generated content.
(2) Mental health is a state of well-being where the individuals can realize their own abilities, cope with life stressors, work productively, and contribute to their community.
(3) Children and adolescents, or individuals collectively referred to as minors, are considered as vulnerable populations with respect to their experience of mental health and their abilities to understand and process mediated content, particularly through social media channels.
(4) Research has demonstrated that social media usage among children and adolescents is associated with poor mental health, including increases in depression and anxiety, and decreases in body image.
(5) More than 20 states have enacted, or are considering, regulations to social media in order to protect the mental health of children and adolescents. This is a timely topic of clear societal interest regarding the health and well-being of the next generation.
(6) Legislation considered across all states has included the following:
(A) Stricter age verifications.
(B) Requiring consent of parents or guardians to open a social media account among those 13 to 17 years of age, inclusive.
(C) Allowing parents or guardians to set limitations on the hours an adolescent user may access their account.
(D) Providing parents or guardians with full access to their child’s account and all its content.
(E) Limiting the obtaining and sharing of adolescent users’ personal information and accounts by social media companies.
(F) Preventing users under 18 years of age from receiving targeted ads.
(G) Banning algorithms and design features which may promote harmful content on adolescent users’ feeds, including the sale of weapons or drugs, self-harm, and other content.
(H) Blocking all pornographic content from users under 18 years of age.
(I) Requiring that certain apps be blocked entirely to protect user data from foreign companies.
(7) Beyond the United States, countries around the world have enacted various social media regulations to protect the mental health of children and adolescents, including South Korea, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, China, India, and Brazil.
(8) To date, social media use in the United States, with respect to the enforcement of age verifications, limitations on the content to which minors are exposed, the ability of proprietary algorithms to freely recommend content to children and adolescents, and advertising to vulnerable youth, remains largely unregulated.
(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that social media content and social media companies are regulated in such a way to promote the health and well-being of the vulnerable population of children and adolescents.