Sens. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas) are re-introducing a bill that aims to ban social media platforms from knowingly letting kids aged under 13 from using them. The bipartisan Kids Off Social Media Act (KOSMA) was introduced last year, but it didn’t progress beyond the committee stage. However, KOSMA may pick up more momentum this time around given the current political landscape.
“I’m going to do everything I can to get it passed out of committee and advanced on the floor […] and signed into law,” Cruz told . “Ted and I are in the middle of about two dozen different disagreements and disputes, but the one thing that seems to unite the political parties is that we need to protect small children from the negative outcomes of being on social media,” Schatz said.
Cruz is now the chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee (which has become a prominent battleground for social media-related issues in recent years). Not only that, Republicans are in control of both houses of Congress while Lina Khan is no longer head of the Federal Trade Commission.
Under KOSMA, that agency would have extra regulatory power over social media platforms. Some Republicans were reluctant to hand Khan those reins. “I think that [Khan’s stint as FTC chair] understandably caused significant reluctance on the part of Congress to entrust any additional authority on the FTC,” Cruz said.
If KOSMA becomes law as it stands, social media platforms would have to delete any accounts held by users aged under 13 as well as any data collected from those children. It would also block them from using data collected from users aged under 17 to algorithmically suggest or promote content. Furthermore, it stipulates that schools would have to block students from accessing social media services on school devices and networks in order to keep receiving certain subsidies.
Schatz was among a bipartisan group of senators that introduced the Protecting Kids on Social Media Act in 2023. That bill aimed to set 13 as the minimum age for using social media, and require parental consent for under 18s to access such platforms. However, the bill pass through the Commerce Committee.
Last July, two online safety bills that ostensibly sought to protect minors, the and the much-derided Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), in a 91-3 vote. However, neither before the previous Congress ended on January 3.