Bill

Bill > A1883


NJ A1883

NJ A1883
Prohibits social media platforms from using certain practices or features that cause child users to become addicted to platform.


summary

Introduced
01/09/2024
In Committee
01/09/2024
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/12/2026

Introduced Session

2024-2025 Regular Session

Bill Summary

The bill prohibits the owner or operator of a social media platform from using any practice, design, feature, or affordance that would cause child users to become addicted to the platform. Under the bill, the owner or operator of the social media platform would be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed $250,000 for each violation. However, the platform would not be deemed to violate the provisions of the bill if the owner or operator of the platform hires an independent third party to conduct an annual audit to determine whether any of its practices, designs, features, or affordances would cause, have the potential to cause, or contribute to the addiction of child users to the platform, and the owner or operator of the platform demonstrates that the platform does not use a practice, design, feature, or affordance that causes, or is likely to cause, the addiction of child users to the platform. If an audit reveals that a practice, design, feature, or affordance has the potential to cause or contributes to child user addiction, the owner or operator of the social media platform would also be required to correct the practice, design, feature, or affordance within 30 calendar days of the completion of the audit. The bill also requires that a social medial platform demonstrate that it does not use a practice, design, feature, or affordance that causes, or is likely to cause, the addiction of child users to the platform. Additionally, certain social media platforms would not be subject to the requirements of the bill. These social media platforms would include any platform that is controlled by a business entity that generated less than $100 million in gross revenue during the preceding calendar year, or any platform whose primary function is to enable users to play video games. The bill also clarifies that the owner or operator of a social media platform would not be subject to liability under this bill for: (1) any content generated, uploaded, or shared by users of the platform; (2) any content that is created by third-party entities and passively displayed by the platform; (3) any information or content for which the platform was not responsible for creating and developing; and (4) any conduct involving child users that would otherwise be protected under certain federal law, the First Amendment of the United States Constitution, or Article I, paragraph 6 of the State Constitution.

AI Summary

This bill prohibits social media platforms from using any practices, designs, features, or affordances that would cause child users to become addicted to the platform. The bill allows platforms to avoid liability if they hire an independent third party to conduct an annual audit to determine whether any of their practices, designs, features, or affordances could contribute to child user addiction, and the platform demonstrates that it does not use anything that causes addiction. The bill also exempts certain smaller platforms and platforms focused on video games. The bill imposes a civil penalty of up to $250,000 per violation for platforms that violate the addiction provisions. The bill also clarifies that platforms are not liable for user-generated content or certain other content and conduct involving child users.

Committee Categories

Business and Industry

Sponsors (7)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Science, Innovation and Technology Committee (on 01/09/2024)

bill text


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