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Bill > HF864


IA HF864

IA HF864
A bill for an act relating to certain commercial entities who publish or distribute obscene material on the internet, and providing civil penalties.(Formerly HF 62.)


summary

Introduced
03/07/2025
In Committee
06/16/2025
Crossed Over
03/20/2025
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

91st General Assembly

Bill Summary

This bill relates to certain commercial entities who publish or distribute certain material on the internet. The bill defines “covered platform”, “identifying information”, “information content provider”, “interactive computer service”, “obscene material”, “provider”, and “reasonable age verification”. The bill makes a covered platform liable if the covered platform fails to perform reasonable age verification of individuals attempting to access obscene material published or distributed by the covered platform. Reasonable age verification includes the use of government-issued identification, financial documents or other documents that are reliable proxies for age, or any other commercially reasonable and reliable method. Reasonable age verification may be performed by a third party subject to state jurisdiction (third party), and the bill permits the use of cryptographic techniques to preserve anonymity and protect privacy. A covered platform or third party is prohibited from retaining an individual’s identifying information after completing the individual’s reasonable age verification, and from distributing, selling, or disseminating an individual’s identifying information obtained through the performance of reasonable age verification. A covered platform or third party is subject to punitive damages for violations of the bill. Punitive damages cannot exceed triple the aggregate amount of a plaintiff’s reasonable attorney fees and costs. The bill’s provisions are not to be construed as to impose liability on a user of an interactive computer service on the internet. The bill’s provisions are not to be construed as to impose liability on a provider solely for providing access or connection to a covered platform, or to obscene material on an internet site or in a facility, system, or network not under the provider’s control. If the attorney general has reasonable belief that a covered platform, or third party, is in violation of the bill, the attorney general may bring a civil action to enjoin further violations, enforce compliance with the bill, assess a civil penalty in an amount not more than $10,000 for each violation, and provide other remedies permitted by law. If the attorney general has reasonable belief that a covered platform, or third party, is in violation of an injunction issued under the bill, the attorney general may bring a civil action to provide for civil penalties in an amount not more than $100,000. The bill allows individuals with knowledge of a violation to report the violation to the attorney general, and requires the attorney general to establish an electronic reporting system for the submission of reports of violations of the bill.

AI Summary

This bill establishes a legal framework for regulating online platforms that publish or distribute obscene material, focusing on age verification requirements. The bill defines several key terms, including "covered platform" (a commercial entity that creates or hosts obscene material online) and "reasonable age verification" (verifying user age through government ID, financial documents, or other reliable methods). The legislation requires covered platforms to implement age verification processes to prevent minors from accessing obscene content, with verification potentially conducted by a third party using privacy-preserving techniques like cryptographic methods. Importantly, platforms and third-party verification services are prohibited from storing or sharing individuals' identifying information after age verification. The bill empowers the attorney general to take civil action against platforms that violate these requirements, with potential penalties up to $10,000 per violation and the ability to seek injunctions. The legislation explicitly protects internet service providers, users, and other intermediary platforms from liability, ensuring that only platforms directly hosting obscene content are held responsible. Additionally, the bill requires the attorney general to establish an electronic reporting system for individuals to report potential violations, providing a mechanism for public oversight and enforcement.

Committee Categories

Business and Industry

Sponsors (0)

No sponsors listed

Other Sponsors (1)

Judiciary (House)

Last Action

Placed on calendar. (on 02/17/2026)

bill text


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