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US House passes youth online safety legislation

By Thomson Reuters Jun 29, 2026 | 6:18 PM

By Jody Godoy

June 29 (Reuters) – The U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation on Monday that would require ​online platforms to provide some safeguards ‌for children, setting up a potential clash with the Senate where lawmakers support more stringent standards.

Congress has taken increasing interest in preventing ‌harm ​to youth online, ⁠as social media companies ⁠have faced a backlash.

The House passed the Kids Internet and Digital Safety Act in a 267-117 vote with ​support from both Democrats and Republicans.

The legislation would require companies to offer ⁠ways for kids to ⁠limit addictive features and put ​in place policies to protect children from ​some harms including sexual exploitation.

The bill ‌is the House’s first attempt to regulate online child safety since the Senate passed the Kids Online Safety Act ⁠in a 91-3 vote in 2024.

The Senate bill would impose a “duty of care” on social ⁠media ‌companies when it comes to ⁠young users. U.S. Senator Marsha ​Blackburn, ‌a Republican from Tennessee, has ​been negotiating ⁠with the White House to gain support for a package that would include the bill.

(Reporting by Jody Godoy in New York; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and ​Chris Reese)