Changeflow GovPing Privacy Guidance US House Committee Advances KIDS Act and Other ...
Priority review Rule Added Draft

US House Committee Advances KIDS Act and Other Online Safety Bills

Favicon for iapp.org IAPP Privacy News
Published March 5th, 2026
Detected March 13th, 2026
Email

Summary

The U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce advanced the KIDS Act, Sammy's Law, and the App Store Accountability Act to a full House vote. These bills aim to enhance children's online safety by addressing issues like dangerous content, age verification, and app store policies.

What changed

The U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce has advanced several children's online safety bills, including the Kids Internet Digital Safety (KIDS) Act, Sammy's Law, and the App Store Accountability Act, to a full House vote. The KIDS Act, which integrates parts of the House version of the Kids Online Safety Act, aims to improve online safety for minors. Sammy's Law mandates social media platforms to use third-party firms to screen minor users for dangerous behaviors and alert parents, while the App Store Accountability Act requires age verification and parental consent for downloading age-restricted apps.

These bills, advanced by a Republican majority despite Democratic objections regarding preemption language and knowledge standards, will now proceed to the full House for consideration. Companies operating online platforms and app stores, particularly those targeting or used by minors, should monitor the progress of these bills. While specific compliance deadlines are not yet established, the bills signal a significant push towards increased regulation of online services concerning child safety, with potential implications for data collection, content moderation, and user verification practices.

What to do next

  1. Monitor legislative progress of the KIDS Act, Sammy's Law, and the App Store Accountability Act.
  2. Review current data collection, age verification, and content moderation policies for compliance with potential new requirements.
  3. Assess potential impacts of state law preemption clauses on existing or future state-level child safety initiatives.

Source document (simplified)


Published

6 March 2026

Subscribe to IAPP Newsletters

Contributors:

Alex LaCasse

Staff Writer

IAPP


The U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce adopted multiple children's online safety bills during a 5 March markup session that will receive a full House vote.

The bills on the committee's docket were House Resolution 7757, the Kids Internet Digital Safety, or KIDS, Act; House Resolution 2657, also known as Sammy's Law; House Resolution 3149, the App Store Accountability Act, and five other bills aimed at improving the cybersecurity of various critical infrastructure components.

The KIDS Act contains some, but not all, pieces of legislation passed in the Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade subcommittee in December of last year, like the Safe Bots Act and the No Fentanyl on Social Media Act. Most notably, the House version of the Kids Online Safety Act was integrated into Title 2 of the KIDS Act.

Sammy's Law is named in memory of a 16-year-old who died after soliciting a fentanyl-laced pill through social media. It requires social media platforms to contract third-party child safety firms that would screen minor users' accounts for communications they may have engaged in dangerous behavior, such as self-harm or drug use, and alert their parents.

The App Store Accountability Act would require age verification to download applications from app stores. Users under age 18 would be required to obtain parental consent to download age-restricted apps, while creating enforcement mechanisms.

Partisan reaction

Democratic committee members complained the KIDS Act contained broad state law preemption and lacked strong knowledge standards on the part of technology companies. Despite their objections, Republicans in the majority passed the KIDS Act along party lines, in addition to both the App Store Accountability Act and Sammy's Law.

However, the Democrats joined Republicans to unanimously pass the cybersecurity infrastructure bills.

The KIDS Act largely generated the most buzz among committee members. Democrats attempted to unsuccessfully reintroduce amendments eliminating preemption language and re-imposing stronger knowledge standard requirements for each law contained within the larger KIDS Act package over the course of several hours.

U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., said he was "disappointed" the two sides could not come to an agreement on a bipartisan framework for the KIDS Act. He claimed "Republicans are handing Big Tech a giant gift by walking away from the stronger preemption standards that were previously included in these bills," while the new knowledge standard contained in the KIDS Act was a "giant loophole" for Big Tech.

"I have engaged in aggressive bipartisan talks with Chairman (Brett) Guthrie and his staff to address the risks children and teens face as they live increasingly digitally centered lives," Pallone said during the hearing. "The new preemption standards are inadequate to allow states to pass stronger laws to do more to protect kids … (The knowledge) standard allows tech companies and companies that collect kids' data to continue to claim that they lacked actual knowledge or willfully disregarded knowledge that kids are using their platforms."

U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla. said the KIDS Act represents "the most comprehensive online safety package" the Energy and Commerce Committee has put before the full House of Representatives. With specific regard to KOSA, Bilirakis said it limits addictive design features, restricts geolocation features for minors and turns off "algorithms by default" on kids' devices.

"(The KIDS Act) is a combination of years of hearings, evidence gathering, heartfelt testimony and the social media questioning this committee led under several chairs in the past," Bilirakis said. "We've all heard the stories that in a matter of days, kids can be sucked into an algorithm that twists (their) innocent views into promoting violence or drug use or self-harm or eating disorders — KOSA puts an end to this model. We have a great package here … that is going to go a long way to protecting kids and reducing the online harms we have all seen."

COPPA 2.0 status?

The markup session was not the only children's online safety measure Congress adopted 5 March as the Senate unanimously passed the Children and Teens Online Privacy Act, otherwise known as COPPA 2.0, according to Politico.

The House version of COPPA 2.0 was originally slated to be part of the Energy and Commerce Committee's markup; however, Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., the committee chairman, pulled the bill and announced that over the course of the hearing there had been "substantial progress" in negotiations among the staffers from both sides to work toward a bipartisan agreement. He did not provide a date for when the House COPPA 2.0 bill would have a markup session before the full committee.

"All of us want to protect kids," Guthrie said. "Our staffs have continued to work toward a bipartisan agreement ... Our staffs will continue to work in the coming days."

This content is eligible for Continuing Professional Education credits. Please self-submit according to CPE policy guidelines.

Submit for CPEs

Contributors:

Alex LaCasse

Staff Writer

IAPP

Tags:

Children’s privacy and safety Law and regulation U.S. federal regulation Privacy

Related Stories

### FTC finalizes COPPA Rule amendments 16 Jan. 2025

### Top 5 impacts of the new COPPA Rule 14 Feb. 2025

ANALYSIS

### US Senate committee advances children's privacy bills 28 July 2023

### Kids Online Safety and Privacy Act clears US Senate 31 July 2024

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Various
Published
March 5th, 2026
Instrument
Rule
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Draft
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Technology companies Manufacturers
Geographic scope
National (US)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Data Privacy
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Children's Online Safety App Store Regulation Cybersecurity

Get Privacy Guidance alerts

Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when IAPP Privacy News publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.