ACLU Urges Congress to Vote Against Online Censorship Proposed in the KIDS Act
6 Articles
6 Articles
The KIDS Act would require an age check to access the Internet: this is a comprehensive set of legislative measures to control web browsing and private messaging, according to the EFFNext, the US Congress is about to vote on the Children's Online Safety Act (KOSA). The KIDS Act aims to strengthen the protection of children online in terms of privacy and mental health. However, according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation...
The KIDS Act Would Turn Web Browsing Into a TSA Line
The KIDS Act Would Turn Web Browsing Into a TSA Line Ross Marchand June 29, 2026 This op-ed was originally published in The Blaze.Lawmakers never tire of devising new ways to undermine digital privacy and First Amendment rights, always under the guise of “protecting kids.”The KIDS Act — the Kids Internet and Digital Safety Act — is the latest piece of smug political b…
CCIA Statement Ahead of House Vote on Kids Internet and Digital Safety Act
Washington – The House is expected to vote this week on a revised version of the Kids Internet and Digital Safety Act (KIDS). The bipartisan package includes a slate of 14 child online safety measures. The Computer & Communications Industry Association shares lawmakers’ goal of protecting young internet users and appreciates the many amendments made to the previous text, including leaving out the problematic duty of care and other clarifying fix…
KIDS Act: Backdoor to digital ID, mass surveillance, and government control
Within the next week, Congress is preparing to vote on the Kids Internet and Digital Safety (KIDS) Act, a sprawling package of legislation that will ultimately become a back door to digital ID, mass surveillance, and complete government control of… Read more → The post KIDS Act: Backdoor to digital ID, mass surveillance, and government control appeared first on The Strident Conservative ™.
The KIDS Act, set for a US House vote as early as next week, could eliminate online anonymity, raising the risk for journalists, dissidents, and whistleblowers (The Intercept)
The Intercept: The KIDS Act, set for a US House vote as early as next week, could eliminate online anonymity, raising the risk for journalists, dissidents, and whistleblowers — A House bill ostensibly aimed at protecting children will raise the risk for journalists, dissidents, and whistleblowers.
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