Federal News
Congress Advances Kids Online Safety Legislation
March 26, 2026
A recent California jury verdict held Meta and Google liable for designing addictive social media products targeting children, prompting bipartisan calls in Congress to strengthen federal protections for youth online. U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn and Representatives Erin Houchin and Jake Auchincloss, leaders of the Kids Online Safety Caucus, urge Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Ted Cruz to advance the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA). This legislation aims to raise the age of Internet adulthood to at least 16 and impose accountability requirements on social media platforms beyond litigation outcomes.
- Why this matters: Federal procurement and compliance professionals should anticipate increased regulatory scrutiny and potential new requirements for technology vendors providing digital platforms or services to minors.
- Agencies may need to update contract clauses to ensure vendor adherence to enhanced child safety standards and data protection mandates.
- Technology contractors should evaluate their product designs and compliance frameworks to align with forthcoming legislative changes impacting youth online safety.
- This development signals growing Congressional focus on digital platform accountability, which could influence future procurement policies and contract evaluations involving social media and online services.
Today283s verdict marks a monumental victory for parents, children, families, and survivors who have taken Big Tech to court to demand accountability after having the door slammed in their face by these social media companies for years.
— Marsha Blackburn, U.S. Senator
Agencies
U.S. Senate, Senate Commerce Committee, U.S. House of Representatives
Vendors
Meta, Google, YouTube