HR-5360-119
Forwarded by Subcommittee to Full Committee in the Nature of a Substitute (Amended) by Voice Vote.
Sponsored by Erin Houchin (R-IN)
What it does
This bill would direct the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to develop and publish educational resources within 180 days of enactment, aimed at helping parents, educators, and minors use AI chatbots safely and responsibly. The resources would cover how to identify safe versus unsafe AI chatbot use, privacy and data collection practices, and best practices for parental supervision. The FTC would model these resources on its existing "Youville" consumer education program.
Who benefits
Minors who use AI chatbots and may be unaware of privacy risks or manipulative design patterns. Parents and legal guardians seeking guidance on supervising their children's AI use. Educators looking for structured materials to teach digital literacy. Schools and libraries that provide AI tools to students. Consumer advocacy organizations that could distribute the resources. AI companies that follow best practices and would benefit from a clearer public standard for "safe" use.
Who is hurt
AI chatbot companies whose data collection or engagement practices may be highlighted as unsafe in the educational materials, potentially affecting their reputations or user bases. The FTC itself would bear the administrative cost of developing and maintaining the resources. Competing private-sector digital literacy organizations may find their market reduced if free federal resources displace demand for their products. Taxpayers would bear any costs associated with the program, though those costs are likely modest.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that AI chatbots are rapidly proliferating among minors — with products like Character.AI and ChatGPT widely used by children — while parents and educators lack reliable, centralized guidance on risks such as data harvesting, emotional manipulation, and inappropriate content. They contend that leveraging the FTC's existing Youville consumer education infrastructure makes this a low-cost, high-reach intervention that fills a clear information gap without imposing mandates on industry or restricting minors' access to technology.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates a government-produced educational framework that could become outdated almost immediately given the pace of AI development, potentially giving parents and educators false confidence in guidance that no longer reflects current products or risks. They contend that the FTC's mandate is law enforcement and consumer protection, not public education, and that funding and staffing a new ongoing educational program diverts agency resources from direct enforcement actions that would more concretely protect minors from harmful AI practices.