S-4741-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
Sponsored by Jim Banks (R-IN)
What it does
This bill would require commercial websites where more than one-third of content is sexual material harmful to minors to verify the age of all users before granting access. Covered entities would have to use government-issued ID, transactional data, or another reliable commercial age verification system. The bill would be enforced by the FTC through civil penalties, by the Department of Justice through criminal prosecution (up to 5 years imprisonment and fines up to $1.5 million for organizations), and by private individuals through a civil right of action. Entities that collect age verification data would be prohibited from retaining or selling it.
Who benefits
Minors who would be blocked from accessing online sexual content. Parents and legal guardians who gain a private right of action to sue non-compliant platforms. Child safety advocacy organizations. Age verification technology companies and vendors who would gain a new mandatory market. Brick-and-mortar adult content retailers who already face age verification requirements and compete with unregulated online platforms. News organizations, which are explicitly exempted.
Who is hurt
Adult content platforms and websites that would face significant compliance costs and potential liability. Adults who value anonymous access to legal content and would be required to submit identifying information to access it. Privacy advocates concerned about identity data collection even with the no-retention rule. Smaller or independent adult content creators and platforms with fewer resources to implement compliant verification systems. Internet service providers and search engines, though the bill explicitly shields them from liability. Users in states with less robust digital ID infrastructure who may face greater friction in the verification process.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that children are routinely able to access hardcore pornography online with no meaningful barrier — a 2023 Thorn study found that 65% of teens had encountered online pornography by age 17, often unintentionally. They contend that the bill mirrors age verification requirements already applied to physical adult content retailers and alcohol sellers, simply extending a well-established principle to the digital space. Supporters further argue that the bill's privacy protections — prohibiting retention or sale of verification data — directly address the most common objection, and that the FTC's existing enforcement infrastructure makes compliance measurable and accountable.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandatory age verification effectively conditions access to constitutionally protected speech on the surrender of government-issued identification, creating a chilling effect on adults' First Amendment rights — a concern the Supreme Court recognized when it struck down the Child Online Protection Act in Ashcroft v. ACLU (2004). They contend that no-retention rules are difficult to audit and enforce, meaning verification systems could still create de facto surveillance infrastructure for legal adult activity. Opponents further argue that determined minors can circumvent verification through VPNs or borrowed credentials, meaning the compliance burden falls on law-abiding adults and platforms while providing only marginal protection.
Constitutional context
The bill's content-based access restrictions implicate the First Amendment, though that provision is not listed in the provided constitutional context. Within the provided framework, the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3) supports federal jurisdiction over internet-based commercial entities engaged in interstate commerce under Wickard v. Filburn's aggregation principle. The FTC's rulemaking authority under the bill may also face post-Loper Bright scrutiny, as courts will now independently assess whether the agency's implementing regulations stay within the statutory boundaries Congress set, rather than deferring to the FTC's own interpretation.
Checks and balances
The executive branch gains enforcement authority through both the FTC (civil) and DOJ (criminal), with Congress retaining oversight through mandatory triennial reporting; courts serve as a check through the private right of action and judicial review of FTC rulemaking under post-Loper Bright independent statutory interpretation.
Historical precedent
The Child Online Protection Act (1998) attempted a similar federal framework restricting minors' access to harmful online content and was struck down by the Supreme Court in Ashcroft v. ACLU (2004) on First Amendment grounds; multiple states have since enacted their own age verification laws with mixed results in court.