Judge allows California’s ban on addictive feeds for minors to go into effect

Late Tuesday evening, a federal judge blocked tech lobbying group NetChoice’s challenge to California’s recently enacted law, SB 976, which prohibits companies from serving “addictive feeds” to minors.

Beginning Wednesday, companies will be prohibited from providing an addictive feed to a California-based user they know to be a minor unless one of the minor’s parents consent. SB 976 defines an addictive feed as an algorithm that selects and recommends content for users based on their behavior, and not their explicit preferences.

From January 2027 onward, companies will be required to use “age assurance techniques,” like age estimation models, to determine whether a user is a minor.

In November, NetChoice, whose members include Meta, Google, and X, sued to enjoin SB 976 in its entirety, arguing the law violated the First Amendment. The judge denied the motion for an injunction, but did block other elements of the bill, including a restriction on nighttime notifications for minors.

Related Content

In a test, asking Claude 3.5 Sonnet to "write better code" iteratively improved the code's features and speed, but more aggressive prompt engineering added bugs (Max Woolf/Max Woolf's Blog)

Generative AI funding reached new heights in 2024

Samsung and Google’s new spatial audio format will take on Dolby Atmos this year

Leave a Comment