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A06789 Summary:

BILL NOA06789B
 
SAME ASSAME AS S00895-B
 
SPONSORLee
 
COSPNSRDickens, Brown K, Shimsky, Gonzalez-Rojas, Weprin, Colton, Simone, Glick, Simon, Lavine, Seawright, Burdick, Rajkumar, Rozic, Rosenthal L, Epstein, Raga
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add Art 42 §§1100 - 1104, Gen Bus L
 
Requires social media companies to post terms of service for each social media platform owned or operated by the company in a manner reasonably designed to inform all users of the social media platform of the existence and contents of the terms of service; requires social media companies to submit to the attorney general certain terms of service reports; provides remedies for violations.
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A06789 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A6789B
 
SPONSOR: Lee
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the general business law, in relation to requiring disclosure of certain social media terms of service   PURPOSE: Requires social media companies, as defined, to post their terms of service and to submit reports to the Attorney General on their terms of service and content moderation policies and outcomes.   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section one of the bill amends the general business law by adding a new article 42. Section 1100 of the new article 42 sets forth definitions. Section 1101 of the new article 42 requires a social media company to post terms of service for each social media platform owned or operated by the company in a manner reasonably designed to inform all users of the social media platform of the existence and contents of the terms of service, and shall-include a description of the process through which users may flag content. The terms of service to be available in the twelve most common non-English languages spoken in the state, as defined, in which the social media platform offers product features, including, but not limited to, menus and prompts. Section 1102 of the new article 42 requires the social media company to submit a terms of service report to the attorney general that includes a statement on whether the terms of services define, and how they define hate speech or racism, extremism or radicalization, disinformation or misinformation, harassment, and foreign political interference, as well as how they enforce those policies, and steps taken and data on flagged and actioned items of content. The attorney general shall make all terms of service reports available to the public in a searchable repository on its official Internet website. Section 1103 of the new article 42 creates violations and remedies: Subject companies in violation to penalties of up to $15,000 per violation per day to be sought by the attorney general. Any social media company determined to have a violation will have a thirty day period during which they must rectify any violations. Section 1104 of the new article 42 states that the law does not apply to companies that generate less than one hundred million dollars in gross revenue annually. Section 2 is the effective date. This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after it shall have become law.   JUSTIFICATION: Social media platforms have not taken appropriate steps to manage the spread of hate speech, racism and misinformation: most do not even provide clear policies around enforcement, let alone clear reports on their enforcement process. A survey conducted by the Anti-Defamation League found that 58% of marginalized people reported hate-based harass- ment online in. the last 12 months. LGBTQ+ respondents were more likely than any other group surveyed to experience harassment. And despite public attention to the issue, online harassment has, stayed at similar levels since 2020. Current transparency reports self-issued by social media companies are hard to find, full of inconsistent and misleading data and metrics making it hard to understand and compare platform policies, and lack the context to understand what the numbers provided mean. Platforms rarely provide detailed insight into their content moderation practices or the effectiveness of different approaches. This bill would require the clear disclosure of current policies on hate speech and racism, disinformation, extremism and threats of violence, harassment, and foreign political interference, provide key metrics and data on the numbers of content, groups and users flagged for violation, method of flagging, number of actions taken and types of enforcement actions.   LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: S.9594 of 2021-2022 (Boylman): Died in Rules   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after it shall have become law.
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