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A congressional committee advanced the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), which aims to protect minors by prohibiting online platforms from knowingly advertising cannabis, alcohol, and other regulated substances to them, but critics argue the bill’s vague requirements could block wide swaths of legal advertising and are likely unconstitutional. The bill's progression is complicated by concerns over its potential impact on legal businesses and its constitutional validity, despite its goal of keeping kids safe online.

Bill Advancing In Congress To Protect Kids Online Could Create Complications For Marijuana Businesses In Legal States

Dec 16, 2025

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment



A congressional committee has advanced a bill aimed at protecting children
online that could create complications for advertisers trying to promote
legal marijuana and other regulated substances.

Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-FL) filed the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) earlier
this month, and the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Commerce,
Manufacturing, and Trade approved an amended version of the legislation on
Thursday on a party-line vote of 13-10, with Republicans in support and
Democrats in opposition.

Bipartisan senators introduced a version of the measure earlier this year,
but it has not advanced in that chamber this Congress even though a prior
iteration was passed by the body in 2024.

Under the new legislation, online platforms would be prohibited from
facilitating the “advertising of narcotic drugs, cannabis products, tobacco
products, gambling, or alcohol to an individual that the covered platform
knows is a minor.”

The provision around drug use lists the “distribution, sale, or use of
narcotic drugs, tobacco products, cannabis products, gambling, or alcohol”
as risks that platforms would need to actively guard minors against.

One section that was in prior iterations of the bill that seems to have
been omitted from this latest version had stipulated that video streaming
platforms would be required “to employ measures that safeguard against
serving advertising for narcotic drugs, cannabis products, tobacco
products, gambling, or alcohol directly to the account or profile of an
individual that the service knows is a minor.”

It’s unclear why that language was left out of the new measure.

Online platforms covered under the legislation under those that are
publicly available for use, allow the creation of searchable usernames that
can be followed, facilitate the “share and access to user-generated
content,” is designed to promote engagement and uses user information to
target advertising.

Bilirakis, who chairs the House panel that approved his amended legislation
last week, said the bill “protects kids across America by mandating default
safeguards and easy-to-use parental controls to empower families.”

“It is the foundation and the safety net, with concrete safeguards to keep
kids and teens safe,” he said.

Few in the public policy space oppose the intent of the legislation, but
some say its broad and potentially vague requirements could be difficult in
practice.

Shoshana Weismann, a fellow at the free-market R Street Institute, told
Marijuana Moment earlier this year when the Senate version was filed that
the measure could ultimately block wide swaths of online advertising that
are *accessible *by minors—even if the ads don’t *target* children, as the
bill’s proponent’s suggest.

“The problem is that the knowledge standard here is so loose,” she said,
pointing to the bill’s definition of knowledge by platforms that they’re
serving content to underage users.

Another previous version of KOSA, introduced in the 118th Congress, won
Senate approval last summer but did not pass out of the House.

After last year’s Senate passage of the measure, Jenna Leventoff, ACLU’s
senior policy council and director of the civil right’s group’s national
political advocacy division, said she was skeptical the legislation would
pass constitutional muster.

A number of states have attempted to adopt bills similar to KOSA, Leventoff
pointed out, and “in almost every case, a court has evaluated those laws
and determined that they are likely to be unconstitutional.”

“It’s extremely likely that KOSA is unconstitutional,” she said at the
time,” and it makes me wonder why Congress is trying to enact something
that won’t hold up in a court of law.”

At the state level last year, Colorado’s Senate passed a bill similarly
aimed at protecting minors from drug and other controversial content. But
the proposal—which was later put on hold indefinitely by a House committee—drew
fire from advocates such as Weismann at R Street Institute.

She and other critics pointed out at the time that the bill could ban
content around over-the-counter cough syrup and even, potentially, the
Colorado governor’s social media posts in favor of the state’s legal
psychedelics industry.

Under existing regulations, states that have legalized have generally seen
less cannabis consumption among young people compared to states where
marijuana remains illegal, according to multiple studies.

For example, an analysis of government survey data published earlier this
year by the advocacy group Marijuana Policy Project (MPP) found that youth
marijuana use declined in 19 out of 21 states that legalized adult-use
marijuana—with teen cannabis consumption down an average of 35 percent in
the first states to legalize a decade ago.

The post Bill Advancing In Congress To Protect Kids Online Could Create
Complications For Marijuana Businesses In Legal States appeared first on Marijuana
Moment.

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