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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.

New Federal "Kids Safety" Bill Could Block Your Favorite Cannabis Ads Online

Dec 16, 2025

Source:

Kyle Jaeger

Marijuana Moment

Congress is moving forward with the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), a bill designed to shield minors from seeing ads for "regulated substances" like cannabis, alcohol, and tobacco. While keeping kids safe is a goal we can all get behind, the way this bill is written has sparked a lot of concern. It basically tells online platforms they have to block this content from anyone they "know" is a minor, but critics argue the language is so vague it could lead to a massive blackout of legal cannabis information and advertising for everyone.

For the everyday toker, this matters because it could make it much harder to find reliable info about local dispensaries, new products, or even advocacy news on your favorite social feeds. If platforms get spooked by potential legal trouble, they might just shadowban anything related to weed to play it safe. We want a community that's well-informed and has easy access to the legal market, and overly broad federal rules like this often end up doing more harm than good for responsible adult consumers.

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