What Teen Vogue Got Wrong About CDA 230, The Internet’s Liability Shield
Teen Vogue, fueled by Big Tech lobbyists, claims that removing the Internet’s liability shield will harm children. Learn why they’re wrong.
Teen Vogue, fueled by Big Tech lobbyists, claims that removing the Internet’s liability shield will harm children. Learn why they’re wrong.
Congress’s “sunset” bill puts an expiry date on CDA 230, the law that has become the greatest enabler of sexual exploitation.
Check out “The Movement”, a regular video update on progress and challenges in the fight to end sexual exploitation.
Big Tech must stop scapegoating the LGBTQ+ community as an excuse to put children in danger.
WASHINGTON, DC (April 10, 2024) – Three of the world’s wealthiest companies have been named to the National Center on Sexual Exploitation’s (NCOSE) 2024 Dirty
CDA 230 has been misinterpreted by the courts as granting blanket immunity for tech companies to facilitate sexual exploitation. Take Action!
Confronting rising reports of child sexual abuse material online, The EARN IT Act clarifies that there is no blanket immunity for Big Tech.
Originally Published at Protocol By Ben Brody A lawsuit in California can proceed against Twitter by two young men who say the site was slow to remove explicit
The National Center on Sexual Exploitation Law Center (NCOSE), The Haba Law Firm, and The Matiasic Firm is asking the United States District Court for the Northern District of California to deny Twitter’s Motion to Dismiss the lawsuit, John Doe #1 and John Doe #2 v. Twitter, Inc., filed by two survivors of child sexual abuse who were trafficked and exploited on the social media platform.
Originally Published at Bloomberg By Rebecca Kern Child Exploitation EARN IT ACT: The bipartisan Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies (EARN IT) Act was introduced
This article was posted 07/08/2020. For the most recent information on the EARN IT Act, please see updates here. The National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE)
Experts from across the country will come together in Washington, D.C. to unpack the reality of harms facing many children online today and to provide