Colorado SB 201, an age-verification invoice that may have required any websites with materials “dangerous to kids” to pay for each age-verification of customers and audits of third-party age-verification suppliers, did not safe a Senate vote after opposition from Free Speech Coalition and others.
“We labored laborious to teach allies and legislators on this invoice,” says Alison Boden, Government Director of Free Speech Coalition. “It was launched with bipartisan help and nearly no formal opposition. We met with legislators and allies to assist them perceive the technical and authorized points with this invoice, in addition to the way it may very well be weaponized in opposition to non-adult content material. Over this coming 12 months, we’ll work with legislators to search out efficient options that don’t jeopardize consumer privateness or Coloradan’s First Modification rights.”
Boden testified earlier than Colorado’s Senate Well being and Human Providers Committee in March, explaining to legislators the myriad of issues with age-verification on the platform stage. She pushed legislators to work with stakeholders on efficient options, reminiscent of device-level verification, and defended the trade in opposition to the assaults from generally hostile legislators.
Different civil liberties teams joined the opposition, together with ACLU of Colorado, Struggle for the Future, Woodhull Freedom Basis and Heart for LGTBQ+ Financial Development and Analysis.
Along with direct legislative work, FSC directed members and followers primarily based in Colorado to contact state legislators, issuing motion alerts to drive calls and emails opposing the invoice.
“FSC’s work is usually instrumental in stopping dangerous payments,” says Boden. “However to try this, we should be on the bottom combating. It’s solely by the help of our members that we’re capable of obtain these victories. I thank our members for supporting us and encourage those that will not be but members to affix the combat. The extra members we have now, the simpler we will be.”
Colorado is the fourth state to fail to cross an age-verification invoice this legislative session, following the defeat of age-verification payments in Nevada, New Mexico and West Virginia.