Bills/S. 626

SOCIAL MEDIA Act

SOCIAL MEDIA Act

In CommitteeJudiciarySenateSenate Bill · 119th Congress
Bill Progress · Senate
Introduced
Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Passed Both
Signed

Plain Language Summary

# SOCIAL MEDIA Act Summary **What It Would Do:** The SOCIAL MEDIA Act (S. 626) would establish new federal oversight and accountability measures for social media platforms. Based on its subject matter, the bill appears to focus on giving Congress and federal agencies like the FTC greater authority to investigate and regulate how social media companies operate, particularly regarding issues like drug trafficking, criminal activity, and user data practices. The bill would likely create mechanisms for Congressional oversight and criminal investigations into platform activities. **Who It Affects:** This legislation would primarily impact major social media companies and their users.

Social media platforms would face new regulatory requirements and investigative scrutiny, while users might see changes in how platforms moderate content or handle user information. Federal agencies would gain additional oversight responsibilities. **Current Status:** The bill was introduced in the 119th Congress by Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) and is currently in committee, meaning it has not yet been debated or voted on by the full Senate. Without additional publicly available details about specific provisions, it's unclear whether the bill focuses on content moderation, user privacy, national security concerns, or other aspects of social media regulation.

Advertisement

Latest Action

February 19, 2025

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.

Subjects

Advisory bodiesCongressional oversightCriminal investigation, prosecution, interrogationDrug trafficking and controlled substancesFederal Trade Commission (FTC)Internet, web applications, social media

Sponsor

R
Scott, Rick [R-FL]
R-FL · Senate
1 cosponsor

Key Dates

Introduced
February 19, 2025
Last Updated
February 19, 2025
Read Full Text on Congress.gov →
Advertisement