On March 25, 2024, Governor Ron DeSantis signed Florida’s HB 3. The law requires that social media platforms prohibit users under 14 years old from creating accounts and requires these platforms to obtain parental consent for account registrants who are 14 or 15 years old. The law also imposes age verification requirements for online services that knowingly distribute a significant amount of “harmful” content.Continue Reading State Social Media Law Patchwork Emerging: Florida Passes Law to Restrict Minors’ Use of Online Services

Justices Considered Whether Certain Court-Imposed Monetary Remedies Are Legal

On Wednesday, January 13, 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in the much-anticipated case of AMG v. FTC, which challenges the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC’s) authority to obtain monetary relief in court under Section 13(b) of the FTC Act. The Court’s decision is likely to have a significant impact on the relief the FTC is able to obtain in federal court proceedings.
Continue Reading U.S. Supreme Court May End Key FTC Consumer Protection Enforcement Practice

Apple recently announced that app developers must check a series of yes/no boxes that will generate a “nutrition label”-style summary of the app’s privacy practices. This new summary, formally called “App Privacy,” will be shown to users within the App Store before they install an app. This is the latest move in Apple’s ongoing effort to make privacy practices more transparent, and it requires app developers to take action now to ensure they can continue to update their apps after December 8, 2020. If developers take no action, their apps will essentially be frozen as they exist on that date.
Continue Reading Apple Requires Apps to Include New Privacy “Nutrition Label” by December 8, Delays Opt-In for Tracking Requirement Until Early 2021