Tech CEOs invited to Senate hearing on kids safety

Summary

Chuck Grassley invited four tech CEOs to testify June 23 as scrutiny of child online safety grows after recent court verdicts.

Why this matters

The hearing will test how lawmakers respond to growing legal and political pressure on major social media companies over child safety. It also comes as recent court rulings may shape future lawsuits involving platform design.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said Friday he had invited the leaders of Meta, Alphabet, TikTok, and Snap to testify at a June 23 hearing on child safety online.

In a post on X, Grassley said he invited Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew, and Snap CEO Evan Spiegel. He wrote that people should know what efforts tech companies are making to keep children and families safe online, and said the committee looked forward to “shining a bright light” and “holding Big Tech accountable.”

The hearing is titled “Examining Tech Industry Practices and the Implications for Users and Families: Is This Social Media’s Big Tobacco Moment?”

It comes about three months after jury verdicts in New Mexico and California found Meta, the parent company of Instagram and Facebook, and YouTube, owned by Alphabet, liable over their platforms’ effects on children and teens online.

The cases were among the first online safety lawsuits to overcome Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, a law that largely shields technology companies from liability for third-party or user content.

The lawsuits focused on platform design rather than the content itself. Lawmakers have compared the verdicts to tobacco litigation in the 1990s, when tobacco companies agreed to large settlements over nicotine addiction.

All four executives have testified before Congress before. Zuckerberg, Spiegel, and Chew appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee in January 2024 for a hearing on child online safety.

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