HB 2108 — An Act providing for duties of covered entities to protect the best interests of children that use online services, products or features and for data protection impact assessments; prohibiting certain actions by covered entities; and imposing penalties.
Congress · introduced 2025-12-18
Latest action: — Referred to CHILDREN AND YOUTH, Dec. 18, 2025
Sponsors
- Jeanne McNeill (D, PA-133) — sponsor · 2025-12-18
- Mandy Steele (D, PA-33) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Ben Waxman (D, PA-182) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Robert Freeman (D, PA-136) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Benjamin V. Sanchez (D, PA-153) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Joe McAndrew (D, PA-32) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Nikki Rivera (D, PA-96) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Dan K. Williams (D, PA-74) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Carol Hill-Evans (D, PA-95) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Darisha K. Parker (D, PA-198) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- III John C. Inglis (D, PA-38) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz (D, PA-129) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
- Gina H. Curry (D, PA-164) — cosponsor · 2025-12-18
Action timeline
- · house — Referred to CHILDREN AND YOUTH, Dec. 18, 2025
Text versions
No text versions on file yet — same ingest as the action timeline populates these. Each version has direct links to the XML / HTML / PDF at govinfo.gov.
Bill text
Printer's No. 2727 · 24,688 characters · source document
Read the full text
PRINTER'S NO. 2727
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA
HOUSE BILL
No. 2108
Session of
2025
INTRODUCED BY McNEILL, STEELE, WAXMAN, FREEMAN, SANCHEZ,
McANDREW, RIVERA, D. WILLIAMS, HILL-EVANS AND PARKER,
DECEMBER 18, 2025
REFERRED TO COMMITTEE ON CHILDREN AND YOUTH, DECEMBER 18, 2025
AN ACT
1 Providing for duties of covered entities to protect the best
2 interests of children that use online services, products or
3 features and for data protection impact assessments;
4 prohibiting certain actions by covered entities; and imposing
5 penalties.
6 The General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
7 hereby enacts as follows:
8 Section 1. Short title.
9 This act shall be known and may be cited as the Online Safety
10 Protection Act.
11 Section 2. Findings and declarations.
12 The General Assembly finds and declares as follows:
13 (1) Covered entities that develop and provide online
14 services, products or features that children are likely to
15 access should consider the best interests of children when
16 designing, developing and providing that online service,
17 product or feature.
18 (2) If a conflict arises between commercial interests
19 and the best interests of children, covered entities that
1 develop online products, services or features likely to be
2 accessed by children should prioritize the privacy, safety
3 and well-being of children over commercial interests.
4 Section 3. Definitions.
5 The following words and phrases when used in this act shall
6 have the meanings given to them in this section unless the
7 context clearly indicates otherwise:
8 "Actual knowledge." In relation to a covered entity that
9 chooses to conduct age estimation to determine whether a user is
10 a consumer under 18 years of age. The term does not include:
11 (1) data processing undertaken during the period when
12 the covered entity is estimating age;
13 (2) an erroneous estimation; or
14 (3) data processing in the absence of reasonable
15 evidence that a user is a consumer under 18 years of age.
16 "Best interests of children." The use, by a covered entity
17 that provides an online product reasonably likely to be accessed
18 by children, of the personal data of children or the design of
19 the online product in a way that will not infringe on children's
20 access to information and will not prioritize the covered
21 entity's commercial interests over children's interests in a way
22 that would cause:
23 (1) reasonably foreseeable and material physical or
24 financial harm to children;
25 (2) severe and reasonably foreseeable psychological or
26 emotional harm to children;
27 (3) a reasonably foreseeable and highly offensive
28 intrusion on children's reasonable expectation of privacy and
29 the risk of foregoing such harms was known to the covered
30 entity on the basis of a data protection impact assessment
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1 for the online product under this act; or
2 (4) unlawful discrimination against children based on
3 race, color, religion, national origin, disability, gender
4 identity, sex or sexual orientation.
5 "Child." A consumer who is under 18 years of age.
6 "Collect." The act of buying, renting, gathering, obtaining,
7 receiving or accessing personal information pertaining to a
8 consumer by any means. The term includes receiving information
9 from a consumer, either actively or passively, or by observing
10 the consumer's behavior.
11 "Consumer." An individual who is a resident of this
12 Commonwealth. The term does not include an individual acting in
13 a commercial or employment context or as an employee, owner,
14 director, officer or contractor of a company, partnership, sole
15 proprietorship, nonprofit entity or State agency whose
16 communications or transactions with a covered entity occur
17 solely within the context of the individual's role with the
18 company, partnership, sole proprietorship, nonprofit entity or
19 State agency.
20 "Covered entity." A business or organization that knowingly
21 processes a child's personal information.
22 "Dark pattern." A user interface knowingly designed with the
23 intended purpose of subverting or impairing user decision making
24 or choice.
25 "Data protection impact assessment." A systematic survey to
26 assess compliance with the duty to act in the best interests of
27 a child.
28 "Default." A preselected option adopted by a covered entity
29 for the online service, product or feature.
30 "Deidentified data." Data that meets all of the following
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1 criteria:
2 (1) The data cannot reasonably be linked to an
3 individual or a device linked to the individual.
4 (2) The data is in the possession of a covered entity
5 that:
6 (i) takes reasonable technical and administrative
7 measures to prevent the data from being reidentified;
8 (ii) does not attempt to reidentify the data and
9 publicly commits not to attempt to reidentify the data;
10 and
11 (iii) contractually obligates a person to which the
12 covered entity transfers the data to comply with the
13 requirements of this paragraph.
14 "Likely to be accessed by a child." Reasonable expectation
15 that an online service, product or feature would be accessed by
16 a child, based on the following indicators:
17 (1) The online service, product or feature is directed
18 to a child as defined in 15 U.S.C. § 6501 (relating to
19 definitions).
20 (2) The online service, product or feature is
21 determined, based on competent and reliable evidence
22 regarding audience composition, to be routinely accessed by a
23 significant number of children.
24 "Online service, product or feature." The term does not
25 include any of the following:
26 (1) A telecommunications service as defined in 47 U.S.C.
27 § 153(53) (relating to definitions).
28 (2) The delivery or use of a physical product.
29 (3) Broadband Internet access service as defined in 47
30 CFR 54.400 (relating to terms and definitions).
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1 "Personal information." Information that is linked or
2 reasonably linkable to an identified or identifiable individual.
3 The term does not include deidentified data or publicly
4 available information.
5 "Precise geolocation information." Data that is derived from
6 a device and used or intended to be used to locate a consumer
7 within a geographic area that is equal to or less than the area
8 of a circle with a radius of 1,850 feet.
9 "Process." To perform an operation or set of operations by
10 manual or automated means on personal data, including
11 collecting, using, storing, disclosing, analyzing, deleting or
12 modifying personal data.
13 "Processor." A natural or legal entity that processes
14 personal data on behalf of a controller of personal data.
15 "Profile." A form of automated processing of personal
16 information that uses personal information to evaluate certain
17 aspects relating to an individual, including analyzing or
18 predicting aspects concerning an individual's performance at
19 work, economic situation, health, personal preferences,
20 interests, reliability, behavior, location or movements. The
21 term does not include processing that does not result in some
22 assessment or judgment about an individual.
23 "Publicly available information." Any of the following:
24 (1) Information that is lawfully made available through
25 Federal, State or local government records.
26 (2) Information that a business or organization has a
27 reasonable basis to believe is lawfully made available to the
28 general public through widely distributed media by a consumer
29 or by a person to whom the consumer has disclosed the
30 information, unless the consumer has restricted the
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1 information to a specific audience.
2 Section 4. Duties of covered entities.
3 A covered entity that provides an online service, product or
4 feature likely to be accessed by a consumer for whom the covered
5 entity has actual knowledge is a child has the following duties:
6 (1) Within two years before any new online service,
7 product or feature is offered to the public on or after the
8 effective date of this paragraph, complete a data protection
9 impact assessment in accordance with section 5 for an online
10 service, product or feature likely to be accessed by the
11 child. In completing the data protection impact assessment,
12 the covered entity shall consider the type of processing used
13 in the online service, product or feature, including new
14 technology, and take into account the nature, scope, context
15 and purpose of the processing that is likely to result in
16 high risk to the child.
17 (2) Maintain documentation of each data protection
18 impact assessment completed under paragraph (1) during the
19 time period when the online service, product or feature is
20 reasonably likely to be accessed by the child and uses
21 processing that is likely to result in high risk to the
22 child.
23 (3) Review each data protection impact assessment
24 completed under paragraph (1) as necessary to account for any
25 significant change to the processing operations of an online
26 service, product or feature.
27 (4) Make each data protection impact assessment
28 completed under paragraph (1) available, within a reasonable
29 time period, to the Office of Attorney General upon written
30 request. Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to
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1 require the covered entity to disclose information to the
2 Office of Attorney General in a manner that would disclose
3 the covered entity's trade secrets.
4 (5) Configure default privacy settings provided to the
5 child by an online service, product or feature to settings
6 that offer a high level of privacy, unless the underlying
7 processing enhances the child's experience of the online
8 service, product or feature and the covered entity offers
9 settings to control the use of the child's data for the
10 purpose of enhancing the child's experience. If default
11 privacy settings meet the criteria specified under this
12 paragraph, the default privacy settings are not considered a
13 dark pattern.
14 Section 5. Data protection impact assessments.
15 (a) Information.--A covered entity shall include all of the
16 following information in a data protection impact assessment
17 required under section 4(1):
18 (1) The purpose of an online service, product or feature
19 provided by the covered entity.
20 (2) The manner in which the online service, product or
21 feature uses a child's personal information.
22 (3) A determination whether the online service, product
23 or feature is designed and offered in a manner consistent
24 with the best interests of a child who is reasonably likely
25 to access the online service, product or feature. In making
26 the determination under this paragraph, the covered entity
27 shall include all of the following information:
28 (i) A systematic description of the anticipated
29 processing operations and the purpose of the processing.
30 (ii) An assessment of the necessity and
20250HB2108PN2727 - 7 -
1 proportionality of the processing operations in relation
2 to the purpose of the processing. For the purpose of this
3 subparagraph, a single assessment may address a set of
4 similar processing operations that present similar risks.
5 (iii) An assessment of the risks to the rights and
6 freedoms of a child.
7 (iv) The measures anticipated to address the risks,
8 including safeguards, security measures and mechanisms,
9 to ensure the protection of personal information and to
10 demonstrate compliance with this act, taking into account
11 the rights and freedoms of a child.
12 (b) Accessibility.--A data protection impact assessment
13 required under section 4(1) shall be protected as confidential
14 and is not subject to inspection and duplication under the act
15 of February 14, 2008 (P.L.6, No.3), known as the Right-to-Know
16 Law.
17 (c) Attorney-client privilege.--To the extent information
18 contained in a data protection impact assessment required under
19 section 4(1) and disclosed to the Office of Attorney General
20 under section 4(4) includes information subject to attorney-
21 client privilege or work product protection, the disclosure does
22 not constitute a waiver of attorney-client privilege or work
23 product protection.
24 (d) Compliance.--A data protection impact assessment
25 conducted by a covered entity for the purpose of compliance with
26 any other law of this Commonwealth shall be deemed to comply
27 with the requirements of this act.
28 Section 6. Prohibition on certain actions by covered entities.
29 A covered entity that provides an online service, product or
30 feature reasonably likely to be accessed by a consumer for whom
20250HB2108PN2727 - 8 -
1 the covered entity has actual knowledge is a child may not take
2 any of the following actions:
3 (1) Use the personal information of the child likely to
4 access the online service, product or feature in a way that
5 the covered entity knows is likely to result in high risk to
6 the child on the basis of a data protection impact assessment
7 required under section 4(1) if the high risk has not been
8 suitably mitigated through measures identified in the data
9 protection impact assessment.
10 (2) Profile the child by default if the profiling has
11 been identified as high risk to the child on the basis of a
12 data protection impact assessment required under section 4(1)
13 if the high risk has not been suitably mitigated through
14 measures identified in the data protection impact assessment.
15 If the covered entity profiles by default, there is a
16 presumption that the profiling does not violate this
17 paragraph if any of the following apply:
18 (i) The covered entity can demonstrate that the
19 covered entity has appropriate safeguards in place to
20 protect the child.
21 (ii) The profiling is necessary to provide the
22 online service, product or feature requested and only
23 used regarding the aspects of the online service, product
24 or feature with which the child is actively and knowingly
25 engaged.
26 (iii) The profiling enhances the child's experience
27 on the online service, product or feature and the covered
28 entity offers settings to control the use of the child's
29 data for the purpose of enhancing the child's experience.
30 (3) Collect, retain, process or disclose the personal
20250HB2108PN2727 - 9 -
1 information of the child in a manner that has been identified
2 as high risk to the child on the basis of a data protection
3 impact assessment required under section 4(1) if the high
4 risk has not been suitably mitigated through measures
5 identified in the data protection impact assessment.
6 (4) Use personal information for any reason other than a
7 reason for which that personal information was collected,
8 unless the covered entity can demonstrate a compelling reason
9 that use of the personal information is in the best interests
10 of the child.
11 (5) Collect, sell, process or retain the precise
12 geolocation information of the child by default unless any of
13 the following apply:
14 (i) The covered entity can demonstrate a compelling
15 reason that the processing is in the best interests of
16 the child.
17 (ii) The processing enhances the child's experience
18 of the online service, product or feature and the covered
19 entity offers settings to control the use of the child's
20 data for the purposes of enhancing the child's
21 experience.
22 (6) Track the precise geolocation information of the
23 child without providing notice regarding the tracking of the
24 child's precise geolocation information.
25 (7) Use dark patterns to knowingly lead or encourage the
26 child to do any of the following:
27 (i) Provide personal information in excess of what
28 is reasonably expected to furnish an online service,
29 product or feature.
30 (ii) Forego privacy protections.
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1 (iii) Take any action that the covered entity knows
2 is not in the best interests of a child reasonably likely
3 to access the online service, product or feature.
4 Section 7. Penalties.
5 (a) Actions.--The Office of Attorney General may initiate a
6 civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction seeking
7 injunctive relief or a civil penalty against a covered entity
8 that violates this act in accordance with this section. Upon a
9 covered entity being found liable for a violation of this act by
10 a court of competent jurisdiction, the court may issue an order:
11 (1) granting injunctive relief; or
12 (2) imposing a civil penalty of no more than $2,500 per
13 affected child for each negligent violation or no more than
14 $7,500 per affected child for each intentional violation.
15 (b) Remittance.--Civil penalties awarded under subsection
16 (a) shall be remitted to the Office of Attorney General to
17 offset the costs incurred by the Office of Attorney General in
18 enforcing this act.
19 (c) Notice.--If a covered entity has made a good faith
20 effort to comply with the requirements under section 4, the
21 Office of Attorney General shall provide written notice to the
22 covered entity before initiating a civil action under subsection
23 (a). The Office of Attorney General shall, in the written
24 notice, identify the specific provisions of this act that the
25 Office of Attorney General alleges to have been or are being
26 violated.
27 (d) Cured violation.--If, no later than 90 days after
28 receipt of the written notice required under subsection (c), the
29 covered entity cures an alleged violation specified in the
30 written notice and provides the Office of Attorney General with
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1 written evidence that the alleged violation has been cured and
2 the covered entity has taken sufficient measures to prevent a
3 future violation of this act, the covered entity is not civilly
4 liable for the alleged violation.
5 (e) Compliance with Federal law.--Compliance by a covered
6 entity with 15 U.S.C. Ch. 91 (relating to children's online
7 privacy protection) shall constitute compliance with this act
8 for an individual under 13 years of age.
9 Section 8. Construction.
10 Nothing in this act shall be construed to:
11 (1) provide a private right of action under this act or
12 any other law of this Commonwealth;
13 (2) impose liability in a manner that is inconsistent
14 with 47 U.S.C. § 230 (relating to protection for private
15 blocking and screening of offensive material); or
16 (3) infringe on the existing rights and freedoms of a
17 child.
18 Section 9. Applicability.
19 (a) Nonapplicability.--This act shall not apply to any of
20 the following:
21 (1) An online service, product or feature that is not
22 offered to the public.
23 (2) Protected health information that is collected by a
24 covered entity or a covered entity's associate governed by
25 the privacy, security and breach notification rules issued by
26 the United States Department of Health and Human Services
27 under 45 CFR Subt. A Subch. C Pts. 160 (relating to general
28 administrative requirements) and 164 (relating to security
29 and privacy) in accordance with the Health Insurance
30 Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-
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1 191, 110 Stat. 1936) and the Health Information Technology
2 for Economic and Clinical Health Act (Public Law 111-5, 123
3 Stat. 226-279 and 467-496).
4 (3) A covered entity governed by the privacy, security
5 and breach notification rules issued by the United States
6 Department of Health and Human Services under 45 CFR Subt. A
7 Subch. C Pts. 160 and 164 in accordance with the Health
8 Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 to the
9 extent the covered entity maintains patient information in
10 the same manner as protected health information under
11 paragraph (2).
12 (4) Information collected as part of a clinical trial
13 subject to the Federal Policy for the Protection of Human
14 Subjects, also known as the Common Rule, in accordance with
15 good clinical practice guidelines issued by the International
16 Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for
17 Pharmaceuticals for Human Use or in accordance with the human
18 subject protection requirements of the United States Food and
19 Drug Administration.
20 (b) Conflicting Federal laws.--
21 (1) This act shall not apply upon the effective date of
22 a Federal law, regulation or rule or an amendment or
23 modification to a Federal law, regulation or rule, including
24 an amendment to 15 U.S.C. Ch. 91 (relating to children's
25 online privacy protection), relating to any of the following:
26 (i) A covered entity's collection, use, retention or
27 disclosure of personal information of an individual under
28 18 years of age.
29 (ii) Consent requirements for the collection, use,
30 retention or disclosure of personal information of an
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1 individual under 18 years of age, including consent
2 requirements to register for or maintain an account with
3 an online service.
4 (iii) Requirements to ascertain or verify the age of
5 an individual.
6 (iv) Parental settings, controls or other oversight
7 or monitoring mechanisms.
8 (2) The Office of Attorney General shall submit a notice
9 to the Legislative Reference Bureau for publication in the
10 next available issue of the Pennsylvania Bulletin of the
11 effective date of a Federal law, regulation or rule or an
12 amendment or modification to a Federal law, regulation or
13 rule specified under paragraph (1).
14 Section 10. Effective date.
15 This act shall take effect December 31, 2027.
20250HB2108PN2727 - 14 -Connected on the graph
Outbound (1)
| date | type | to | amount | role | source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| — | referred_to_committee | Pennsylvania House Children And Youth Committee | — | pa-leg |
The full graph
Every typed relationship touching this entity — 1 edge across 1 category. Grouped by what the connection is; the heaviest few are shown, with a link to the full list.
Committees
→ Referred to committee 1 edge
Who matters
Members ranked by combined influence on this bill: role (sponsor 5 / cosponsor 1), capped speech count from the Congressional Record, and recorded-vote engagement.
| # | Member | Role | Speeches | Voted | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jeanne McNeill (D, state_lower PA-133) | sponsor | 0 | — | 5 |
| 2 | Ben Waxman (D, state_lower PA-182) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 3 | Benjamin V. Sanchez (D, state_lower PA-153) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 4 | Carol Hill-Evans (D, state_lower PA-95) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 5 | Dan K. Williams (D, state_lower PA-74) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 6 | Darisha K. Parker (D, state_lower PA-198) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 7 | Gina H. Curry (D, state_lower PA-164) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 8 | III John C. Inglis (D, state_lower PA-38) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 9 | Joe McAndrew (D, state_lower PA-32) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 10 | Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz (D, state_lower PA-129) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 11 | Mandy Steele (D, state_lower PA-33) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 12 | Nikki Rivera (D, state_lower PA-96) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
| 13 | Robert Freeman (D, state_lower PA-136) | cosponsor | 0 | — | 1 |
Predicted vote
Aggregated from: actual roll-call votes (when present) → sponsor → cosponsor → party median (predicts YES when ≥25% of the caucus sponsored/cosponsored). Each row labels its confidence tier so you can see why a position was predicted.
0 predicted yes (0%) · 543 predicted no (100%) · 0 unknown (0%)
By party: · R: 0 yes / 277 no · D: 0 yes / 263 no · I: 0 yes / 3 no
Activity
Every typed-graph event involving this entity, newest first. Each row is one edge in the influence graph; click the date to jump to its provenance.
- 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania House Children And Youth Committee · pa-leg