Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 09, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2879Introduced by Assembly Member LowFebruary 18, 2022An act to add Chapter 22.2.9 (commencing with Section 22589) to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to online content. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2879, as amended, Low. Online content: Students: cyberbullying.Existing law, the Safe Place to Learn Act, requires the State Department of Education to assess whether local educational agencies have taken certain actions related to educational equity, including adopting a policy that prohibits discrimination, harassment, intimidation, and bullying based on specified characteristics. Existing law requires local educational agencies, as defined, to adopt procedures for preventing acts of bullying, including cyberbullying. Existing law also prohibits a pupil from being suspended from school or recommended for expulsion, unless the superintendent of the school district or the principal of the school in which the pupil is enrolled determines that the pupil has committed a specified act, including, among other acts, engaging in an act of bullying, which includes communications made in writing or by means of an electronic act, as defined.Existing law, the Student Online Personal Information Protection Act, restricts the use of information about specified students by operators of certain internet websites, online services, online applications, or mobile applications by, among other things, prohibiting operators from engaging in targeted advertising, amassing student profiles except for prescribed school purposes, or selling or disclosing student information. Existing law also requires an operator to implement and maintain reasonable security procedures and practices appropriate to the nature of the covered information to protect the information from unauthorized access, destruction, use, modification, or disclosure.This bill would require a social media platform, as defined defined, and subject to specified exceptions, to disclose all cyberbullying, as defined, reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service service, and would require a social media platform to establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows an individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service, as specified.Beginning September 1, 2023, this bill would provide that make a social media platform that intentionally violates these provisions shall be subject to specified civil penalties or injunction, to be prosecuted in a court of competent jurisdiction by the Attorney General. The bill would specify that its provisions shall not be deemed to do not create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Chapter 22.2.9 (commencing with Section 22589) is added to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, to read: CHAPTER 22.2.9. Student Cyberbullying Protection Act22589. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) (1) Content means statements or comments made by users and media that are created, posted, shared, or otherwise interacted with by users on an internet-based service or application.(2) Content does not include media put online on a service or application exclusively for the purpose of cloud storage, transmitting documents, files, or file collaboration. (b) Cyberbullying means any severe or pervasive conduct made by an electronic act or acts, as defined in paragraph (2) of subdivision (r) of Section 48900 of the Education Code, committed by a pupil or group of pupils directed toward one or more pupils that has or can be reasonably predicted to have the effect of one or more of the following:(1) Placing a reasonable pupil or pupils in fear of harm to that pupils or those pupils person or property.(2) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience a substantially detrimental effect on the pupils physical or mental health.(3) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils academic performance.(4) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils ability to participate in or benefit from the services, activities, or privileges provided by a school.(c) Social media platform means a public or semipublic internet-based service or application that has users in California and that meets both of the following criteria:(1) (A) A substantial function of the service or application is to connect users in order to allow users to interact socially with each other within the service or application.(B) A service or application that provides email or direct messaging services shall not be considered to meet this criterion on the basis of that function alone.(2) The service or application allows users to do all of the following:(A) Construct a public or semipublic profile for purposes of signing into and using the service or application.(B) Populate a list of other users with whom an individual shares a social connection within the system.(C) Create or post content viewable by other users, including, but not limited to, on message boards, in chat rooms, or through a landing page or main feed that presents the user with content generated by other users.(d) Public or semipublic internet-based service or application excludes a service or application used to facilitate communication within a business or enterprise among employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise, provided that access to the service or application is restricted to employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise using the service or application.(e) Terms of service means a public-facing policy or set of policies adopted by a social media platform that specifies, at least, the user behavior and activities that are permitted on the social media platform and the user behavior and activities that may result in the social media platform taking action against the user or content.22589.1. (a) A social media platform shall disclose all cyberbullying reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service.(b) A social media platform shall establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows any individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service. The reporting mechanism shall allow, but not require, an individual to upload a screenshot of the content that contains cyberbullying or violates the terms of service.22589.2. Actions for relief pursuant to this chapter may be prosecuted exclusively in a court of competent jurisdiction in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General. This chapter shall not be deemed to create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action.22589.3. (a) (1) Any social media platform that violates a requirement of this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty of not more than seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) for each intentional violation, which shall be assessed and recovered in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General.(2) In a successful action brought by the Attorney General to enforce this chapter, the court may order injunctive relief to obtain compliance with this chapter.(b) For purposes of this section, each day a social media platform is in violation of a requirement of this chapter constitutes a separate violation.(c) This section shall become operative September 1, 2023.22589.4. This chapter shall not apply to a social media platform that generates less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in gross revenue during the preceding calendar year. Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 09, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2879Introduced by Assembly Member LowFebruary 18, 2022An act to add Chapter 22.2.9 (commencing with Section 22589) to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to online content. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2879, as amended, Low. Online content: Students: cyberbullying.Existing law, the Safe Place to Learn Act, requires the State Department of Education to assess whether local educational agencies have taken certain actions related to educational equity, including adopting a policy that prohibits discrimination, harassment, intimidation, and bullying based on specified characteristics. Existing law requires local educational agencies, as defined, to adopt procedures for preventing acts of bullying, including cyberbullying. Existing law also prohibits a pupil from being suspended from school or recommended for expulsion, unless the superintendent of the school district or the principal of the school in which the pupil is enrolled determines that the pupil has committed a specified act, including, among other acts, engaging in an act of bullying, which includes communications made in writing or by means of an electronic act, as defined.Existing law, the Student Online Personal Information Protection Act, restricts the use of information about specified students by operators of certain internet websites, online services, online applications, or mobile applications by, among other things, prohibiting operators from engaging in targeted advertising, amassing student profiles except for prescribed school purposes, or selling or disclosing student information. Existing law also requires an operator to implement and maintain reasonable security procedures and practices appropriate to the nature of the covered information to protect the information from unauthorized access, destruction, use, modification, or disclosure.This bill would require a social media platform, as defined defined, and subject to specified exceptions, to disclose all cyberbullying, as defined, reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service service, and would require a social media platform to establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows an individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service, as specified.Beginning September 1, 2023, this bill would provide that make a social media platform that intentionally violates these provisions shall be subject to specified civil penalties or injunction, to be prosecuted in a court of competent jurisdiction by the Attorney General. The bill would specify that its provisions shall not be deemed to do not create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 09, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 09, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2879 Introduced by Assembly Member LowFebruary 18, 2022 Introduced by Assembly Member Low February 18, 2022 An act to add Chapter 22.2.9 (commencing with Section 22589) to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to online content. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST AB 2879, as amended, Low. Online content: Students: cyberbullying. Existing law, the Safe Place to Learn Act, requires the State Department of Education to assess whether local educational agencies have taken certain actions related to educational equity, including adopting a policy that prohibits discrimination, harassment, intimidation, and bullying based on specified characteristics. Existing law requires local educational agencies, as defined, to adopt procedures for preventing acts of bullying, including cyberbullying. Existing law also prohibits a pupil from being suspended from school or recommended for expulsion, unless the superintendent of the school district or the principal of the school in which the pupil is enrolled determines that the pupil has committed a specified act, including, among other acts, engaging in an act of bullying, which includes communications made in writing or by means of an electronic act, as defined.Existing law, the Student Online Personal Information Protection Act, restricts the use of information about specified students by operators of certain internet websites, online services, online applications, or mobile applications by, among other things, prohibiting operators from engaging in targeted advertising, amassing student profiles except for prescribed school purposes, or selling or disclosing student information. Existing law also requires an operator to implement and maintain reasonable security procedures and practices appropriate to the nature of the covered information to protect the information from unauthorized access, destruction, use, modification, or disclosure.This bill would require a social media platform, as defined defined, and subject to specified exceptions, to disclose all cyberbullying, as defined, reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service service, and would require a social media platform to establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows an individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service, as specified.Beginning September 1, 2023, this bill would provide that make a social media platform that intentionally violates these provisions shall be subject to specified civil penalties or injunction, to be prosecuted in a court of competent jurisdiction by the Attorney General. The bill would specify that its provisions shall not be deemed to do not create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action. Existing law, the Safe Place to Learn Act, requires the State Department of Education to assess whether local educational agencies have taken certain actions related to educational equity, including adopting a policy that prohibits discrimination, harassment, intimidation, and bullying based on specified characteristics. Existing law requires local educational agencies, as defined, to adopt procedures for preventing acts of bullying, including cyberbullying. Existing law also prohibits a pupil from being suspended from school or recommended for expulsion, unless the superintendent of the school district or the principal of the school in which the pupil is enrolled determines that the pupil has committed a specified act, including, among other acts, engaging in an act of bullying, which includes communications made in writing or by means of an electronic act, as defined. Existing law, the Student Online Personal Information Protection Act, restricts the use of information about specified students by operators of certain internet websites, online services, online applications, or mobile applications by, among other things, prohibiting operators from engaging in targeted advertising, amassing student profiles except for prescribed school purposes, or selling or disclosing student information. Existing law also requires an operator to implement and maintain reasonable security procedures and practices appropriate to the nature of the covered information to protect the information from unauthorized access, destruction, use, modification, or disclosure. This bill would require a social media platform, as defined defined, and subject to specified exceptions, to disclose all cyberbullying, as defined, reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service service, and would require a social media platform to establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows an individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service, as specified. Beginning September 1, 2023, this bill would provide that make a social media platform that intentionally violates these provisions shall be subject to specified civil penalties or injunction, to be prosecuted in a court of competent jurisdiction by the Attorney General. The bill would specify that its provisions shall not be deemed to do not create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action. ## Digest Key ## Bill Text The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Chapter 22.2.9 (commencing with Section 22589) is added to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, to read: CHAPTER 22.2.9. Student Cyberbullying Protection Act22589. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) (1) Content means statements or comments made by users and media that are created, posted, shared, or otherwise interacted with by users on an internet-based service or application.(2) Content does not include media put online on a service or application exclusively for the purpose of cloud storage, transmitting documents, files, or file collaboration. (b) Cyberbullying means any severe or pervasive conduct made by an electronic act or acts, as defined in paragraph (2) of subdivision (r) of Section 48900 of the Education Code, committed by a pupil or group of pupils directed toward one or more pupils that has or can be reasonably predicted to have the effect of one or more of the following:(1) Placing a reasonable pupil or pupils in fear of harm to that pupils or those pupils person or property.(2) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience a substantially detrimental effect on the pupils physical or mental health.(3) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils academic performance.(4) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils ability to participate in or benefit from the services, activities, or privileges provided by a school.(c) Social media platform means a public or semipublic internet-based service or application that has users in California and that meets both of the following criteria:(1) (A) A substantial function of the service or application is to connect users in order to allow users to interact socially with each other within the service or application.(B) A service or application that provides email or direct messaging services shall not be considered to meet this criterion on the basis of that function alone.(2) The service or application allows users to do all of the following:(A) Construct a public or semipublic profile for purposes of signing into and using the service or application.(B) Populate a list of other users with whom an individual shares a social connection within the system.(C) Create or post content viewable by other users, including, but not limited to, on message boards, in chat rooms, or through a landing page or main feed that presents the user with content generated by other users.(d) Public or semipublic internet-based service or application excludes a service or application used to facilitate communication within a business or enterprise among employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise, provided that access to the service or application is restricted to employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise using the service or application.(e) Terms of service means a public-facing policy or set of policies adopted by a social media platform that specifies, at least, the user behavior and activities that are permitted on the social media platform and the user behavior and activities that may result in the social media platform taking action against the user or content.22589.1. (a) A social media platform shall disclose all cyberbullying reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service.(b) A social media platform shall establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows any individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service. The reporting mechanism shall allow, but not require, an individual to upload a screenshot of the content that contains cyberbullying or violates the terms of service.22589.2. Actions for relief pursuant to this chapter may be prosecuted exclusively in a court of competent jurisdiction in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General. This chapter shall not be deemed to create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action.22589.3. (a) (1) Any social media platform that violates a requirement of this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty of not more than seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) for each intentional violation, which shall be assessed and recovered in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General.(2) In a successful action brought by the Attorney General to enforce this chapter, the court may order injunctive relief to obtain compliance with this chapter.(b) For purposes of this section, each day a social media platform is in violation of a requirement of this chapter constitutes a separate violation.(c) This section shall become operative September 1, 2023.22589.4. This chapter shall not apply to a social media platform that generates less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in gross revenue during the preceding calendar year. The people of the State of California do enact as follows: ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows: SECTION 1. Chapter 22.2.9 (commencing with Section 22589) is added to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, to read: CHAPTER 22.2.9. Student Cyberbullying Protection Act22589. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) (1) Content means statements or comments made by users and media that are created, posted, shared, or otherwise interacted with by users on an internet-based service or application.(2) Content does not include media put online on a service or application exclusively for the purpose of cloud storage, transmitting documents, files, or file collaboration. (b) Cyberbullying means any severe or pervasive conduct made by an electronic act or acts, as defined in paragraph (2) of subdivision (r) of Section 48900 of the Education Code, committed by a pupil or group of pupils directed toward one or more pupils that has or can be reasonably predicted to have the effect of one or more of the following:(1) Placing a reasonable pupil or pupils in fear of harm to that pupils or those pupils person or property.(2) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience a substantially detrimental effect on the pupils physical or mental health.(3) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils academic performance.(4) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils ability to participate in or benefit from the services, activities, or privileges provided by a school.(c) Social media platform means a public or semipublic internet-based service or application that has users in California and that meets both of the following criteria:(1) (A) A substantial function of the service or application is to connect users in order to allow users to interact socially with each other within the service or application.(B) A service or application that provides email or direct messaging services shall not be considered to meet this criterion on the basis of that function alone.(2) The service or application allows users to do all of the following:(A) Construct a public or semipublic profile for purposes of signing into and using the service or application.(B) Populate a list of other users with whom an individual shares a social connection within the system.(C) Create or post content viewable by other users, including, but not limited to, on message boards, in chat rooms, or through a landing page or main feed that presents the user with content generated by other users.(d) Public or semipublic internet-based service or application excludes a service or application used to facilitate communication within a business or enterprise among employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise, provided that access to the service or application is restricted to employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise using the service or application.(e) Terms of service means a public-facing policy or set of policies adopted by a social media platform that specifies, at least, the user behavior and activities that are permitted on the social media platform and the user behavior and activities that may result in the social media platform taking action against the user or content.22589.1. (a) A social media platform shall disclose all cyberbullying reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service.(b) A social media platform shall establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows any individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service. The reporting mechanism shall allow, but not require, an individual to upload a screenshot of the content that contains cyberbullying or violates the terms of service.22589.2. Actions for relief pursuant to this chapter may be prosecuted exclusively in a court of competent jurisdiction in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General. This chapter shall not be deemed to create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action.22589.3. (a) (1) Any social media platform that violates a requirement of this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty of not more than seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) for each intentional violation, which shall be assessed and recovered in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General.(2) In a successful action brought by the Attorney General to enforce this chapter, the court may order injunctive relief to obtain compliance with this chapter.(b) For purposes of this section, each day a social media platform is in violation of a requirement of this chapter constitutes a separate violation.(c) This section shall become operative September 1, 2023.22589.4. This chapter shall not apply to a social media platform that generates less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in gross revenue during the preceding calendar year. SECTION 1. Chapter 22.2.9 (commencing with Section 22589) is added to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, to read: ### SECTION 1. CHAPTER 22.2.9. Student Cyberbullying Protection Act22589. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) (1) Content means statements or comments made by users and media that are created, posted, shared, or otherwise interacted with by users on an internet-based service or application.(2) Content does not include media put online on a service or application exclusively for the purpose of cloud storage, transmitting documents, files, or file collaboration. (b) Cyberbullying means any severe or pervasive conduct made by an electronic act or acts, as defined in paragraph (2) of subdivision (r) of Section 48900 of the Education Code, committed by a pupil or group of pupils directed toward one or more pupils that has or can be reasonably predicted to have the effect of one or more of the following:(1) Placing a reasonable pupil or pupils in fear of harm to that pupils or those pupils person or property.(2) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience a substantially detrimental effect on the pupils physical or mental health.(3) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils academic performance.(4) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils ability to participate in or benefit from the services, activities, or privileges provided by a school.(c) Social media platform means a public or semipublic internet-based service or application that has users in California and that meets both of the following criteria:(1) (A) A substantial function of the service or application is to connect users in order to allow users to interact socially with each other within the service or application.(B) A service or application that provides email or direct messaging services shall not be considered to meet this criterion on the basis of that function alone.(2) The service or application allows users to do all of the following:(A) Construct a public or semipublic profile for purposes of signing into and using the service or application.(B) Populate a list of other users with whom an individual shares a social connection within the system.(C) Create or post content viewable by other users, including, but not limited to, on message boards, in chat rooms, or through a landing page or main feed that presents the user with content generated by other users.(d) Public or semipublic internet-based service or application excludes a service or application used to facilitate communication within a business or enterprise among employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise, provided that access to the service or application is restricted to employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise using the service or application.(e) Terms of service means a public-facing policy or set of policies adopted by a social media platform that specifies, at least, the user behavior and activities that are permitted on the social media platform and the user behavior and activities that may result in the social media platform taking action against the user or content.22589.1. (a) A social media platform shall disclose all cyberbullying reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service.(b) A social media platform shall establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows any individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service. The reporting mechanism shall allow, but not require, an individual to upload a screenshot of the content that contains cyberbullying or violates the terms of service.22589.2. Actions for relief pursuant to this chapter may be prosecuted exclusively in a court of competent jurisdiction in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General. This chapter shall not be deemed to create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action.22589.3. (a) (1) Any social media platform that violates a requirement of this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty of not more than seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) for each intentional violation, which shall be assessed and recovered in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General.(2) In a successful action brought by the Attorney General to enforce this chapter, the court may order injunctive relief to obtain compliance with this chapter.(b) For purposes of this section, each day a social media platform is in violation of a requirement of this chapter constitutes a separate violation.(c) This section shall become operative September 1, 2023.22589.4. This chapter shall not apply to a social media platform that generates less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in gross revenue during the preceding calendar year. CHAPTER 22.2.9. Student Cyberbullying Protection Act22589. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) (1) Content means statements or comments made by users and media that are created, posted, shared, or otherwise interacted with by users on an internet-based service or application.(2) Content does not include media put online on a service or application exclusively for the purpose of cloud storage, transmitting documents, files, or file collaboration. (b) Cyberbullying means any severe or pervasive conduct made by an electronic act or acts, as defined in paragraph (2) of subdivision (r) of Section 48900 of the Education Code, committed by a pupil or group of pupils directed toward one or more pupils that has or can be reasonably predicted to have the effect of one or more of the following:(1) Placing a reasonable pupil or pupils in fear of harm to that pupils or those pupils person or property.(2) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience a substantially detrimental effect on the pupils physical or mental health.(3) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils academic performance.(4) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils ability to participate in or benefit from the services, activities, or privileges provided by a school.(c) Social media platform means a public or semipublic internet-based service or application that has users in California and that meets both of the following criteria:(1) (A) A substantial function of the service or application is to connect users in order to allow users to interact socially with each other within the service or application.(B) A service or application that provides email or direct messaging services shall not be considered to meet this criterion on the basis of that function alone.(2) The service or application allows users to do all of the following:(A) Construct a public or semipublic profile for purposes of signing into and using the service or application.(B) Populate a list of other users with whom an individual shares a social connection within the system.(C) Create or post content viewable by other users, including, but not limited to, on message boards, in chat rooms, or through a landing page or main feed that presents the user with content generated by other users.(d) Public or semipublic internet-based service or application excludes a service or application used to facilitate communication within a business or enterprise among employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise, provided that access to the service or application is restricted to employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise using the service or application.(e) Terms of service means a public-facing policy or set of policies adopted by a social media platform that specifies, at least, the user behavior and activities that are permitted on the social media platform and the user behavior and activities that may result in the social media platform taking action against the user or content.22589.1. (a) A social media platform shall disclose all cyberbullying reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service.(b) A social media platform shall establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows any individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service. The reporting mechanism shall allow, but not require, an individual to upload a screenshot of the content that contains cyberbullying or violates the terms of service.22589.2. Actions for relief pursuant to this chapter may be prosecuted exclusively in a court of competent jurisdiction in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General. This chapter shall not be deemed to create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action.22589.3. (a) (1) Any social media platform that violates a requirement of this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty of not more than seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) for each intentional violation, which shall be assessed and recovered in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General.(2) In a successful action brought by the Attorney General to enforce this chapter, the court may order injunctive relief to obtain compliance with this chapter.(b) For purposes of this section, each day a social media platform is in violation of a requirement of this chapter constitutes a separate violation.(c) This section shall become operative September 1, 2023.22589.4. This chapter shall not apply to a social media platform that generates less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in gross revenue during the preceding calendar year. CHAPTER 22.2.9. Student Cyberbullying Protection Act CHAPTER 22.2.9. Student Cyberbullying Protection Act 22589. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) (1) Content means statements or comments made by users and media that are created, posted, shared, or otherwise interacted with by users on an internet-based service or application.(2) Content does not include media put online on a service or application exclusively for the purpose of cloud storage, transmitting documents, files, or file collaboration. (b) Cyberbullying means any severe or pervasive conduct made by an electronic act or acts, as defined in paragraph (2) of subdivision (r) of Section 48900 of the Education Code, committed by a pupil or group of pupils directed toward one or more pupils that has or can be reasonably predicted to have the effect of one or more of the following:(1) Placing a reasonable pupil or pupils in fear of harm to that pupils or those pupils person or property.(2) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience a substantially detrimental effect on the pupils physical or mental health.(3) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils academic performance.(4) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils ability to participate in or benefit from the services, activities, or privileges provided by a school.(c) Social media platform means a public or semipublic internet-based service or application that has users in California and that meets both of the following criteria:(1) (A) A substantial function of the service or application is to connect users in order to allow users to interact socially with each other within the service or application.(B) A service or application that provides email or direct messaging services shall not be considered to meet this criterion on the basis of that function alone.(2) The service or application allows users to do all of the following:(A) Construct a public or semipublic profile for purposes of signing into and using the service or application.(B) Populate a list of other users with whom an individual shares a social connection within the system.(C) Create or post content viewable by other users, including, but not limited to, on message boards, in chat rooms, or through a landing page or main feed that presents the user with content generated by other users.(d) Public or semipublic internet-based service or application excludes a service or application used to facilitate communication within a business or enterprise among employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise, provided that access to the service or application is restricted to employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise using the service or application.(e) Terms of service means a public-facing policy or set of policies adopted by a social media platform that specifies, at least, the user behavior and activities that are permitted on the social media platform and the user behavior and activities that may result in the social media platform taking action against the user or content. 22589. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply: (a) (1) Content means statements or comments made by users and media that are created, posted, shared, or otherwise interacted with by users on an internet-based service or application. (2) Content does not include media put online on a service or application exclusively for the purpose of cloud storage, transmitting documents, files, or file collaboration. (b) Cyberbullying means any severe or pervasive conduct made by an electronic act or acts, as defined in paragraph (2) of subdivision (r) of Section 48900 of the Education Code, committed by a pupil or group of pupils directed toward one or more pupils that has or can be reasonably predicted to have the effect of one or more of the following: (1) Placing a reasonable pupil or pupils in fear of harm to that pupils or those pupils person or property. (2) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience a substantially detrimental effect on the pupils physical or mental health. (3) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils academic performance. (4) Causing a reasonable pupil to experience substantial interference with the pupils ability to participate in or benefit from the services, activities, or privileges provided by a school. (c) Social media platform means a public or semipublic internet-based service or application that has users in California and that meets both of the following criteria: (1) (A) A substantial function of the service or application is to connect users in order to allow users to interact socially with each other within the service or application. (B) A service or application that provides email or direct messaging services shall not be considered to meet this criterion on the basis of that function alone. (2) The service or application allows users to do all of the following: (A) Construct a public or semipublic profile for purposes of signing into and using the service or application. (B) Populate a list of other users with whom an individual shares a social connection within the system. (C) Create or post content viewable by other users, including, but not limited to, on message boards, in chat rooms, or through a landing page or main feed that presents the user with content generated by other users. (d) Public or semipublic internet-based service or application excludes a service or application used to facilitate communication within a business or enterprise among employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise, provided that access to the service or application is restricted to employees or affiliates of the business or enterprise using the service or application. (e) Terms of service means a public-facing policy or set of policies adopted by a social media platform that specifies, at least, the user behavior and activities that are permitted on the social media platform and the user behavior and activities that may result in the social media platform taking action against the user or content. 22589.1. (a) A social media platform shall disclose all cyberbullying reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service.(b) A social media platform shall establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows any individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service. The reporting mechanism shall allow, but not require, an individual to upload a screenshot of the content that contains cyberbullying or violates the terms of service. 22589.1. (a) A social media platform shall disclose all cyberbullying reporting procedures in the social media platforms terms of service. (b) A social media platform shall establish a mechanism within its internet-based service that allows any individual, whether or not that individual has a profile on the internet-based service, to report cyberbullying or any content that violates the existing terms of service. The reporting mechanism shall allow, but not require, an individual to upload a screenshot of the content that contains cyberbullying or violates the terms of service. 22589.2. Actions for relief pursuant to this chapter may be prosecuted exclusively in a court of competent jurisdiction in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General. This chapter shall not be deemed to create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action. 22589.2. Actions for relief pursuant to this chapter may be prosecuted exclusively in a court of competent jurisdiction in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General. This chapter shall not be deemed to create a private right of action or limit any existing private right of action. 22589.3. (a) (1) Any social media platform that violates a requirement of this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty of not more than seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) for each intentional violation, which shall be assessed and recovered in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General.(2) In a successful action brought by the Attorney General to enforce this chapter, the court may order injunctive relief to obtain compliance with this chapter.(b) For purposes of this section, each day a social media platform is in violation of a requirement of this chapter constitutes a separate violation.(c) This section shall become operative September 1, 2023. 22589.3. (a) (1) Any social media platform that violates a requirement of this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty of not more than seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) for each intentional violation, which shall be assessed and recovered in a civil action brought in the name of the people of the State of California by the Attorney General. (2) In a successful action brought by the Attorney General to enforce this chapter, the court may order injunctive relief to obtain compliance with this chapter. (b) For purposes of this section, each day a social media platform is in violation of a requirement of this chapter constitutes a separate violation. (c) This section shall become operative September 1, 2023. 22589.4. This chapter shall not apply to a social media platform that generates less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in gross revenue during the preceding calendar year. 22589.4. This chapter shall not apply to a social media platform that generates less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in gross revenue during the preceding calendar year.