HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 1 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S A bill to be entitled 1 An act relating to online access to materials harmful 2 to minors; creating s. 282.803, F.S.; providing 3 definitions; requiring a developer to, beginning on a 4 specified date, make specific determination about 5 covered applications, provide notice to applicatio n 6 stores about such applications, and provide certain 7 features for parents to protect a user that is a 8 child; requiring a covered manufacturer to, beginning 9 on a specified date, take certain steps to determine 10 specified information about the user, provide certain 11 notices, and provide developers of covered 12 applications with a specified means to verify the age 13 of a user; providing requirements for devices sold 14 before a specified date; providing construction; 15 requiring an application store to establish 16 nondiscriminatory practices; providing for enforcement 17 actions by the Attorney General; providing an 18 affirmative defense; providing a limitation on 19 liability for a covered manufacturer under certain 20 circumstances; amending s. 501.1737, F.S.; revising 21 and providing definitions; revising the age 22 verification method used by certain commercial 23 entities to verify the age of a person accessing 24 certain material; providing an exception; requiring a 25 covered manufacturer to ensure certain statutory 26 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 2 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S requirements are met; aut horizing the Department of 27 Legal Affairs to bring an action against covered 28 manufacturers; authorizing the imposition of civil 29 penalties against covered manufacturers; removing 30 certain liability and damage provisions for certain 31 commercial entities; removi ng provisions relating to 32 public records exemptions and the Open Government 33 Sunset Review Act; removing the definition of the term 34 "proprietary information"; creating s. 501.1741, F.S.; 35 requiring covered manufactures to take certain steps 36 upon activation of a device; requiring certain 37 websites, applications, or online services to take 38 certain actions based on the amount of material 39 harmful to minors found on such website, application, 40 or online service; requiring covered manufacturers to 41 comply with statutory requirements in a 42 nondiscriminatory manner; prohibiting covered 43 manufacturers from taking certain actions; authorizing 44 the Department of Legal Affairs to adopt rules and 45 regulations; providing preemption; providing an 46 effective date. 47 48 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 49 50 Section 1. Section 282.803, Florida Statutes, is created 51 to read: 52 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 3 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S 282.803 Online application store. — 53 (1) As used in this section, the term: 54 (a) "Application store" means a publicly available 55 website, software application, or online service that 56 distributes third-party platform software applications to a 57 computer, a mobile device, or any other general purpose 58 computing device. 59 (b) "Child" means an individual consumer under 18 years of 60 age. 61 (c) "Covered application" means a software application, 62 website, or other online service that is likely to be accessed 63 by children and that is intended to be run or directed by a user 64 on a computer, mobile device, or any other general purpose 65 computing device. The t erm does not include a broadband Internet 66 access service as defined in 47 C.F.R. s. 8.1(B); a 67 telecommunications service as defined in 47 U.S.C. s. 153; or 68 the delivery or use of a physical product unconnected to the 69 Internet. 70 (d) "Covered entity" means a covered manufacturer or 71 developer of a covered application. 72 (e) "Covered manufacturer" means a manufacturer of a 73 device, an operating system for a device, or an application 74 store. 75 (f) "Developer" means any person, entity, or organization 76 that creates, owns, or controls an application and is 77 responsible for the design, development, maintenance, and 78 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 4 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S distribution of the application to users through an application 79 store. 80 (g) "Device" means a device or a portion of a device that 81 is designed for and capab le of communicating across a computer 82 network with other computers or devices for the purpose of 83 transmitting, receiving, or storing data, including, but not 84 limited to, a desktop, a laptop, a cellular telephone, a tablet, 85 or any other device designed for and capable of communicating 86 with or across a computer network and that is used for such 87 purpose. The term does not include cable, fiber, or wireless 88 modems, and home routers whether standalone or combined with the 89 aforementioned modems; managed set -top boxes; and any physical 90 object that only supports communications within a closed user 91 group or private network available to a limited set of users. 92 (h) "Likely to be accessed by children" means it is 93 reasonable to expect that an application would be access ed by 94 children, based on satisfying any of the following criteria: 95 1. The application is determined, based on competent and 96 reliable evidence regarding audience composition, to be 97 routinely accessed by children; or 98 2. Internal research findings determine that the 99 application is routinely accessed by children. 100 (i) "Parent" means a biological, foster, or adoptive 101 parent; a stepparent; or a legal guardian. 102 (j) "User" means an individual consumer of covered 103 applications. 104 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 5 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S (2) Beginning January 1, 2026: 105 (a) A developer of a covered application shall: 106 1. Determine whether an application the developer provides 107 is likely to be accessed by children and, if the application is 108 provided for distribution via an applicat ion store, provide 109 notice to such application store that the application is likely 110 to be accessed by children. 111 2. To the extent applicable and technically feasible, 112 provide readily available features for parents to protect a user 113 that is a child as appro priate to the risks that arise from the 114 child's use of the developer's covered application. This 115 includes providing features to help manage which accounts are 116 affirmatively linked to the user under the age of 18, to help 117 manage the delivery of age appropri ate content, and to limit the 118 amount of time that the user under the age of 18 spends daily on 119 the developer's covered application. 120 (b) A covered manufacturer shall take commercially 121 reasonable and technically feasible steps to: 122 1. Upon initial activat ion of a device, determine or 123 estimate the age of the device's primary user. 124 2. If the covered manufacturer is an application store: 125 a. Provide a mechanism for a developer to provide notice 126 that an application is likely to be accessed by children. 127 b. Obtain parental consent before permitting a known child 128 under 16 years of age to download a covered application from the 129 application store. 130 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 6 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S c. Provide developers of covered applications in the 131 application store a signal regarding whether a parent has 132 provided consent when required under this subsection. 133 d. Provide the parent with the option to connect the 134 developer of such a covered application with the approving 135 parent for the purpose of facilitating parental supervision 136 tools. 137 3. Provide developer s of covered applications with a 138 digital signal via a real time application programming interface 139 regarding whether a user is: 140 a. Under 13 years of age. 141 b. At least 13 years of age and under 16 years of age. 142 c. At least 16 years of age and under 18 y ears of age. 143 d. At least 18 years of age. 144 4. Developers of covered applications may rely on age 145 signals and parental consent provided under subparagraph 2. for 146 purposes of complying with this paragraph. 147 (c) For devices sold before January 1, 2026, co vered 148 manufacturers shall ensure that the requirements under paragraph 149 (b) are included in its operating system and app store versions 150 and updates by default after January 1, 2027. 151 (3)(a) Except for the requirements provided in 152 subparagraph (2)(b)2., thi s section does not: 153 (b) Require a covered entity to access, collect, retain, 154 reidentify, or link information, that in the ordinary course of 155 business, would not otherwise be accessed, collected, retained, 156 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 7 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S reidentified, or linked. 157 (c) Require a covered entity to implement new account 158 controls or safety settings if it is not necessary to comply 159 with this act. 160 (d) Modify, impair, or supersede the operation of any 161 antitrust law, including chapter 1331 of the Revised Code and 15 162 U.S.C. 1, et seq. 163 (4) An application store shall comply with this section in 164 a nondiscriminatory manner, including: 165 (a) Imposing at least the same restrictions and 166 obligations on its own applications and application distribution 167 as it does on those from third -party applications or application 168 distributors; 169 (b) Not using data collected from third parties, or 170 consent mechanisms deployed for third parties, in the course of 171 compliance with this subsection, for any of the following: 172 1. To compete against those third parties. 173 2. To give the application store's services preference 174 relative to those of third parties. 175 3. To otherwise use the data or consent mechanism in an 176 anticompetitive manner. 177 (5)(a) At least 45 days before the date on which the 178 Attorney General initiates an enforcement action against a 179 covered entity that is subject to the requirements of this 180 section, the Attorney General shall provide the covered entity 181 with a written notice that identifies each alleged violation and 182 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 8 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S an explanation of the basis for each al legation. 183 (b) The Attorney General may not initiate an action if the 184 covered entity cures the violation or violations described in 185 the notice within 45 days after the notice is sent and provides 186 the Attorney General with a written statement indicating tha t 187 the violation is cured and that no further violations will 188 occur. 189 (c) If a covered entity continues to violate this section 190 in breach of an express written notice provided under paragraph 191 (6)(a), the Attorney General may bring a civil action and seek 192 damages for up to $2,500 per violation of this section not to 193 exceed $50,000. Damages shall begin accruing after completion of 194 the 45-day cure period in paragraph (6)(b). 195 (d) This subsection does not provide a private right of 196 action. The Attorney General has the exclusive authority to 197 enforce this section. 198 (e) Paragraph (a) does not apply if the covered entity 199 fails to timely cure all of the violations described in the 200 notice or commits a subsequent violation of the same type after 201 curing the initial vio lation under that paragraph. 202 (6) It is an affirmative defense to a violation of this 203 section if the developer acted in reasonable reliance on the 204 application store's determination or estimate that the user is 205 not a child. 206 (7) A covered manufacturer is not subject to liability for 207 failure to comply with this section if that covered manufacturer 208 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 9 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S has taken commercially reasonable and technically feasible steps 209 to determine or estimate the age of the user of the device as 210 provided in paragraph (2)(b). 211 Section 2. Section 501.1737, Florida Statutes, is amended 212 to read: 213 501.1737 Age verification for online access to materials 214 harmful to minors.— 215 (1) As used in this section and s. 501.1741, the term: 216 (a) "Anonymous age verification" has the same meanin g as 217 in s. 501.1738. 218 (b) "Application store" means a publicly available 219 website, software application, or online service that 220 distributes third-party platforms' software applications to a 221 computer, a mobile device, or any other general -purpose 222 computing device. 223 (c)(b) "Commercial entity" includes a corporation, a 224 limited liability company, a partnership, a limited partnership, 225 a sole proprietorship, and any other legally recognized entity. 226 (d) "Covered manufacturer" means a manufacturer of a 227 device, an operating system for a device, or an application 228 store. 229 (e)(c) "Department" means the Department of Legal Affairs. 230 (f) "Device" means equipment or a portion of equipment 231 that is designed for and capable of communicating across a 232 computer network with other computers or devices for the purpose 233 of transmitting, receiving, or storing data, including, but not 234 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 10 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S limited to, a desktop, a laptop, a cellular telephone, a tablet, 235 or any other device designed for and capable of communicating 236 with or across a comp uter network and that is used for such 237 purpose. 238 (g) "Digital age verification" means either anonymous age 239 verification, standard age verification, or device -based age 240 verification. 241 (h)(d) "Distribute" means to issue, sell, give, provide, 242 deliver, transfer, transmit, circulate, or disseminate by any 243 means. 244 (i)(e) "Material harmful to minors" means any material 245 that: 246 1. The average person applying contemporary community 247 standards would find, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient 248 interest; 249 2. Depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, 250 sexual conduct as specifically defined in s. 847.001(19); and 251 3. When taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, 252 artistic, political, or scientific value for minors. 253 (j)(f) "News-gathering organization" me ans any of the 254 following: 255 1. A newspaper, news publication, or news source, printed 256 or published online or on a mobile platform, engaged in 257 reporting current news and matters of public interest, and an 258 employee thereof who can provide documentation of su ch 259 employment. 260 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 11 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S 2. A radio broadcast station, television broadcast 261 station, cable television operator, or wire service, and an 262 employee thereof who can provide documentation of such 263 employment. 264 (k) "Operating system provider" means an entity that 265 develops, distributes, or maintains the operating system of, and 266 provides common services for, a device. The term includes the 267 design, programming, and supply of operating systems for various 268 devices such as smartphones, tablets, and other digital 269 equipment. 270 (l)(g) "Publish" means to communicate or make information 271 available to another person or entity on a publicly available 272 website or application. 273 (m)(h) "Resident" means a person who lives in this state 274 for more than 6 months of the year. 275 (n)(i) "Standard age verification" means any commercially 276 reasonable method of age verification approved by the commercial 277 entity. 278 (o)(j) "Substantial portion" means more than 33.3 percent 279 of total material on a website or application. 280 (2) A commercial enti ty that knowingly and intentionally 281 publishes or distributes material harmful to minors on a website 282 or application, if the website or application contains a 283 substantial portion of material harmful to minors, must use 284 digital either anonymous age verificat ion or standard age 285 verification to verify that the age of a person attempting to 286 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 12 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S access the material is 18 years of age or older and prevent 287 access to the material by a person younger than 18 years of age. 288 The commercial entity must offer anonymous age ve rification and 289 standard age verification, and a person attempting to access the 290 material may select which method will be used to verify his or 291 her age unless the commercial entity is relying on device -based 292 age verification pursuant to s. 501.1741 . 293 (3) A commercial entity must ensure that the requirements 294 of s. 501.1738 are met unless the commercial entity is relying 295 on device-based age verification pursuant to s. 501.1741. A 296 covered manufacturer must ensure that the requirements of s. 297 501.1741 are met. 298 (4)(a) This section does not apply to any bona fide news 299 or public interest broadcast, website video, report, or event 300 and does not affect the rights of a news -gathering organization. 301 (b) An Internet service provider or its affiliates or 302 subsidiaries, a search engine, or a cloud service provider does 303 not violate this section solely for providing access or 304 connection to or from a website or other information or content 305 on the Internet or a facility, system, or network not under the 306 provider's control, inc luding transmission, downloading, 307 intermediate storage, or access software, to the extent the 308 provider is not responsible for the creation of the content of 309 the communication which constitutes material harmful to minors. 310 (5)(a) Any violation of subsectio n (2) or subsection (3) 311 is deemed an unfair and deceptive trade practice actionable 312 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 13 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S under part II of this chapter solely by the department on behalf 313 of a resident minor against a commercial entity or a covered 314 manufacturer. If the department has reason to believe that a 315 commercial entity or a covered manufacturer is in violation of 316 subsection (2) or subsection (3), the department, as the 317 enforcing authority, may bring an action against the commercial 318 entity or a covered manufacturer for an unfair or decepti ve act 319 or practice. For the purpose of bringing an action pursuant to 320 this section, ss. 501.211 and 501.212 do not apply. In addition 321 to any other remedy under part II of this chapter, the 322 department may collect a civil penalty of up to $50,000 per 323 violation and reasonable attorney fees and court costs. When the 324 commercial entity's or a covered manufacturer's failure to 325 comply with subsection (2) or subsection (3) is a consistent 326 pattern of conduct of the commercial entity or covered 327 manufacturer, punitive damages may be assessed against the 328 commercial entity or covered manufacturer . 329 (b) A third party that performs age verification for a 330 commercial entity or covered manufacturer in violation of s. 331 501.1738 is deemed to have committed an unfair and deceptiv e 332 trade practice actionable under part II of this chapter solely 333 by the department against such third party. If the department 334 has reason to believe that the third party is in violation of s. 335 501.1738, the department, as the enforcing authority, may bring 336 an action against such third party for an unfair or deceptive 337 act or practice. For the purpose of bringing an action pursuant 338 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 14 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S to this section, ss. 501.211 and 501.212 do not apply. In 339 addition to other remedies under part II of this chapter, the 340 department may collect a civil penalty of up to $50,000 per 341 violation and reasonable attorney fees and court costs. 342 (c) A commercial entity that violates subsection (2) for 343 failing to prohibit access or prohibit a minor from future 344 access to material harmful to minors after a report of 345 unauthorized or unlawful access is liable to the minor for such 346 access, including court costs and reasonable attorney fees as 347 ordered by the court. Claimants may be awarded up to $10,000 in 348 damages. A civil action for a claim under this paragraph must be 349 brought within 1 year from the date the complainant knew, or 350 reasonably should have known, of the alleged violation. 351 (c)(d) Any action under this subsection may only be 352 brought on behalf of or by a resident minor. 353 (6) For purposes of bringing an action under subsection 354 (5), a commercial entity or covered manufacturer that publishes 355 or distributes material harmful to minors on a website or 356 application, if the website or application contains a 357 substantial portion of material harmfu l to minors and such 358 website or application is available to be accessed in this 359 state, is considered to be both engaged in substantial and not 360 isolated activities within this state and operating, conducting, 361 engaging in, or carrying on a business and doing business in 362 this state, and is therefore subject to the jurisdiction of the 363 courts of this state. 364 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 15 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S (7) This section does not preclude any other available 365 remedy at law or equity. 366 (8)(a) If, by its own inquiry or as a result of 367 complaints, the departmen t has reason to believe that an entity 368 or person has engaged in, or is engaging in, an act or practice 369 that violates this section, the department may administer oaths 370 and affirmations, subpoena witnesses or matter, and collect 371 evidence. Within 5 days, excl uding weekends and legal holidays, 372 after the service of a subpoena or at any time before the return 373 date specified therein, whichever is longer, the party served 374 may file in the circuit court in the county in which it resides 375 or in which it transacts busin ess and serve upon the enforcing 376 authority a petition for an order modifying or setting aside the 377 subpoena. The petitioner may raise any objection or privilege 378 which would be available upon service of such subpoena in a 379 civil action. The subpoena shall inf orm the party served of its 380 rights under this subsection. 381 (b) If the matter that the department seeks to obtain by 382 subpoena is located outside the state, the entity or person 383 subpoenaed may make it available to the department or its 384 representative to exa mine the matter at the place where it is 385 located. The department may designate representatives, including 386 officials of the state in which the matter is located, to 387 inspect the matter on its behalf and may respond to similar 388 requests from officials of other states. 389 (c) Upon failure of an entity or person without lawful 390 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 16 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S excuse to obey a subpoena and upon reasonable notice to all 391 persons affected, the department may apply to the circuit court 392 for an order compelling compliance. 393 (d) The department may reque st that an entity or person 394 that refuses to comply with a subpoena on the ground that 395 testimony or matter may incriminate the entity or person be 396 ordered by the court to provide the testimony or matter. Except 397 in a prosecution for perjury, an entity or ind ividual that 398 complies with a court order to provide testimony or matter after 399 asserting a valid privilege against self -incrimination shall not 400 have the testimony or matter so provided, or evidence derived 401 therefrom, received against the entity or person in any criminal 402 investigation or proceeding. 403 (e) Any entity or person upon whom a subpoena is served 404 pursuant to this section shall comply with the terms thereof 405 unless otherwise provided by order of the court. Any entity or 406 person that fails to appear wit h the intent to avoid, evade, or 407 prevent compliance in whole or in part with any investigation 408 under this part or that removes from any place, conceals, 409 withholds, mutilates, alters, or destroys, or by any other means 410 falsifies any documentary material in the possession, custody, 411 or control of any entity or person subject to any such subpoena, 412 or knowingly conceals any relevant information with the intent 413 to avoid, evade, or prevent compliance, shall be liable for a 414 civil penalty of not more than $5,000 per week in violation, 415 reasonable attorney fees, and costs. 416 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 17 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S (9)(a) All information held by the department pursuant to 417 a notification of a violation of this section or an 418 investigation of a violation of this section is confidential and 419 exempt from s. 119.07( 1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State 420 Constitution, until such time as the investigation is completed 421 or ceases to be active. This exemption shall be construed in 422 conformity with s. 119.071(2)(c). 423 (b) During an active investigation, information made 424 confidential and exempt pursuant to paragraph (a) may be 425 disclosed by the department: 426 1. In the furtherance of its official duties and 427 responsibilities; 428 2. For print, publication, or broadcast if the department 429 determines that such release would assist in n otifying the 430 public or locating or identifying a person whom the department 431 believes to be a victim of an improper use or disposal of 432 customer records, except that information made confidential and 433 exempt by paragraph (c) may not be released pursuant to th is 434 subparagraph; or 435 3. To another governmental entity in the furtherance of 436 its official duties and responsibilities. 437 (c) Upon completion of an investigation or once an 438 investigation ceases to be active, the following information 439 held by the department shall remain confidential and exempt from 440 s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution: 441 1. Information that is otherwise confidential or exempt 442 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 18 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S from s. 119.07(1) or s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution. 443 2. Personal identifying inf ormation. 444 3. A computer forensic report. 445 4. Information that would otherwise reveal weaknesses in 446 the data security of the commercial entity. 447 5. Information that would disclose the proprietary 448 information of the commercial entity. 449 (d) For purposes of this subsection, the term "proprietary 450 information" means information that: 451 1. Is owned or controlled by the commercial entity. 452 2. Is intended to be private and is treated by the 453 commercial entity as private because disclosure would harm the 454 commercial entity or its business operations. 455 3. Has not been disclosed except as required by law or a 456 private agreement that provides that the information will not be 457 released to the public. 458 4. Is not publicly available or otherwise readily 459 ascertainable through proper means from another source in the 460 same configuration as received by the department. 461 5. Reveals competitive interests, the disclosure of which 462 would impair the competitive advantage of the commercial entity 463 that is the subject of the informatio n. 464 (e) This subsection is subject to the Open Government 465 Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and shall stand 466 repealed on October 2, 2029, unless reviewed and saved from 467 repeal through reenactment by the Legislature. 468 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 19 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S (9)(10) The department may adopt rules to implement this 469 section. 470 Section 3. Section 501.1741, Florida Statutes, is created 471 to read: 472 501.1741 Device-based age verification. — 473 (1) Upon activation of a device, a covered manufacturer 474 must take commercially reasonable and techn ically feasible steps 475 to do all of the following: 476 (a) Determine or estimate the age of the user of the 477 device. 478 (b) Provide websites, applications, application stores, 479 and online services with a digital signal and a real -time 480 application programming int erface to verify that a person is: 481 1. Younger than 13 years of age. 482 2. At least 13 years of age but younger than 16 years of 483 age. 484 3. At least 16 years of age but younger than 18 years of 485 age. 486 4. Eighteen years of age or older. 487 (c) If the covered manufacturer is an application store, 488 obtain parental or guardian consent before permitting a person 489 younger than 16 years of age to download an application from the 490 application store and provide the parent or guardian with the 491 option to connect the develo per of the application with the 492 approving parent or guardian for the purpose of facilitating 493 parental supervision tools. 494 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 20 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S (d) Beginning July 1, 2026, ensure that the requirements 495 of this section are included by default in all operating systems 496 and application store versions and updates for devices sold 497 after July 1, 2026. 498 (2) A website, an application, or an online service that 499 makes available material harmful to minors must recognize and 500 allow for the receipt of digital age signals pursuant to this 501 section. 502 (3) A website, an application, or an online service that 503 makes available a substantial portion of material harmful to 504 minors must do all of the following: 505 (a) Block access to the website, application, or online 506 service if an age signal is received indicating that the person 507 using such website, application, or online service is under 18 508 years of age. 509 (b) Provide a disclaimer to the user or visitors that the 510 website, application, or online service contains material 511 harmful to minors. 512 (c) Label itself as restricted to adults. 513 (4) A website, an application, or an online service that 514 knowingly makes available less than a substantial portion of 515 material harmful to minors must do all of the following: 516 (a) Block access to known material harmful to minors if an 517 age signal is received indicating that the person using such 518 website, application, or online service is under 18 years of 519 age. 520 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 21 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S (b) Provide a disclaimer to users or visitors before 521 displaying known material harmful to minors. 522 (5) A website, an application, or an online service with 523 actual knowledge, through receipt of a signal regarding a user's 524 age or otherwise, that a user is under 18 years of age must, to 525 the extent commercially reasonable and technically feasible, 526 provide readily availab le features for parents or guardians to 527 support a minor with respect to the minor's use of the service, 528 including features to help manage which persons or accounts are 529 affirmatively linked to the minor, to help manage the delivery 530 of age appropriate conten t, and to limit the amount of time that 531 the minor spends daily on the website, application, or online 532 service. 533 (6) A covered manufacturer must comply with this section 534 in a nondiscriminatory manner, specifically including, but not 535 limited to imposing at least the same restrictions and 536 obligations on its own websites, applications, and online 537 services as it does on those from third parties. 538 (7) A covered manufacturer may not: 539 (a) Use data collected from third parties, or consent 540 mechanisms deployed for third parties, in the course of 541 compliance with this section to compete against such third 542 parties; 543 (b) Give the covered manufacturer's services preference 544 relative to those of third parties; or 545 (c) Otherwise use data collected from third parties or 546 HB 931 2025 CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. hb931-00 Page 22 of 22 F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S consent mechanisms deployed by third parties in an 547 anticompetitive manner. 548 (8) After requisite notice and public comment, the 549 department may adopt such rules and regulations necessary to 550 establish the processes by which entities are to comply with 551 this section. 552 (9) This section is intended to provide uniformity of the 553 law. Any state law, regulation, or policy or any ordinance, 554 regulation, or policy adopted by a county, a municipality, an 555 administrative agency, or other political subdivision of this 556 state which are in conflict with this section are hereby 557 superseded and are deemed null and void to the extent of the 558 conflict with this section. 559 Section 4. This act shall take effect July 1, 2025. 560