- Senators have introduced a bill to force
social media companies to hand over internal data to outside researchers. - The proposed law would allow researchers to take social media companies to court for failing to give up data.
The proposed "Platform Accountability and Transparency Act" was unveiled Thursday by Democratic senators Amy Klobuchar and Chris Coons and Republican senator Rob Portman, and aims to "support
The bill was published after 300 scientists sent an open letter to Meta CEO
The proposed law would force social media companies with a minimum of 25 million monthly users to hand over data to university-affiliated researchers who request it through the National Science Foundation. If a company failed to hand over data, the researchers and their universities would be able to take legal action.
The bill proposes that a company found by a court to have failed to hand over data should lose its Section 230 protections. Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act allows tech companies to determine how to moderate their own platforms, and protects them from being liable for content posted by users.
"Social media companies have incredible amounts of data about each of us – but right now, they're the only ones that get to use it to their advantage," Sen. Coons tweeted.
Neither Meta, formerly Facebook, or Twitter immediately responded when contacted by Insider for comment on the bill.
On Wednesday, Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri testified before Congress about child safety on the platform.
In October 2020,