04/24/2025 / By Laura Harris
Colorado is about to pass a bill that would push for stricter regulations on social media, aiming to shield minors from potential harm, but Democratic Gov. Jared Polis expressed reservations about signing the bill.
Senate Bill 25-086, dubbed as Protections for Users of Social Media Act, already passed the Colorado General Assembly this April with bipartisan support. This bill would require social media companies to publish and enforce strict policies, determine within 72 hours whether a reported post violates their rules and remove violators within 24 hours of a breach and comply swiftly with law enforcement requests.
Moreover, companies with at least one million users must provide a “streamlined process” for Colorado authorities to contact them and must comply with search warrants within 72 hours. Platforms must submit yearly reports to the state detailing how minors engage with their services, including any large-scale product experiments (though a controversial clause on minor-targeted testing was removed).
After passing the House and Senate, the bill must first be signed by House Speaker Julie McCluskie before going to Polis, who has expressed reservations about the proposed SB 25-086 due to government overreach and privacy. Once he receives it, he has 10 days to sign it, veto it or let it become law without his signature. If he vetoes it, the Legislature can override his decision with a two-thirds majority vote in both chambers. (Related: Republican senators co-sponsor bill against social media censorship.)
While Polis has not yet signed SB 25-086, supporters and critics of the bill continue their argument trying to influence the governor in his decision. Supporters argue the bill is critical for protecting children from online harms, insisting it balances safety, privacy and free speech. Supporters, including bipartisan lawmakers and parent groups, even held a press conference at the Capitol in Denver on April 14, urging Polis to approve the measure. They argue that social media companies have failed to self-regulate, leading to rising mental health issues among teens.
“This bill simply says that for users egregiously harming our kids, they cannot be given endless chances to continue victimizing others. If this kind of conduct that we see on these social media platforms were happening on the street, there would be no question about intervention. None,” Sen. Lisa Frizell, a Castle Rock Republican and bill sponsor, said during the press conference.
However, opponents fear the bill could erode constitutional rights, enable government overreach and stifle digital innovation. Privacy advocates warn that forcing platforms to automatically remove users based on violations, without robust safeguards, could lead to censorship and disproportionately silence marginalized voices.
Michael McReynolds, a legislative liaison for the Governor’s Office of Information Technology, expressed concerns about letting private social media companies decide whether a user violated the law and should be banned.
“Our main concern is the discomfort with this bill’s reliance on private companies to interpret and enforce the First Amendment. Delegating the nuanced and complex task of balancing free speech rights with the protection of vulnerable populations to private entities raises significant concerns about consistency, transparency and potential for overreach,” he said during a House committee hearing on the bill in March. “If someone is using an expression and talking about that activity, where is that line, and how is that being interpreted?”
He also raised concerns about how the data collection rule could clash with the state’s privacy laws.
PrivacyWatch.news has more stories like this.
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