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EXCLUSIVE
Tech News

Tech CEOs expected to endorse legislation and preview policy decisions at Senate child safety hearing

The CEOs of X and Snap on Wednesday plan to commit to various measures with child safety in mind.
Linda Yaccarino, CEO, X, speaks onstage during Vox Media's 2023 Code Conference
X CEO Linda Yaccarino at Vox Media's Code Conference in Dana Point, Calif., in September.Jerod Harris / Getty Images for Vox Media file

WASHINGTON — Tech CEOs are set to testify Wednesday at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing about child safety issues on social media platforms and will offer rare policy commitments and regulatory endorsements, company representatives said.

The hearing, which has attracted significant attention in the tech industry and Washington, will bring together the CEOs of X, TikTok, Discord, Meta and Snap to address concerns and questions about how platforms are considering their impact on children.

Such committee hearings with tech CEOs have often been adversarial, and this hearing is projected to be no different. But representatives from some of the tech companies called to testify said their CEOs will offer olive branches to senators and the public in the form of legislative endorsements and policy assurances.

X's chief of U.S. and Canadian public policy, Wifredo Fernandez, told NBC News that CEO Linda Yaccarino would offer support for the SHIELD Act and other child safety legislation.

The SHIELD Act, introduced by Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., would criminalize the transmission of nonconsensual intimate images and sexualized depictions of children.

Other child safety laws proposed in the Senate include the Kids Online Safety Act, or KOSA, which would create a "duty of care" for social media companies that recommend content to minors. Also introduced in the Senate is the Stop CSAM Act (CSAM stands for child sexual abuse material), which aims to expand protections for minor victims, enhance child abuse reporting requirements and make it easier for victims to request that content be removed from platforms.

Last week, Snap was one of the first major social media platforms to stand behind KOSA, telling Politico that the legislation aligned with its existing policies.

In November, Meta published a blog post advocating for federal legislation that “requires app stores to get parents’ approval whenever their teens under 16 download apps.”

Tech companies have been slow to advocate for legislation that would create regulation in their industry.

A source close to the Senate Judiciary Committee said part of the larger strategy behind the hearings was to publicly pressure CEOs for such commitments and create a pathway to pass legislation this year.

snapchat ceo co-founder happy smile
Snap Inc. co-founder and CEO Evan Spiegel at the Disrupt SF conference at the Moscone Center in San Francisco in 2019.Justin Sullivan / Getty Images file

Yaccarino isn't the only CEO planning to make such announcements Wednesday.

A representative for SNAP said CEO Evan Spiegel will share that the company won’t further deploy encryption on Snapchat in ways that might prevent scanning for child sexual abuse material.

Elements of Snapchat are already encrypted, like single person-to-person photo messages, but Snapchat says it does proactively scan other parts of Snapchat and other communications for child sexual abuse material or content that might indicate other dangerous behaviors.

The deployment of encryption on apps has been deeply controversial.

Many child safety advocates say end-to-end encryption, which makes it difficult for law enforcement to obtain messages from people suspected of being child predators, does irreparable harm to investigations that could save lives. Privacy advocates have said that encryption of digital communications should be considered a human right and that it offers protection from surveillance for victims and whistleblowers.