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Survivor Parents Express Disappointment, Urge House Energy & Commerce to Advance Stronger, Bipartisan Version of KOSA

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Dec. 11, 2025

Contact: Ashwin Verghese, Communications Director, [email protected], 508-263-0289

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) December 11 — Members of ParentsSOS, a coalition of 20 survivor families who have lost children to online harms, attended today’s markup of the Kids Online Safety Act in the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade.

Joann Bogard, mother of Mason Bogard, forever 15, issued the following statement on ParentsSOS’s behalf: 

“Today’s subcommittee markup, like the revised House text of the Kids Online Safety Act, was a disappointment and a missed opportunity to deliver strong protections for American families. As our coalition has stated time and again, any online safety legislation must include, at the very least, a ‘Duty of Care’ that requires Big Tech companies to prevent and mitigate compulsive use and other online harms. It must also not preempt existing online safety and privacy legislation and preserve states’ rights to protect children in the future from harms we may not yet be aware of. 

“We appreciate that the House and Energy & Commerce Committee has been willing to hear our concerns and that they are open to making changes between now and full Committee markup. But we must reiterate: if the House version of KOSA is not significantly strengthened, we will have no choice but to oppose it.

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ParentsSOS, an educational initiative formed by bereaved families to combat online harms, will continue to provide educational resources and advocate for legislative change to protect children online. For more information about ParentsSOS and their mission, visit www.parentssos.org.