Chatbot Lockdown: Minnesota’s Bold Plan to Age-Gate AI
March 10th, 2026
Minnesota’s Senate File 1857 has emerged as a focal point in the 2026 legislative session, aiming to establish one of the nation’s strictest frameworks for minor access to artificial intelligence. Authored by Senator Erin Maye Quade, the bipartisan bill would prohibit any entity from allowing individuals under 18 to access “recreational” chatbots. To enforce this, the legislation mandates that platforms implement robust age-verification systems, with the Minnesota Attorney General empowered to seek civil penalties of up to $5,000,000 for non-compliance. Supporters argue the move is a necessary response to “AI companions” that can bypass parental controls and expose children to psychologically harmful or hypersexualized content.
However, the bill faces significant headwinds regarding its practical and legal feasibility. Critics and industry groups warn that the broad definition of “recreational” could inadvertently block minors from creative or educational tools that simply happen to be engaging. Furthermore, the requirement for age verification raises substantial privacy concerns, as it often necessitates the collection of sensitive biometric data or government IDs. Opponents also point to potential First Amendment challenges, noting that similar age-gating laws in other states have been stalled by courts for placing “unnecessary burdens” on the free speech rights of adults.
As SF 1857 moves through the Senate Judiciary and Public Safety Committee, lawmakers are grappling with how to balance child safety with digital privacy. While the intent is to prevent AI-driven harm, the “outlier” status of the bill—which lacks the more flexible “parental consent” models seen in other states—suggests a difficult road ahead.
Whether the bill can survive constitutional scrutiny while effectively defining the line between a helpful tool and a harmful digital peer remains the central question.
Re-Engineering Social Media for Youth Safety
March 9th, 2026
Minnesota House File 4138, the “Stop Harms from Addictive Social Media Act,” proposes a sweeping overhaul of how platforms with over $1 billion in annual revenue interact with users aged 15 and younger. Introduced by Representative Peggy Scott, the bipartisan bill would require these “covered platforms” to obtain verifiable parental consent before a minor can create an account and mandates that privacy settings default to the highest possible level. Most notably, the legislation seeks to ban “addictive interface features”—such as infinite scrolling, autoplay videos, and algorithmically curated “profile-based feeds”—for young users, while also prohibiting targeted commercial advertising in their feeds.
Despite its focus on child protection, the bill faces significant criticism regarding its technical and legal feasibility. Opponents, including the Computer & Communications Industry Association, argue that banning curated feeds could backfire by removing the algorithmic filters that currently help suppress harmful or age-inappropriate content. Critics also warn that the bill’s requirement for continuous age estimation and parental verification would force companies to collect and store more sensitive data, such as government IDs or biometrics, creating new privacy risks. Furthermore, legal experts suggest the bill may struggle with First Amendment challenges, as courts have historically viewed broad restrictions on digital content and access with skepticism.
