2019 -- H 5685 | |
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LC000551 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2019 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS - DUTIES OF UTILITIES AND | |
CARRIERS - HUMAN TRAFFICKING AND CHILD EXPLOITATION PREVENTION | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Roberts, Price, Quattrocchi, Nardone, and Chippendale | |
Date Introduced: February 27, 2019 | |
Referred To: House Corporations | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Chapter 39-2 of the General Laws entitled "Duties of Utilities and Carriers" |
2 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
3 | 39-2-20.2. Internet digital blocking -- Human trafficking and child exploitation |
4 | prevention. |
5 | (a) An Internet service provider, as defined in § 39-2-20.1, shall provide with any Internet |
6 | service or product sold, leased or distributed, a digital blocking capability that renders |
7 | inaccessible by default sexual content and/or patently offensive material as defined in § 11-31-1. |
8 | (b) A person who manufacturers, sells, offers for sale, leases, or distributes a product that |
9 | makes content accessible on the Internet shall: |
10 | (1) Make reasonable and ongoing efforts to ensure that the digital content blocking |
11 | capability functions properly; |
12 | (2) Establish a reporting mechanism, such as a website or call center, to allow a consumer |
13 | to report unblocked sexual content or potentially offensive material or report blocked material |
14 | that is not sexual content or potentially offensive; |
15 | (3) Ensure that all child pornography and revenge pornography is inaccessible on the |
16 | product; |
17 | (4) Prohibit the product from accessing any hub that facilitates prostitution; and |
18 | (5) Render websites that are known to facilitate human trafficking, in violation of chapter |
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1 | 67.1 of title 11, inaccessible; and |
2 | (6) Report child pornography received to the National Center for Missing and Exploited |
3 | Children's cybertipline in accordance with 18 U.S.C. § 2258A. |
4 | (c) Any digital blocking capability may be deactivated after a consumer: |
5 | (1) Requests in writing that the capability be disabled; |
6 | (2) Presents identification to verify that the consumer is eighteen (18) years of age or |
7 | older; |
8 | (3) Acknowledges receiving a written warning regarding the potential danger of |
9 | deactivating the digital blocking capability; and |
10 | (4) Pays a one-time twenty-dollar ($20.00) digital access fee to be remitted to the state to |
11 | fund the cost of upholding community standards of decency and combating sex crimes. |
12 | (d) A reasonable separate fee may be charged and retained to deactivate the digital |
13 | blocking capability. |
14 | (e) A person who manufactures, sells, offers for sale, leases, or distributes a product that |
15 | makes content accessible on the Internet shall submit the funds collected as the digital access fee, |
16 | pursuant to subsection (c)(4) of this section to the general treasurer each quarter. The general |
17 | treasurer shall forward the funds collected to the attorney general to help fund the operations of |
18 | the council on human trafficking, established by § 11-67.1-19, and for the attorney general to |
19 | issue grants to government and non-government entities and individuals that are working to |
20 | uphold community standards of decency, to strengthen families and to develop, expand, or |
21 | strengthen programs for victims of human child exploitation. This includes providing grants for: |
22 | (1) Rape-kit testing; |
23 | (2) Physical and mental health services; |
24 | (3) Temporary and permanent housing placement; |
25 | (4) Employment, placement, education, training; |
26 | (5) Prevention of human trafficking, domestic violence, prostitution, divorce child abuse, |
27 | and rape by training first responders and by increasing public awareness; |
28 | (6) Independent school districts; |
29 | (7) Victims compensation; |
30 | (8) Shelters; |
31 | (9) Family counseling; |
32 | (10) Law enforcement; and |
33 | (11) Other programs to benefit victims of human trafficking. |
34 | (f) If the digital blocking capability blocks material that is not sexual content nor patently |
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1 | offensive and the block is reported to a call center or reporting website, the material shall be |
2 | unblocked within a reasonable time, but in no event later than five (5) business days after the |
3 | block is first reported. |
4 | (g) A consumer or the attorney general may seek judicial relief to unblock filtered |
5 | content. |
6 | (h) If a person who manufacturers, sells, offers for sale, leases, or distributes a product |
7 | that makes content accessible on the Internet is unresponsive to a report of sexual content or |
8 | patently offensive material that has breached the filter required by this section, the attorney |
9 | general or a consumer may file a civil suit. The attorney general or a consumer may seek damages |
10 | of up to five hundred dollars ($500) for each website that was reported but not subsequently |
11 | blocked. The prevailing party in the civil action may seek attorneys' fees, costs and other forms of |
12 | relief. |
13 | (i) It shall be an affirmative defense in a civil action alleging violation of this section that |
14 | the dissemination of the accessible content described in this section was limited to institutions or |
15 | organizations having scientific, educational, or other similar justifications for displaying the |
16 | material covered by this section. |
17 | (j) A person who knowingly manufacturers, sells, offers for sale, leases, or distributes a |
18 | product that makes sexual content shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000) if |
19 | the person: |
20 | (1) Provides the source code or mechanism to deactivate to a minor or a nonconsenting |
21 | adult; |
22 | (2) Fails to install block capability to prevent dissemination of obscene material, child |
23 | pornography, revenge pornography, or allows access to websites that are known to facilitate |
24 | human trafficking or prostitution; or |
25 | (3) Deactivates the filter without complying with the provisions of this section. |
26 | (k) This act shall not apply to: |
27 | (1) An occasional sale of an Internet enabled device by a person that is not regularly |
28 | engaged in the trade business of selling Internet enabled devices; |
29 | (2) Products manufactured or sold before enactment; or |
30 | (3) A person who manufacturers, sells, offers for sale, leases, or distributes a product that |
31 | makes content accessible on the Internet and who is not subject to this state's jurisdiction. |
32 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect on July 1, 2020. |
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LC000551 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS - DUTIES OF UTILITIES AND | |
CARRIERS - HUMAN TRAFFICKING AND CHILD EXPLOITATION PREVENTION | |
*** | |
1 | This act would require Internet service providers to provide digital blocking by default of |
2 | sexual content and patently offensive material. It would allow consumers to deactivate digital |
3 | block upon payment of a twenty dollar ($20.00) fee. This act would also provide penalties for |
4 | violations. The act would also establish that fees be forwarded to the attorney for use to fund |
5 | programs combating human trafficking and for upholding community standards of decency. |
6 | This act would take effect on July 1, 2020. |
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LC000551 | |
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