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SB 1341

Wildlife Corridor Grant Fund; established, wildlife carcass removal tracking, reports.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Dave Marsden

Commercial sites with over 33% harmful-to-minors content must use reasonable age verification or face civil liability and potential damages, with data-retention bans.

Left in Finance and Appropriations
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 1341

Summary — SB 1341 (FINANCE‑TECH) — Internet website liability / age verification (Arizona, 2025)

Note: The submitted document includes text from multiple bills and jurisdictions (Arizona, Hawaii, Illinois). The summary below focuses on the Arizona portion titled “Publishers and Distributers of Material Harmful to Minors” (proposed addition of Chapter 7 to Title 18, Arizona Revised Statutes), which appears to be the primary content of SB 1341 introduced 2/18/2025 by Senators Rogers and Finchem.

Purpose / intent

The bill requires commercial websites that publish a “substantial portion” of material harmful to minors to use a “reasonable age verification method” before granting access. It creates a private civil cause of action and damages for failures to verify age or for retaining users’ identifying information after access is granted. The stated intent is to reduce minor access to sexually explicit or otherwise harmful material online and to protect minors.

Key provisions

  • Civil liability: A commercial entity that intentionally or knowingly publishes or distributes material harmful to minors on a website where more than 33 1/3% of content is such material is civilly liable if it does not perform a reasonable age verification method before granting access (18‑701(A)).
  • Age verification methods: A “reasonable age verification method” includes:
    • Using an independent third‑party age verification service that (i) compares the personal information entered by the user to information in commercially available databases/aggregates and (ii) is regularly used by government agencies and businesses to verify age/identity; or
    • Any commercially reasonable method relying on public or private transactional data to verify age (18‑701(G)(7)).
  • Data retention prohibition: The commercial entity or third‑party verifier may not retain any identifying information after access is granted. If a commercial entity or third party knowingly retains identifying information after access is granted, that actor is liable for resulting damages (subsections B and D).
  • Damages: Liability includes damages resulting from a minor’s access, plus court costs and reasonable attorney fees (subsection C).
  • Exceptions and safe harbors:
    • Exempts bona fide news or public‑interest broadcasts, website videos, reports, or events and does not affect news‑gathering rights (subsection E).
    • Provides a non‑liability clause for ISPs, affiliates/subsidiaries of ISPs, search engines, and cloud providers that only provide access, transmission, storage, or connectivity where they are not responsible for creating the content (subsection F).
  • Definitions: Detailed definitions for “commercial entity,” “publish,” “distribute,” “material harmful to minors” (using contemporary community standards and specific sexual depictions), “substantial portion” (>33 1/3%), and “transactional data” (including mortgage, education, employment records) are provided (subsection G).

Who would be affected

  • Covered: Commercial entities (corporations, LLCs, partnerships, sole proprietorships, etc.) operating websites where >33.33% of content is defined as harmful to minors; third‑party age verification vendors; websites offering sexually explicit content aimed at adults.
  • Not covered: ISPs, search engines, and cloud service providers acting solely as conduits; bona fide news organizations and public‑interest reporting.

Enforcement, remedies & impacts

  • Enforcement is via private civil lawsuits by individuals harmed by a minor’s access or by retention of identifying information.
  • Potential impacts include compliance costs for implementating approved age verification technology, selection and oversight of third‑party verifiers, privacy tradeoffs (use of commercial/transactional data), and increased litigation risk for adult content publishers and service providers.
  • The data‑retention prohibition likely forces verifiers to design ephemeral verification flows or use tokenized attestations rather than storing raw identifiers.

Procedural status & sponsors

  • Introduced: February 18, 2025.
  • Status in provided record: Referred to Assignments.
  • Sponsors (per document): Senator Wendy Rogers (primary) and Senator Mark Finchem (cosponsor).

Important caveat

The transmitted document mixes material from other SB1341 texts in other states (Hawaii, Illinois) and a long list of legislative actions that appear to correspond to different jurisdictions. Those sections are not part of the Arizona statutory text summarized here. If you want, I can (a) extract and separately summarize the Hawaii and Illinois provisions shown in the document, or (b) verify the current procedural status of the Arizona SB 1341 in legislative tracking sources.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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