Digital Public Decency & Anti-Trafficking Act
Protecting every child online. Rescuing trafficking victims. Defending free speech. Respecting human dignity. Costing taxpayers nothing.
The Internet Has No Front Door
Walk into any bar, any R-rated movie, any adult store in America—you'll be asked to prove your age. That's been the law for over a century. But the internet? A child can access the most extreme content on Earth with a single click and a lie. That's not freedom. That's a failure.
Nearly three in four kids have seen online pornography before they're old enough to drive. Most first encountered it between ages 10 and 13.
Victims coerced into filming received a $13 million judgment. The men behind it were convicted. But the videos are still online.
The parent company of the world's largest porn sites admitted in a federal agreement to receiving money from sex trafficking. A click-through checkbox didn't stop that.
Same Rules Online as Downtown
For 200 years, America has said: do what you want in your home, but public spaces have standards. A child shouldn't stumble into an adult store while walking to school. The internet is a public space too. This bill applies the same common-sense rules that have always existed—updated for the digital age.
Real Age Verification for Viewers
Before accessing adult content, you prove you're 18+. Not by clicking a button—through a real, private verification system. You pick the method: anonymous token, device check, third-party ID, or credit card. Your identity is never shared with the website.
Performer Verification
Every person appearing in adult content must be verified as a legal adult who's participating voluntarily. Viewers see an anonymous confirmation—never a performer's real name or personal info. This is how we catch trafficking.
Digital Zoning
Just like cities zone adult businesses away from schools, this bill creates a digital version. Adult content still exists for adults who want it—but it's behind a locked door, not sitting in the middle of the sidewalk where any kid can see it.
Supreme Court Approved
In Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton (2025), the Supreme Court ruled that age verification for adult sites is constitutional. Smartphones made old parental filters useless. Mandatory verification is the least restrictive way to protect kids.
Every Person Has Inherent Worth
This isn't just a regulatory bill. It's a statement about who we are. Every major faith tradition and every secular ethical system agrees: human beings have dignity that can't be bought or sold. Trafficking victims aren't statistics. They're people whose dignity was stolen—and this bill helps give it back.
Christianity
The body as a Temple. Compassion for the suffering. Redemption for the broken.
Judaism
Pikuach nefesh—saving life. Kavod ha'adam—human dignity. Protecting the vulnerable.
Islam
Humans as khalifa—trustees of creation. Special duty to free those in bondage.
Buddhism
Metta—loving-kindness. Ahimsa—do no harm. Compassion for all who suffer.
Secular Humanism
Inherent human worth. Self-determination. The obligation to protect people from exploitation.
Victim Flourishing Metrics
This bill measures success not just by arrests—but by whether victims actually heal.
Health
Trauma recovery, therapy, physical healing
Autonomy
Freedom to choose, power over your own life
Connection
Family reunification, community, belonging
Security
Safe housing, stable job, financial independence
Purpose
Hope, goals, meaning, a reason to wake up
Dignity
Knowing you matter. Knowing you are worthy.
This Bill Protects Free Speech
Some people will say this threatens the First Amendment. They're wrong. This bill has six carved-out exemptions protecting art, education, medicine, science, news, and documentary work. Museums get a legal presumption that their content is protected. So do schools, hospitals, and newsrooms. The bill regulates commerce, not speech.
Fine Art
Paintings, sculpture, photography, and visual art with real artistic intent are fully exempt. Michelangelo stays online.
Medical & Health
Sexual health education, reproductive information, and medical content are completely protected.
Education
University courses, sex ed, art history, and academic research are exempt. Period.
Science
Scientific publications and anthropological research continue without restriction.
News & Documentary
Journalism, documentaries, and historical reporting are fully protected. The press stays free.
Institutional Presumption
Museums, galleries, libraries, schools, and newsrooms get an automatic legal presumption of protection.
This Bill Does Not Target Adults
Adults can still access any legal content they want—after verifying their age, the same way they've always had to at a liquor store or R-rated movie. This bill targets access without verification, not the content itself. Private viewing by verified adults is fully protected under Stanley v. Georgia.
AI Fakes Are Already Here
Artificial intelligence can now create fake explicit images of real people—your neighbor, your coworker, your child. Without their knowledge. Without their consent. This bill is one of the first to draw a clear legal line: if you make a fake nude of a real person without their permission, that's a crime.
Mandatory Labels
All AI-generated explicit content must be clearly labeled as synthetic. No pretending it's real.
No Fake Nudes of Real People
Creating a deepfake explicit image of someone without their written consent is illegal under this bill.
Age Gates Still Apply
Even if no real person is shown, AI-generated explicit content still requires viewer age verification.
Your Privacy Is Sacred
The biggest concern people have about age verification is: what about my privacy? This bill answers that with the strictest data protections in any federal internet law. Your identity is confirmed, then the data disappears. No one builds a list. No one tracks what you watch.
ποΈ Data Minimization
Websites can only collect the bare minimum needed to confirm you're 18. ID documents are deleted within 30 days. Verification records last 3 years max.
π« No Watching-Habit Databases
It is explicitly illegal to build a database of what people watch. Your viewing history is never recorded, never sold, never shared.
π Anonymous Tokens Preferred
Congress declares that privacy-first methods are preferred. The best option: an anonymous token that says "yes, this person is 18+" without revealing who they are.
ποΈ No Government Bulk Collection
The bill explicitly bans the government from using verification data for surveillance. No bulk collection. No backdoors. No exceptions.
Costs Taxpayers Nothing
This bill is 100% self-funded. The adult industry pays the regulatory fees. Those fees fund enforcement and the Trafficking Victim Rescue Fund. Not a penny comes from your taxes.
Industry-funded fees scaled by company revenue, from $500 for the smallest sites to $500,000+ for the biggest. The companies that profit from adult content pay to regulate it.
Trafficking Victim Fund dedicated to rescue, rehabilitation, safe housing, job training, counseling, and family reunification. Measured by Victim Flourishing Metrics.
Annual reporting to Congress on fee revenue, enforcement costs, and how every dollar is spent. Total transparency. Total accountability.
10-year sunset. The law expires automatically unless Congress reauthorizes it based on GAO review and proven results including Victim Flourishing outcomes.
Built-In Protection Against Government Overreach
This bill was written by someone who doesn't trust government power any more than you do. That's why it has more guardrails than any comparable internet regulation ever proposed. The regulatory agency can't expand the rules. Congress reserved every major decision to itself. And courts have fast-track review for any First Amendment challenge.
What This Bill Promises
Protect Kids. Rescue Victims. Respect Freedom.
This is common sense that's been common law for 200 years. It's time to bring the digital world up to the same standard as the physical one. Read the full bill. Share it. Tell your representative.