Amendment #127 to H4789
Digital Child Labor and Online Content Creation Protections
Representatives Jones of North Reading, Ferguson of Holden, Frost of Auburn, Gifford of Wareham, Barrows of Mansfield and Smola of Warren move to amend the bill by adding the following two sections:
“SECTION AA. Chapter 149 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2022 Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after section 203 the following section:-
Section 204. Digital Child Labor; Online Content
(a)For the purposes of this section, the following words shall have the following meanings:-
‘Compensation’ shall mean any monetary payment or other valuable consideration received in exchange for video content.
‘Minor’ shall mean an individual under the age of 16 years old.
‘Online platform’ shall mean any public-facing website, web application, or digital application, including a mobile application. ‘Online platform’ includes a social network, advertising network, mobile operating system, search engine, email service, or Internet access service.
‘Vlogger’ shall mean an individual or family that creates video content, performed in the Commonwealth, in exchange for compensation, and includes any proprietorship, partnership, company, or other corporate entity assuming the name or identity of a particular individual or family for the purposes of that content creation. "Vlogger" does not include any person under the age of 16 who produces his or her own vlogs.
(b) A minor under the age of 16 shall be considered engaged in the work of vlogging when the following criteria are met at any time during the previous 12-month period:
(1) At least 30 per cent of the vlogger's compensated video content produced within a 30-day period included the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor. Content percentage shall be measured by the percentage of time the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor visually appears or is the subject of an oral narrative in a video segment, as compared to the total length of the segment; and
(2) The number of views received per video segment on any online platform met the online platform's threshold for the generation of compensation or the vlogger received actual compensation for video content equal to or greater than $0.10 per view.
(c) With the exception of subsection (b), the provisions of this section shall not apply to a minor engaged in the work of vlogging.
(d) All vloggers whose content features a minor under the age of 16 engaged in the work of vlogging shall maintain the following records and shall provide them to the minor on an ongoing basis:
(1) The name and documentary proof of the age of the minor engaged in the work of vlogging;
(2) The number of vlogs that generated compensation as described in subsection (b) during the reporting period;
(3) The total number of minutes of the vlogs that the vlogger received compensation for during the reporting period;
(4) The total number of minutes each minor was featured in vlogs during the reporting period;
(5) The total compensation generated from vlogs featuring a minor during the reporting period; and
(6) The amount deposited into the trust account for the benefit of the minor engaged in the work of vlogging, as required by section 204A.
(e) If a vlogger whose vlog content features minors under the age of 16 engaged in the work of vlogging fails to maintain the records as provided in subsection (d), the minor may commence a civil action to enforce the provisions of this section.
SECTION BB.Chapter 149 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2022 Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after section 204, as inserted by SECTION AA, the following section:-
Section 204A. Minor engaged in the work of vlogging; trust fund
(a) A minor satisfying the criteria described in subsection (b) of section 204 shall be compensated by the vlogger. The vlogger shall set aside gross earnings on the video content, including the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor, in a trust account to be preserved for the benefit of the minor upon reaching the age of majority, according to the following distribution:
(1) Where only one minor meets the content threshold as defined in subsection (b) of section 204, the percentage of total gross earnings on any video segment, including the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor, that is equal to or greater than half of the content percentage that includes the minor as described in subsection (b) of section 204; or
(2) Where more than one minor meets the content threshold as defined in subsection (b) of section 204 and a video segment includes more than one of those minors, the percentage described in paragraph (1) for all minors in any segment shall be equally divided between the minors, regardless of differences in percentage of content provided by the individual minors.
(b) A trust account required under this section shall provide, at a minimum, the following:
(1) That the funds in the account shall be available only to the minor engaged in the work of vlogging;
(2) That the account shall be held by a bank, corporate fiduciary, or trust company; and
(3) That the funds in the account shall become available to the minor engaged in the work of vlogging upon the minor attaining the age of 18 years or until the minor is declared emancipated.
(c) If a vlogger knowingly or recklessly violates this section, a minor satisfying the criteria described in subsection (b) of section 204 may commence a civil action to enforce the provisions of this section regarding the trust account. The court may award, to a minor who prevails in any action brought in accordance with this section, the following damages:
(1) Actual damages;
(2) Punitive damages; and
(3) The costs of the action, including attorney's fees and litigation costs.
(d) Nothing in this section shall affect any party that is neither the vlogger nor the minor engaged in the work of vlogging.”