Photo by Christian Wiediger on Unsplash

Tennesseans could soon be required to provide a form of ID to access certain websites as a new bill moves through the legislature.

The bill titled the โ€œProtect Tennessee Minors Act,โ€ was recommended for passage from the Senate Finance, Ways and Means Committee with 10 ayes and zero nays Tuesday morning.ย 

According to Sen. Becky Massey (R-Knoxville), who introduced the bill, the legislation looks at material that is โ€œsexually explicit and harmful to minors,โ€ or appeals to prurient interest. While it is not spelled out in the billโ€™s summary, this includes pornography.

โ€œThe Protect Tennessee Minors Act requires an individual or commercial entity that publishes or distributes in this state a website that contains a substantial portion of material harmful to minors perform reasonable age-verification methods to verify the age of individuals attempting to access the material,โ€ the bill reads.

Such entities would also be required to โ€œretain at least seven years of historical anonymized age-verification data.โ€ However, they are not allowed to store any personally identifying information.

Those who violate the act would face a Class C felony.

โ€œThe number of Class C felony convictions that may result from violations of the legislationโ€™s requirements is unknown,โ€ the fiscal memorandum reads. โ€œGiven the widespread nature of such content on the internet and the number of sites that distribute it, it is assumed that the increase in such convictions could be significant.โ€

Massey went on to say that this bill would have a similar process that alcohol sites use when asking users to confirm their age before entering the site, but with โ€œhigher standards.โ€ 

โ€œYou can enter a picture of a state-issued ID or an acceptable ID then you can be on this site for up to 60 minutes, and then youโ€™d have to go off of the site if youโ€™re not still actively using it,โ€ Massey said.

Megan Moore, committee attorney, said that users would have to โ€œmatch a photo of themselves,โ€ that is โ€œmatched with a valid ID that is โ€˜a valid form of identification issued by the United States of America.โ€™โ€

Moore added that if users do not have an ID there is a second method that can be used to verify age. This alternative is defined as โ€œa commercially reasonable method relying on public or private transactional data to verify that the age of the person attempting to access the information is at least 18 or old.โ€

When asked by Sen. Joey Hensley (R-Hohenwald) what this information would be, Moore said they were unsure.