Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle II— Protection of Children and Other Persons › Chapter 209— CHILD PROTECTION AND SAFETY › Subchapter I— SEX OFFENDER REGISTRATION AND NOTIFICATION › Part A— Sex Offender Registration and Notification › § 20917
The Attorney General must set up a secure system that lets social networking sites check whether a user’s internet identifier matches an entry in the National Sex Offender Registry and only shows matches. The system must not require or allow sites to send all their users’ internet identifiers to the system operator. It must use strong protections so the registry data and identifiers stay secret and unreadable. If a site finds a match, it can ask the Attorney General for the person’s name, sex, resident address, photograph, and physical description, and the Attorney General must give that information quickly. A site must apply to the Attorney General to use the system and give basic information about the site, why it wants access, who will use it, and rules to notify and let people challenge denials and to report registry errors. Approved sites can search as often as allowed, must pay any fee set by the Attorney General, and must limit who can see matched identifiers. The Attorney General can deny or stop access for false or improper use. No one may publish the list of matched identifiers. Lawsuits over a site’s use are barred except for intentional misconduct, actual malice, reckless disregard for a serious risk of harm without legal reason, or acting for a purpose unrelated to the system. Using the system is optional and sites face no penalty for not using it.
Full Legal Text
Navy — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 20917
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60