Title 47 › Chapter 8— NATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION ADMINISTRATION › Subchapter III— MISCELLANEOUS › § 941
Requires the agency in charge of the U.S. country-code domain to make and run a second-level web domain that only shows content that is safe and appropriate for kids. The registry chosen to run the U.S. domain must agree, during the 90-day period beginning on December 4, 2002 (or within 90 days after a successor registry is chosen), to run the new kids’ domain under the rules in the law. The new domain must be up and running no later than one year after December 4, 2002. The registry must have written content rules (but the agency cannot write those rules), contracts with registrars and with registrants that require following the rules, ways to stop and remove content that breaks the rules, a fast and fair process for registrants to challenge removals, and steps to keep service running during any change of registry. The registry must try to keep registrant contact information accurate, ban two-way or multiuser interactive services unless the registrant certifies they meet safety rules, ban links that take users outside the new domain, and do any other needed actions to meet the law’s goals. The agency must publicize the domain and start a parent-education program within 30 days after the domain opens. The registry must work with federal agencies to prevent predatory targeting, must report each year to Congress about monitoring and enforcement, and the agency can order the domain suspended if it is not working as intended. When carrying out these duties, the registry, contractors who check content, and registrars that follow the agreements are treated as interactive computer services under 47 U.S.C. 230(c), but only for the work they do under this domain. Definitions (one line each): “harmful to minors” — material that appeals to sexual prurient interest, shows sexually explicit or patently offensive sexual content for minors, and lacks serious value for minors; “minor” — anyone under 13 years old; “registry” — the entity chosen to run the U.S. country-code domain; “successor registry” — any entity that later gets the contract to run the U.S. domain covering periods after the contract signed on October 26, 2001; “suitable for minors” — material that is not inappropriate for children and that serves their educational, informational, intellectual, social, emotional, or entertainment needs.
Full Legal Text
Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
47 U.S.C. § 941
Title 47 — Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60