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April 24, 2024

ATLANTA — Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed into law on Tuesday a bill that includes Georgia’s version of the age verification of adult content provisions being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists.

SB 351 was introduced by Republican Sen. Jason Anavitarte, a member of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, the group founded by veteran religious conservative figurehead Ralph Reed.

As XBIZ reported, the age verification for adult content requirement was originally introduced by Republican Rep. Rick Jasperse in February as a separate House Bill, HB 910, and later inserted into SB 351.

The Georgia House passed SB 351 on a 120-45 vote and the Senate approved it 48-7, in spite of warnings by First Amendment Georgia and other civil liberties advocates.

The new law requires that social media companies verify that their users are at least 16 years of age or older, unless they receive approval from an individual’s parents to use the service, but also includes language requiring websites whose content is comprised of over a third of material that is considered “harmful to minors” — including pornography — to verify that their users are age 18 or older.

Kemp’s office announced the signing through a press release highlighting how SB 351 was a priority of Lieutenant Governor Burt Jones, who has defined himself in campaign material as ”husband, father, believer.”

The media campaign promoting the age verification requirement was being led by Georgia-based lobbying group Frontline Policy Action, led by religious Republican activist Cole Muzio, who launched it in 2017 in partnership with the national Family Policy Alliance. According to its literature, the group primarily “exists to glorify God and equip His people to transform the culture.”

The Catholic Vote news site heralded the signing of SB 351 with a peculiar, overtly censorship-endorsing headline underlining these bills’ real intention: ”Georgia joins list of states shutting down porn sites as governor signs age verification law.”