2026 Legislative Session

AB 1705

CFC Supports

Pornographic internet websites

Authors: CA Assemblywoman Rebecca Bauer-Kahan , CA Assemblywoman Diane Dixon
Latest Action: From committee: Do pass and re-refer to P., D.T., & C.P. (Ayes 11. Noes 0.) (June 16). Re-referred to P., D.T., & C.P.
Child Exploitation

CFC Says

CFC supports AB 1705.

Currently at 2nd Committee, having cleared 3 stages. Hearing in Senate Privacy, Digital Technologies and Consumer Protection Committee today.

Legislative Progress

Introduced Passed 2026-02-04
Committee Passed 2026-02-23
Floor Vote Passed 2026-05-21
2nd Committee Current stage 2026-06-17
2nd Floor Vote Pending
Governor Pending

Official Description

Existing law generally regulates obscene content on internet websites, including requiring a social media platform to provide a means for a user who is a California resident to report material to the social media platform that the user reasonably believes is child sexual abuse material and prohibiting an operator of an internet website directed to minors from advertising obscene matter to minors. Under existing law, a person who distributes an image of an intimate body part or act of sexual intercourse of an identifiable person, under specified circumstances that include an agreement or understanding that the image would remain private, is guilty of a crime. This bill would require an operator of a pornographic internet website, among other things, to exercise ordinary care and reasonable diligence to ensure that each instance of sexually explicit content displayed on the operator’s pornographic internet website does not include a depicted individual. The bill would define terms, including “depicted person,” for its purposes. This bill would also require an operator to exercise ordinary care and take reasonable steps to ensure that each instance of sexually explicit content uploaded to the operator’s pornographic internet website does not include a depicted individual. The bill would require a user of a pornographic internet website, before uploading sexually explicit content, to submit specific information to the operator, including a statement certifying, under penalty of perjury, that each individual depicted in the sexually explicit content meets certain criteria. Under the bill, knowingly providing false information in the user statement would be punishable as an infraction with a specified fine. By expanding the crime of perjury and creating a new crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program. This bill would authorize a depicted individual and a public prosecutor to bring a civil action to enforce these provisions, as prescribed. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement. This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.

Learn More

Full Bill Text CA LegInfo

Legislator Votes on This Bill

125 Aye
0 Nay
10 Abstain/NVR
Unlock Full Details
Create a free account to see:
  • Detailed voting records & roll calls
  • Upcoming committee hearings
  • AI-powered bill analysis
  • Bill sponsors & legislative history