10/02/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/02/2025 11:00
NEW YORK - New York Attorney General Letitia James today announced that social media companies must start reporting their content moderation policies to her office, as required by the "Stop Hiding Hate" Act. This law, sponsored by Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal and Assemblymember Grace Lee and signed by Governor Hochul, requires platforms to submit biannual reports on whether and how their existing policies deal with hate speech, racism, misinformation, and other types of content. The law applies to any social media company operating in New York that generates over $100 million in gross annual revenue. As of today, social media companies can submit their content moderation reports online by January 1.
"With violence and polarization on the rise, social media companies must ensure that their platforms don't fuel hateful rhetoric and disinformation," said Attorney General James. "The Stop Hiding Hate Act requires social media companies to share their content moderation policies publicly and with my office to ensure that these companies are more transparent about how they are addressing harmful content on their platforms. I thank Governor Hochul, Senator Hoylman-Sigal, and Assemblymember Lee for their work on this legislation to ensure transparency and accountability."
"Whether in our communities or online, my top priority is keeping New Yorkers safe," said Governor Kathy Hochul. "Social media platforms should be a place for people to connect and share their interests - not a place where individuals can hide behind a keyboard to spread hate speech or harass others. This legislation builds on our efforts to improve safety online and marks an important step to increase transparency and accountability."
"As real and threatened political violence emanates from the spread of hate speech and disinformation online, the Stop Hiding Hate Act will ensure that New Yorkers are able to know what social media companies are doing (or not doing) to stop the spread of hatred and misinformation on their platforms," said Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal. "The commencement of required reporting by social media companies is an important milestone and first step toward allowing New Yorkers to be able to better decide which social media platforms they utilize. The transparency and accountability resulting from the reporting required by the Stop Hiding Hate Act will reduce the circulation of malevolent white supremacy, antisemitism, islamophobia, anti-LGBTQ hatred and anti-AAPI violence. New Yorkers deserve this information, and I am happy to stand with Attorney General Letitia James, Assemblymember Grace Lee, and the Anti-Defamation League as we start to shed a light on the darkness that is social media content moderation."
"Starting today, New Yorkers will finally get the transparency they deserve from social media companies," said Assemblymember Grace Lee. "For too long, attention-driven algorithms have amplified harmful content with little accountability. The Stop Hiding Hate Act changes that by requiring clear reporting and real oversight. During COVID, the Asian American community felt firsthand how online lies can fuel real-world violence. Transparency and data are essential tools to hold platforms accountable. I'm proud to have worked with Attorney General Letitia James, Senator Hoylman-Sigal, and the ADL to protect New Yorkers from online harm."
In December 2024, the "Stop Hiding Hate" Act was signed into law to ensure that social media companies are more transparent and accountable for content on their platforms. The law requires social media companies to biannually submit their terms of service reports to the Office of the Attorney General (OAG), including statements on the terms of services and how they define hate speech or racism, extremism or radicalization, disinformation or misinformation, harassment, and foreign political interference, as well as how they enforce those policies, and steps taken and data on flagged and actioned items of content.
Key Requirements of the "Stop Hiding Hate" Act include:
In their biannual reports, social media companies must provide specific data, including:
Social media companies that fail to post their terms of service, submit a required report, or file a materially incomplete or misleading report may face a civil penalty of up to $15,000 per violation per day.