Nebraska digital reality posture profile
This page summarizes six tracked digital safety topics for Nebraska, showing where public legislative coverage currently looks more proactive, more reactive, broader, or thinner. It is a structural posture signal based on public disclosures, not a political or legal grade.
Last reviewed May 12, 2026.
Educational summary only
Not legal advice. Laws and enforcement change frequently. Verify current official statutes, regulations, and counsel where needed.
Overall state posture signal
Proactive-leaning posture with narrow tracked coverage.
Based on six tracked topics and public disclosures.
Posture meter
Lean and breadth across six tracked topics. Not a quality or political score.
Lean
Proactive-leaning
Breadth
Narrow tracked coverage
Nebraska Youth & Social Media law summary
Based on direct statute tracking.
Nebraska's Parental Rights in Social Media Act (LB 383) was passed on Final Reading 46–3 on May 14, 2025 and approved by the Governor on May 20, 2025. The act establishes state-level requirements related to minors' access to social media — the precise platform duties live in the enrolled bill text.
Educational summary only
Not legal advice. Laws and enforcement change frequently. Verify current official statutes, regulations, and counsel where needed.
Why this status
Based on direct statute tracking.
What this means
- Nebraska's rule places duties on social-media platforms — age-verification and parental-consent processes are the structural surfaces. It doesn't place direct duties on parents.
- The exact obligations on platforms — including the age threshold, the consent mechanism, and which services count as covered — live in the enrolled bill text.
- Federal rules (COPPA for under-13 data) may also apply alongside this state law.
What to do next
- Read the enrolled text of LB 383 on the Nebraska Legislature site for the operative effective date and the precise duties placed on platforms.
- Check the Nebraska Attorney General's office for implementation guidance or enforcement statements — and watch for any court challenge that could pause enforcement.
Citation-grade sources
Official sources
1Nebraska LB 383 — Parental Rights in Social Media Act, official legislative history
Official textCitation: LB 383 (109th Legislature)
Observed: 2026-05-04Official Nebraska Legislature record showing LB383 passed Final Reading 46-3 on May 14, 2025 and was approved by the Governor on May 20, 2025.
Open source
Provenance
Source basis
Official links still being curated
Confidence
High confidence
Review scope
Review centered on currently tracked state-level law
Last reviewed
May 8, 2026
References
Nebraska LB 383 — Parental Rights in Social Media Act, official legislative history
Official Nebraska Legislature record showing LB383 passed Final Reading 46-3 on May 14, 2025 and was approved by the Governor on May 20, 2025.
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