A group of parents and advocates are heading to Capitol Hill this week in a renewed push for online safety legislation, hoping to build on the momentum of court wins against social media companies last month.

Around 60 parents who say their children were harmed or died because of tech platforms are set to travel from around the country to hold a vigil and speaking event Tuesday afternoon on the Capitol’s west lawn. They also aim to meet with individual lawmakers to advocate for federal legislation that would force tech companies to change their platforms to better protect minors.

Tuesday’s event will include parents who say they’ve experienced the risks of social media firsthand, as well as youth advocates and parents who say AI tools harmed their children. That includes Alicia Shamblin, who is suing OpenAI after ChatGPT allegedly encouraged her 23-year-old son Zane to die by suicide. (In response to that lawsuit, still in its early stages, OpenAI previously it was studying the details of the case and working with mental health professionals to improve its chatbot.)

“It’s time for lawmakers to choose: Are they going to side with kids and the safety of our children, or with Big Tech?” said Todd Minor, whose son Matthew died at age 12 after participating in the “choking challenge,” which Minor says he learned about on social media.

Minor is one of many parents and online safety advocates who have spent years pushing for greater federal online child safety protections. While lawmakers have grilled tech executives and whistleblowers in public hearings, legislative efforts have repeatedly stalled.

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