The bill's scope and enforcement mechanisms remain partially undefined. The legislation targets services meeting user thresholds to be determined later and exempts private messaging and basic internet providers. Compliance penalties are substantial—administrative fines up to $10 million or 3 percent of global gross revenue, with criminal penalties reaching $20 million or 5 percent of revenue—but the specific criteria for regulatory designation and compliance timelines have not been clarified.
Attorneys advising technology companies, social media platforms, and AI developers should monitor this legislation closely. Canada is the first jurisdiction to impose direct safety duties on AI chatbot services, and the bill's simultaneous regulation of age verification, content labeling, rapid takedown obligations, and AI systems creates significant compliance uncertainty. Legal analysis from major firms is expected in early July, and the bill's passage through Parliament will determine whether this framework becomes binding on Canadian and foreign operators serving Canadian users.