Sen. Josh Hawley Joshua (Josh) David HawleyThis week: Senate races to wrap up work before recess Romney to vote against budget deal: Agreement 'perpetuates fiscal recklessness' Hillicon Valley: FTC fines Facebook B in privacy settlement | Critics pan settlement as weak | Facebook also faces FTC antitrust probe | Senate panel advances 'deepfakes' legislation | House passes anti-robocall bill MORE (R-Mo.), a freshman who has emerged as a top Republican critic of major technology companies in Congress, on Tuesday will introduce a bill banning social media companies from building "addictive" features into their products.

Hawley's Social Media Addiction Reduction Technology Act would make it illegal for social media platforms to hook users by offering them more content than they requested in order to get them to continue on their respective platforms.

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The bill takes aim at practices specifically employed by the country's top social networking sites — YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Snapchat.

For example, it would ban YouTube's "autoplay" feature, which loads up new videos for users automatically; Facebook and Twitter's "infinite scroll," which allows users to continue scrolling through their homepages without limit; and Snapchat's "streaks," which reward users for continuing to send photos to their friends.

It would also require the companies to build "user-friendly" interfaces, with features allowing users to limit the amount of time they spend on the platform and offering reminders how much time they've spent perusing the site.

"Big tech has embraced a business model of addiction," Hawley said in a statement. "Too much of the ‘innovation’ in this space is designed not to create better products, but to capture more attention by using psychological tricks that make it difficult to look away."

Hawley's legislation would empower the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and state attorneys to take action against companies that did not remove "addictive" features within a few months.

It would also allow the FTC and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to jointly write new rules aimed at getting ahead of new "deceptive" tactics, anticipating that there will be new innovations in technology that the bill doesn't cover.

The addictive features targeted by Hawley's legislation can be considered as a form of "dark patterns," or design features that nudge users into certain behavior without their explicit knowledge.

Sens. Mark Warner Mark Robert WarnerDemocrats take another stab at preventing foreign election interference Collins is first GOP senator to back bill requiring campaigns report foreign assistance offers to FBI GOP senator introduces bill banning 'addictive' social media features MORE (D-Va.) and Deb Fischer Debra (Deb) Strobel FischerOvernight Defense: Esper sworn in as Pentagon chief | Confirmed in 90-8 vote | Takes helm as Trump juggles foreign policy challenges | Senators meet with woman accusing defense nominee of sexual assault Lobbying World On The Money: Labor secretary under fire over Epstein plea deal | Trump defends Acosta as Dems call for ouster | Biden releases tax returns showing steep rise in income | Tech giants to testify at House antitrust hearing MORE (R-Neb.) in April introduced legislation prohibiting the largest online platforms — like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube — from using dark patterns by giving the FTC more jurisdiction over the issue.

Hawley has introduced an expansive array of tech-related bills during this Congress, addressing issues from children's online privacy to video game design. While the bulk of this legislation has not seen significant movement beyond gathering a few bipartisan co-sponsors, Hawley has attracted an army of aggressive critics ranging from Silicon Valley trade groups to free market conservatives in Washington.

Hawley in a May op-ed even suggested that Americans may be better off without social media entirely.

"This is a digital drug," he wrote. "And the addiction is the point."

The Missouri Republican caused his biggest splash earlier this year when he introduced a bill that would make alterations tech's legal shield, known as Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. Hawley's Section 230 bill, responding to accusations from conservatives that Big Tech is biased against right-wing perspectives, would require the FTC to audit the country's largest tech companies to ensure they are not censoring political perspectives.

Hawley's latest social media legislation does not yet have any co-sponsors.