I am delighted to announce the release of our new parents’ guides to two of the most popular social apps among teens, Instagram and Snapchat. You can read or download and print the free guides at ConnectSafely.org. Just 6 pages – including the “Top 5 Questions” parents have about each app right up front – [...]
The overall message from the Federal Trade Commission to mobile app developers has moved from guidance to what I’d call guidance+. The guidance appears to be growing teeth. The commission, which enforces COPPA (the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act), reached a settlement with Path, a social network site and mobile app that agreed to pay [...]
Also filed in children's privacy, consumer privacy, family privacy, Parenting, Privacy, privacy education
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Tagged apps, COPPA, FTC, mobile platform, Path, Privacy
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Snapchat, the little app that came out of nowhere – well, Stanford University, but launched with no media fanfare by a couple of students whose service now supports 50 million snaps a day – has been joined by a similar “ephemeral messaging” app by Facebook: Poke. But now that perishable photo-sharing (the photos disappear in [...]
Also filed in apps, Digital Tech, Mobile, mobile communications, mobile socializing, mobile technology, photo-sharing
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Tagged apps, cellphones, ephemeral messaging, Facebook, mobile technology, photo-sharing, Poke, Snapchat
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Only 20% of the 400 children’s apps the FTC analyzed “provided disclosures about their data collection practices,” the New York Times reported today – and the apps that did linked to long, dense privacy policies that few users could comprehend. The Federal Trade Commission’s announcement does not surprise; it’s an update of the Commission’s report [...]
Also filed in apps, children's privacy, consumer privacy, COPPA, data privacy, Law & Policy, Parenting, Privacy
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Tagged children's privacy, consumer privacy, COPPA, FTC, mobile apps, mobile privacy
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You know that texting doesn’t just happen on phones, right? Kids can (and do) download a free texting app to any wi-fi-enabled device – iPod Touches, iPads, Android tablets, etc. – and text with their friends for hours without racking up any Verizon, AT&T or other mobile carriers’ charges. For the same reason that they’re [...]
Also filed in apps, Mobile, mobile communications, mobile socializing, text messages, texting
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Tagged Android, apps, cellphones, Google Play, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, mobile phones, mobile technology, SMS, texting, texts
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As of the beginning of this month, there are now a billion smartphones being used on the planet, up from 708 million a year ago, MobileBusinessBriefing.com reports, citing data from Strategy Analytics. That’s 1 in 7 people on Earth, the market research firm says, and “16 years after the first smartphone [the Nokia Communicator] was [...]
The US Federal Trade Commission has turned this week’s wakeup call about mobile-app privacy into a conference call, adding kids’ privacy to the conversation. The title of its just-released report “Mobile Apps for Kids: Current Privacy Disclosures are Disappointing” (that’s the FTC authors’ cute italicization) summarizes the Commission’s conclusions well. But to make their point [...]
Also filed in consumer privacy, data, data privacy, data security, Privacy
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Tagged cellphones, consumer privacy, data security, FTC, FTC kids apps report, kids apps, mobile apps, mobile phones, Privacy
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I’ve done it, have you? I have a feeling most of us have passed our cellphones back to a kid in the backseat so we could drive in peace while the child (who has been hounding us to let it happen) plays a game app. Of course, increasingly, this is happening with really little kids, [...]
Also filed in Mobile, mobile games, mobile learning, mobile technology, pedagogy
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Tagged ACT, Dan Donahoo, education technology, educational apps, Joan Ganz Cooney Center, kids apps, mobile apps, Moms With Apps
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Wow, remember the film American Grafitti? It’s ancient history more than ever now. Gartner research found that 46% of Americans 18-24 “prefer access to the Internet over access to their own car, and that teens drive less overall today than they did in past generations,” Forbes reports, “highlighting the impact of technology on kids and [...]
US parents may be interested to see the Times of India’s account of single mom Darshana Verma “who never learned to use a computer and saved for 10 months,” spending more than half a month’s income on mobile phones for her two children. Verma told the Times that the access to Facebook and the Internet [...]
Also filed in Mobile, mobile social networking, Social Media
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Tagged BlackBerry, cellphones, Facebook, feature phones, India, LinkedIn, mobile social networking, smartphones, Social Media, twitter
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