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 [...]
Filed in children's privacy, consumer privacy, family privacy, mobile data, Parenting, Privacy, privacy education
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Also tagged apps, FTC, mobile platform, Path, Privacy
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The US Federal Trade Commission’s revisions to the COPPA Rule announced today (12/19/12), are aimed at syncing up a rule mandated by a 1998 law with today’s technology and with “the way children use the Internet, mobile devices and social networking,” the FTC says in its press release. For example, the personal information that services [...]
Filed in children's privacy, consumer privacy, COPPA, data privacy, Law & Policy, Privacy, privacy education
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Also tagged children's online privacy, consumer privacy, FTC, New Media, privacy law, regulation
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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 [...]
Filed in apps, children's privacy, consumer privacy, COPPA, data privacy, Law & Policy, mobile data, Parenting, Privacy
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Also tagged children's privacy, consumer privacy, FTC, mobile apps, mobile privacy
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If there were no Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, teens would be safer in social media, a new study from researchers at New York University indicates (pdf). Without COPPA, children under 13 would have little to no reason to lie about their age to set up a Facebook account, for example (this would be true [...]
Filed in children's privacy, COPPA, online safety research, Privacy, Research, Risk & Safety, Social Media, social networking research, Youth-Risk Research
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Also tagged children's privacy, Facebook, New York University, online privacy, Social Media, Social Networking
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A US law about children’s online services can really only regulate US-based children’s online services. It might influence foreign regulators but it has no jurisdiction over sites and services based outside the US and can’t stop US users from leaving compliant services and going to noncompliant ones outside the US (or in it, for that [...]
Filed in children's privacy, consumer privacy, COPPA, Law & Policy, Privacy
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Also tagged Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, children's privacy, consumer privacy, FTC, Internet safety, proposed revisions, Social Media
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It’s tough to be the FTC – or anyone else trying to make rules for user-driven (social) media. It’s hard enough to make static rules address fast-changing technology. Then there’s the problem of changing understanding of consumers – the intended beneficiaries of the rules and the users of user-driven media – as we all adjust [...]
Filed in children's privacy, consumer privacy, COPPA, data privacy, Law & Policy, Privacy, privacy education, privacy rules, Research, social media research
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Also tagged FTC, laws, legislation, online safety, Privacy, regulation, under 13, unintended consequences
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A whole lot of us know that 13 is Facebook’s minimum age, but fewer of us know that the reason for that is not kids’ online safety but a law called the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act designed to protect the privacy of kids’ data – a law administered by the Federal Trade Commission, which [...]
Filed in children's privacy, data protection, Privacy, Social Media, social media research
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Also tagged danah boyd, data protection, Eszter Hargitai, Facebook, Jason Schultz, John Palfrey, lie about their age, media research, online privacy, Social Media, social media research, U13s
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The US Federal Trade Commission has just announced its proposed changes for the 10-year-old Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, the law that inadvertently created the social Web’s “minimum age” of 13 (in its effort to define an age when all children are developmentally able to protect their own privacy). Because COPPA requires children’s sites and [...]
The number of social sites aimed at children under 13 is suddenly growing again. Now joining Everloop (which just raised another $3.1 million, TechCrunch reported), YourSphere (for young people under and over 13), and Togetherville.com (recently acquired by Disney) is WhatsWhat.me. National Geographic-branded AnimalJam.com for kids 5-11 passed the 1 million player mark in a [...]
Filed in Kids, Social Media, social media research
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Also tagged AnimalJam.com, disney, Everloop, GiantHello, Henry Jenkins, kid sites, participation gap, participatory culture, Social Media, Togetherville, U13, under 13, Whatswhat, YourSphere
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The Consumer Reports headline reads, “That Facebook friend might be 10 years old, and other troubling news,” but – interestingly – fewer and fewer parents find it troubling. Most of today’s headlines about under-13 social networkers are about the Consumer Reports survey, which found that 20 million, or about 13% of Facebook’s 150 million active US [...]
Filed in children's privacy, Privacy, social media research
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Also tagged age minimum, children's privacy, consumer privacy, Facebook, online safety, Parenting, social media research, U13, underage
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