FTC Strengthens Children's Privacy Protections Online 45
An anonymous reader writes "The U.S. Federal Trade Commission today updated the privacy standards that protect children's privacy online. The new rules say companies must gain parental consent before collecting a kid's geolocation data, photos, and videos. It also broadened existing language to include third parties and companies that collect data on users across multiple websites. 'While the new rule strengthens such safeguards, it could also disrupt online advertising. Web sites and online advertising networks often use persistent identification systems — like a customer code number in a cookie in a person's browser — to collect information about a user's online activities and tailor ads for that person. But the new rule expands the definition of personal information to include persistent IDs — such as a customer code number, the unique serial number on a mobile phone, or the I.P. address of a browser — if they are used to show a child behavior-based ads.'"
How do you tell if the user is a child? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Shouldn't this be 21 rather than 13 though...
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Do you want children to never learn how to use the real internet?
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How do you know the user is a child and thus subject to special rules? By asking them? If so, this is awesome -- I'll just tell everybody I'm a kid and get all the same privacy safeguards (because my "parent" is me, and he'll never give consent).
Browser makers should replace "Do Not Track" with "I'm a Child." Does the same thing, but advertisers aren't allowed to ignore it.
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If they were able to determine the age of the fake identify by tracking it they would have broken the law.
You don't need to know the age of the user to be able to say "well, this account was created 13 years ago today, so therefore the user must be at least 13 years old by now". At least I think that is what AC was getting at.
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Which will cause problems when such systems start rejecting people's "real names".
Google plus would not let me sign up unless i provided a name that was not obviously an actual name. If I want to be Nunya Bizniss online, I should have the
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I think this is one of those "You'll know if you're breaking the law."
Does HBO really need to do anything about this law? No... you just pop up a window "Are you over the age of 13? y/n" and yes goes to the content, and no drops you somewhere not on your site cause you dont even want to deal with them. HBO isn't in the business of profiting off of pre-teens.
If you're nickelodeon? Well then I guess you'd shut down your behavior tracking, add targeting MMO design teems because society has decided that what yo
The age is too low! (Score:3)
Have to say it. 13 is too low of an age limit. It should be at least 16, which is the age of consent in the majority of states. 13 was fine in the early days, before we had all of the bots doing the leg work. Now, it should be higher and more restrictive.
Look at the bright side, it'll generate lots of revenue for someone to develop all of those restrictions into the bots.
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Instagram / Facebook don't care (Score:5, Insightful)
Allow me to paraphrase Instagram's position on this issue: the USFTC can eat a dick.
From Instagram's new Terms of Service:
Get that? "If you're using this service and you're under 18 we will act as if we have parental consent to share every bit of data we have about you with anyone we want."
Re:Instagram / Facebook don't care (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't think that would hold water in court. It's been a long time since I studied that type of case law, but there is a specific term for that type of contract. Given a couple hours in the law library I would have a solid case against that TOS.
The equivalent would be to give a contract to an autistic person taking 100% of their profits from their exceptional art talent, and having a statement of "my legal guardians agree to me signing this contract." The contract signed by only the autistic person is legally worth less than toilet paper. The contract is not valid because of that clause and I could sue for not only actual loss but some hefty damages.
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Didn't stop them putting that in the Terms though, did it?
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Conveniently a minor (under the age of eighteen) can't legally agree to such terms, and can't legally make such a representation.
Next step (Score:2)
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because other laws require them to do this to protect children from online predators COPA is just one of them.
Simply put, in the United States, if they're under 18 They are not legally able to sign any contract unless they've been emancipated by the courts as being competent. So long as they can't vote, anything they do is not binding upon them unless it's murder or other criminal action where they can try them as an adult.
down side? (Score:2)
So what you are saying is, there is no down side?
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So what you are saying is, there is no down side?
You've got a funny notion of whose benefit this country is supposed to be run for.
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It was supposed to be a joke about anything that disrupts online advertising being a good thing, but apparently my sense of humor is incompatible with Slashdot.
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The downside is that little folks like me have to jump through more hoops trying to provide their services in accordance with the laws, when we don't track you for advertising purposes anyway, (GEO-IP lookup to find you a good low latency server to play on), will simply end up frustrating you needlessly with "Enter Your Birthday" every page load or every time you start the program because: How the fuck else can we comply with a law that says we must not store underage kids info without parental consent exc
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with all due respect...you have no idea who has your personal data collected through means outside the internet.
The internet actually made collecting private information more transparent because you know it is happening. pre-internet you had no idea.
And this took so long... (Score:2)
...why?
But Think of The Chil.. (Score:3)
In legal terms that's what you call a Loophole Big Enough To Drive A Truck Through.
Seriously, how would this work anyhow? Surely kids will figure out pretty fast to lie about their age - who's going to follow up and prove them wrong? Or they'll just click the "Yes, I'm the Parent and Approve this Activity" Button. Think Facebook is going to try to track down Mommy or Daddy to confirm that it really was them that gave approval?
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Think Facebook is going to try to track down Mommy or Daddy to confirm that it really was them that gave approval?
Just wonder about the possibilities! All signup forms would have an additional field for one to submit a scan of an official ID card. Failure to provide it would set your account to kid status and cut you out of basically everything. Providing it would destroy any resemblance of anonymity, everywhere, for everyone.
Then, at a later stage, website operator could become frustrated enough to require the establishment of a central identification service. Managed by the government, of course. Something OpenID-bas