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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper" |
| | One Potential Solution
The easiest solution to these Facebook related privacy problems is simple - get off of Facebook (or at least restrict younger users). However, given that millions of users continue to voluntarily share personal information with Facebook, both directly and through third-party applications, another solution is necessary, I would propose extending COPPA to protect users up to 18 years old. If we believe that minors under 18 are not mature enough to make decisions such as whom to vote for, marry without parental permission or go to war, perhaps we should similarly protect their privacy. While a child under 13 might arguably be developmentally unable to make decisions about privacy, many 15 or 16 year old probably are developmentally ready. However, the years between 13 and 18 can be used to teach children about making decisions about their personal information. Those buffer years can provide time for learning with reduced risks for the future, so that by the time children become adults, they are ready to make educated decisions about what information to make public and what to keep to themselves. | |
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I'm not sure why "being a minor" is the relevant
category here. From 0-13, one set of rules, from 13-18 another, and
then "adulthood"? Seems to me the questions are, when can one teach
people how to make such decisions, how should one teach people to
make such decisions? But we cannot answer those questions until we
decide how we want people to answer those decisions. If our view
is that we want people to behave as consumers subjugated by personal
debt, we will prefer the current population to one more educated and
empowered.
Heather,
This is a really interesting topic. We've talked a lot in class about the privacy implications of Facebook on adults, but I never really stopped to think about the ramifications for minors--a group which is obviously much less informed and/or concerned about their privacy.
I think your legislation solution has a lot of merit, although I think that if such legislation did come about, it would be motivated not by strictly by privacy concerns (i.e. not by concern for Facebook selling information), but by child safety concerns from online predators, etc. In any case, the result would be a very good one I think.
-- EdwardBontkowski - 23 Nov 2009
Heather,
Thank you for your comments on my essay.
After reading your essay one issue that comes to mind is how you would verify age. Simply relying on the user to correctly identify his age would probably not be effective. If users were required to verify age through presentation of a government issued ID or credit card that would add an element of inconvenience for all users. That verification process itself would also require the disclosure of additional personal information by all users. I like your proposal and unfortunately I don’t have a lot to add; however, that is one question that occurred to me.
-- BrettJohnson - 24 Nov 2009
Yes, I agree with Brett. The age verification process would probably be very similar to the process used by pornographic websites and online gambling sites. At the moment, these processes are incredibly ineffective. Adding in the contradictory tension of having to provide personal information in order to prevent others from obtaining it only makes it that much harder in this case.
-- EdwardBontkowski - 24 Nov 2009
Heather,
I think you've got a good idea here. My only suggestion would be to tie in or reference COPPA, the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, since it seems directly on point. Nothing else from me, nice work.
-- BrianS - 24 Nov 2009
Thank you all for your comments on my essay. You are likely correct both that age verification would pose a large obstacle to my proposed legislation and that if such legislation were to pass, it would not be in response to privacy concerns. I've attempted to include both of these issues (though unfortunately only briefly due to the short length of this paper). Brian, thank you especially for pointing out the importance of COPPA. Bringing in COPPA suggest the particular importance of my argument for teenagers between 13 and 17, and I'm glad I was able to address that point!
-- HeatherStevenson - 25 Nov 2009
Heather, your proposal seems completely reasonable -- and actually possible because people can get roused to action to "protect the children."
However, concentrating on children may cede the adult battlefield...and when you think about it, do adult Facebook users really have any idea of the privacy implications of what they're doing when they first sign up? Drunk co-eds who post incriminating pictures of themselves need protection too!
-- GavinSnyder - 30 Nov 2009
I feel like getting people to vote for such legislation would be incredibly difficult if not impossible. Furthermore, even if this kind of voting were possible, it seems like to the degree that this were possible, voters would already be aware of the dangers of giving away their information and, consequently, such legislation would not be that helpful.
Users do not have a good idea of what they're giving away. Facebook & Friends have every incentive not to tell them. These companies have incredible lobbying power. If voters could be convinced to elect politicians who would enact such privacy-protecting measures, they would be demonstrating an unusually keen awareness to the dangers of giving away their information. In that case, they would probably be able to protect their children without government interference.
-- StevenWu - 30 Nov 2009
I would consider that children have the right to give away their personal information regularly. They have undisputed rights to write their dreams on pieces of paper, submit them to schools, do show and tells, make videotapes, and even to distribute these things themselves, or allow others (such as a school) to distribute these things on their behalf. They are further allowed to do this with very little information (I have no idea what happened to any project/presentation/paper I did when I was in elementary school, but I would not be surprised if they're kept somewhere on file by strangers, or even shown to strangers as examples). Theoretically, such things may also last forever even without the internet and our control over them exist only theoretically, but never practically.
I don't think the internet provides a new problem here, but just pushes the distribution method to the extreme. If the information is the same, how much must we be told about what it's used for? How much do we have to understand? There's a transaction cost underlying all regulations, and I would bet that even if children were forced to take classes before signing up for facebook/myspace, 90%+ of their actions would not change. The same principles apply to any contract, and that hypothetical 10% would always be screwed, adult or child, internet or papers, taking out a mortgage or signing up for facebook.
-- JakeWang - 05 Dec 2009
Heather,
Here's a new FTC study I ran into today that you might find relevant:
FTC Report Finds Sexually and Violently Explicit Content in Online Virtual Worlds Accessed by Minors - Recommends Best Practices to Shield Children and Teens
"The FTC surveyed 27 online virtual worlds – including those specifically intended for young children, worlds that appealed to teens, and worlds intended only for adults. The FTC found at least one instance of either sexually or violently explicit content in 19 of the 27 worlds. The FTC observed a heavy amount of explicit content in five of the virtual worlds studied, a moderate amount in four worlds, and only a low amount in the remaining 10 worlds in which explicit content was found. ...
The Commission makes five recommendations to virtual world operators to reduce the risk of youth exposure to explicit content:
- Use more effective age-screening mechanisms to prevent children from registering in adult virtual worlds;
- Use or enhance age-segregation techniques to make sure that people interact only with others in their age group;
- Re-examine language filters to ensure that they detect and eliminate messages that violate rules of behavior in virtual worlds;
- Provide more guidance to community enforcers in virtual worlds so they are better able to review and rate virtual world content, report potential underage users, and report any users who appear to be violating rules of behavior; and
- Employ a staff of specially trained moderators who are equipped to take swift action against rule violations.
The report recommends that parents and children become better educated about online virtual worlds, and affirms the FTC’s commitment to ensuring that parents have the information
they need to make informed choices. A consumer alert, Virtual Worlds and Kids: Mapping the Risks, is available at www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/consumer/alerts/alt038.shtm.
The Commission vote to approve the report was 4-0. The full text of the report can be found at http://www.ftc.gov/os/2009/12/oecd-vwrpt.pdf."
-- BrianS - 10 Dec 2009
I'm sorry, I missed the part where you explained why
there's a first amendment exception for information about children.
Why people can be prohibited from exchanging information they have
legitimately acquired because that information concerns a child I,
with my primitive free speech sensibilities, am unable to comprehend. | > > | I'm not going to repeat
prior observations, though they are still relevant to this draft, the
revisions having addressed minor but not major issues. Let's assume
that your analysis is sufficient to sustain the "potential solution"
you propose, and that the politics went somehow from impossible to
possible. You then imagine a conversation in 40 million homes during
which teenagers seek parental consent to use Facebook and are
refused? Of course, your application of COPPA—which eliminates
any form of commercial independence for teenagers because they must
seek parental consent not only for Facebook, but also for pretty much
every commercial transaction online—takes away from young
people freedoms that you and I and everyone we ever knew had and used
and needed in the "real" world. You haven't anywhere confronted
this, or acknowledged in fact that teenagers are people whose freedom
is valuable to them and to humanity. If something is wrong with
Facebook, one might suppose that the solution isn't to take freedoms
away from young people, but either to prohibit what's wrong (if it
can or should be prohibited) or to replace Facebook with a form of
social networking that doesn't spy on people. This view may be
erroneous, but if it is, you should explain why, so that the reader
understands. If, indeed, COPPA is just another piece of legislative
pandering, "protecting the children" by cutting off a commercial
market too small to buy any Senators and thus protecting the immense
market in spying on everybody else which owns any number of
Senators, then you've got the larger political context wrong, but
that's not as crucial to revising this draft. | | | |
< < | Why not take a position that children should be
taught by careful parents and responsible schools to see the issues
for themselves? There are private conversations, like phone and IM,
and there are public places that you get to by crossing the street in
the real world, or being in the web. In public places, we don't give
out information about our private selves; we have a name we use in
that place, and that name is all we tell people about ourselves.
People who ask for more than that about us in public are being
disrespectful, and we politely ignore them. By explaining behavior
in the net the same way we explain behavior in the "real world," we
can teach children to think wisely about the choices they make.
Naturally they do not make all the choices adults make. They do not
have credit cards and they do not buy things to be delivered, which
removes the links that tie an online identity firmly to a located
identity in the "real world." But they do have room within which to
exercise their facility for choosing. As a child I made choices
about my relation to the world--including choices about my life with
computers, and choices about working, in real jobs for actual money.
I was given both information about how to make choices and the
freedom to make my own. The liberty of children is more important
than the liberty of adults, because all human beings know of freedom
they learn when they are children. Too bad it receives in general so
little respect.
Everything children need to know to make themselves
sensible users of their part of the web could be taught interested
twelve-year-olds in a day. We should do it.
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