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Politics & Government

AG Urges FTC To Strengthen Online Protections For Children

Attorney General has called on FTC to prohibit websites collecting personal data from children and tracking them across the internet

AG Ford has called for increased protections for children online
AG Ford has called for increased protections for children online (Office of the Attorney General)

CARSON CITY, NV - Nevada Attorney General Aaron D. Ford has written to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) urging the agency to strengthen its rules prohibiting websites, mobile applications and other digital marketing companies from collecting personal information from children under the age of 13 and then using that information to track children across the internet. 25 other states signed on in support of the letter.

"Children are more susceptible to deception and exploitation, which is why I'm proud to push for added legal protections for our minors," said AG Ford. "No one should be allowed to take advantage of Nevada's children by collecting their private information."

Many websites and mobile applications collect personal information from users, including geolocation information, browser histories, search histories, voice recordings and more. In 1996, Congress passed the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) prohibiting this type of data collection from children under the age of 13. Both the FTC and all state attorneys general are empowered to enforce COPPA, though only the FTC is empowered to issue regulations based on COPPA.

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In his letter, Attorney General Ford urged the FTC to expand its definitions of personal information to include things like faceprints, which can be used to unlock consumers' cellphones, health data from Internet-connected smart watches, and kids' genetic information.

The letter also urges the FTC to clamp down on companies that embed code in children's mobile applications and collect data in order to serve children behavioral advertising, and to examine how the rules apply to school-issued laptops that are "free" so long as companies get to collect information from the students using them. The Attorney General also urged the FTC not to create exceptions to the rule that would allow massive websites like YouTube to skirt COPPA's requirements.

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In submitting the letter Attorney General Ford was joined by the attorneys general of Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia and Washington.

A copy of the letter can be viewed at: http://ag.nv.gov/uploadedFiles/agnvgov/Content/News/PR/PR_Docs/2019/2019-12-08%20FINAL%20AG%20FTC%20COPPA.pdf

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