Web playgrounds shut gates to kids

Published: 16 April 2001 y., Monday
In the past year, kids site Zeeks.com closed its chat rooms and disabled e-mail accounts for children. Internet matchmaker eCrush dropped users under 13, as did America Online’s ICQ service. Alloy Online banned young children from contests. Children under 13 can do less on the Internet these days in part because of a federal law designed to protect their privacy. The law, which marks its first anniversary a week from Saturday, requires sites that attract children under 13 to get permission from parents before asking for names, physical locations and other details that could expose kids to marketers and molesters. Scores of sites have re-evaluated whether they really need all the information they had previously collected, and many have improved mechanisms to get parental consent. But others simply dropped services or limited usage to avoid paperwork. Zeeks.com tried keeping its services for a few months, but ultimately decided that staffing, equipment and storage of consent records would cost $200,000 a year. Traffic dropped by 20 percent when Zeeks took away chat rooms and e-mail accounts, said Steve Bryan, the company’s chief executive. The company couldn’t make money and sold the site a few weeks ago. Under the law, sites could still collect those details, but they need consent. Chat rooms and other interactive features are covered because kids may let such details slip. The law covers only information collection, not content restriction. The law affects sites that target or know they have young kids who live in the United States. Violators are subject to fines of up to $11,000.
Šaltinis: msnbc.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Antiwar hacker strikes the U.S. Navy

Virus writer and hacker activity has stepped up dramatically since the U.S. and U.K. armed forces started their war against Iraq more »

EU bigwig bangs on about eGovt

A top EU commissioner has been banging on about the importance of eGovernment more »

Al Jazeera launches English service

But within hours, firm suffers denial of service attack more »

Chip cards - in Kazakh practice

Commercial Alliance-Bank will be the first among RK banks implementing a transaction through international chip cards "Visa Smart Debit & Credit (VSDC)" through single processing center more »

A new Internet site

All those interested in British-Polish economic issues now have a new Internet site www.bpcc.org.pl more »

"Tibo’2003"

Minsk to Welcome Belarusian Congress on Telecommunications, Information and Banking Technologies more »

E-Russia threatened by cuts in financing

A drop in federal funding could delay some projects under the Electronic Russia program, which aims to boost the use of information technology throughout the country, the Communications Ministry said Tuesday more »

Belgian consortium heads race to run .eu

The European Commission is consulting its 15 national member governments over a draft decision to pick a Belgian-led consortium to run the long-awaited .eu top-level domain name registry more »

U.S. military computer attacked

Previously undiscovered flaw used to attack Army Web site more »

Banking Solutions at CeBIT 2003

Wincor Nixdorf presents a range of propositions with the spotlight focused on the specific needs and problems facing the banking industry under the key headings of Branch, Multichannel and Cash Management more »