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Coping
with COPPA:
Protecting Campers' Privacy and Avoiding Big Government Fines
By Michael Steinig, Bunk1.com
Have you
joined the latest summer camp trend of having a website with
interactive features such as chat rooms, message boards, e-commerce,
and content written by campers? Well, it is important to realize
that along with the benefits of these features comes the responsibility
of complying with the Children's Online Privacy Protection
Act ("COPPA") (actually pronounced "cop-a"). Many camps, even
those with the best of intentions that vigorously guard the
privacy of their campers, have been unknowingly violating
COPPA. This is because, in order to comply with COPPA, a website
must institute a series of significant procedural and technological
safeguards, and provide explicit information to its users.
Violations of COPPA can result in Federal Trade Commission
enforcement actions and civil fines of up to $11,000 per violation.
In fact, the Federal Trade Commission recently has increased
its efforts to investigate websites that are not COPPA-compliant.
COPPA
applies to all websites that collect personal information
(such as name, address, email and other contact information)
from children under 13, or that allow children to post information
(through chat rooms, message boards, etc.). Thus, even if
you restrict certain areas of your website to your camp community
only, or even if you monitor chat rooms closely and do not
give personal information of your campers to outsiders, your
website still may be subject to the burdensome rules of COPPA.
You should
not necessarily abandon the idea of message boards and children's
content just because of COPPA. But you should be very careful
to institute all of the safeguards required by the rules.
For example, at Bunk1.com, the websites and interactive online
features we provide to summer camps have been carefully developed
to comply strictly with COPPA's many rules.
To introduce
you to some of the basic COPPA rules, the following summarizes
some - but not all - of the critical requirements:
- A website
subject to COPPA must have a privacy policy that provides
certain explicit information, including an explanation about
the collection, use and display of personal information.
There must be a prominent link to the privacy policy on
a website's homepage and on any other page where personal
information may be collected from children.
- A website
cannot collect personal information from a child, or allow
a child to post anything on its site, unless the website
has received verifiable consent from that child's parent
or guardian. Verifiable consent can be obtained by receiving
signed parental consent or by verifying a parent's credit
card number.
- If
a parent revokes their previous consent for a child to use
message boards and/or chat rooms, the website must have
the technology to reverse the child's ability to access
these features.
If you
are interested in more information on COPPA, you should visit
the Federal Trade Commission's website at www.ftc.gov/kidzprivacy.
Also feel free to review Bunk1.com's privacy policy at www.bunk1.com
to see how Bunk1 complies with COPPA.
Michael
Steinig is general counsel and director of business development
for Bunk1.com and graduated with honors from Harvard Law School.
This article is for informational purposes only and is not
intended to constitute legal advice.
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