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  by J.D. Heyes
 August 28, 2012
 from 
			NaturalNews Website
 
			  
			  
			  
			Some 20 children's advocacy, public 
			interest and health groups have jointly filed a complaint with the 
			Federal Trade Commission charging that some online marketing by 
			McDonald's and four other popular companies targeting children 
			violates a federal statute that protects their privacy.
 The law is known as the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act 
			(COPPA), The New York Times reported, and it requires operators of 
			websites to obtain verifiable consent from a child's parents before 
			collecting their personal information if they are under the age of 
			13.
 
 However, in complaints to the FTC, the 20-member coalition said six 
			popular websites that target kids have violated the law,
 
				
				"by encouraging children who play 
				brand-related games or engage in other activities to provide 
				friends' email addresses - without seeking prior parental 
				consent," the paper said. 
			One of the companies, however, countered 
			accusations by the coalition were a mis-characterization of its 
			practices, noting that the law permits exceptions for one-time use 
			of a friend's email address. It wasn't clear by press time if the 
			companies had yet received the complaint.
 Getting information about social networking sites for adults to 
			email marketing messages to their friends is commonplace in the 
			industry; it's a practice called "refer a friend" or "tell a 
			friend."
 
 Now, though, an increasing number of kid's sites are using the 
			strategy by inviting children to make customized videos, for 
			instance, which promote key products, and then sending them to their 
			friends.
 
 
			  
			  
			Cartoon 
			Network, General Mills accused as well
 
 Sites included in the complaint are,
 
				
					
					
					McDonald's Happymeal.com
					
					Viacom-owned Nickelodeon site 
					Nick.com
					
					ReesesPuffs.com, owned by cereal 
					giant General Mills
					
					SubwayKids.com, another General 
					Mills-owned site called TrixWorld.com
					
					CartoonNetwork.com, owned by 
					Turner   
				"It really shows that companies are 
				doing an end run around a law put in place to protect children's 
				privacy," Laura Moy, a lawyer for the Center for Digital 
				Democracy, a nonprofit group in Washington leading complaints, 
				told the Times.
 "Under the law, they can't just collect e-mail addresses from 
				kids and send them marketing material directly. So they are 
				embedding messages saying, 'Play this game and share it with 
				your friends,' in order to target the friends," she added.
 
			Additional members of the coalition 
			include, 
				
					
					
					the Consumer Federation of 
					America
					
					the Rudd Center for Food Policy 
					and Obesity at Yale University
					
					the American Academy of Child 
					and Adolescent Psychiatry, and Public Citizen 
			Separate reports said the coalition 
			filed five separate complaints and was led by the Center for Digital 
			Democracy.
 
			  
			  
			Companies say 
			'we're taking it seriously'
 
				
				"It is very troubling that major 
				companies as McDonald's, General Mills and Nickelodeon are 
				collecting email addresses from children so they can send 
				unsolicited marketing messages to their friends," said Angela 
				Campbell, the co-director of the Institute for Public 
				Representation at Georgetown Law School, who serves as legal 
				counsel to CDD and the other groups submitting the complaints.
				   
				"These 'tell-a-friend' practices 
				violate the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act because 
				they are done without adequate notice to parents and without 
				parental consent. The FTC should act promptly to stop this 
				commercial exploitation of children." 
			In their letter to the FTC, the 
			coalition asked the agency to look into additional marketing 
			practices they said are also unfair or otherwise deceptive, 
			including sites that use computer code to track the online 
			activities of children or sites that ask them to upload their 
			photos. 
				
				"This is the kind of thing you see 
				from con artists, not the Fortune 500 elite," said Jeff Chester, 
				the CDD's executive director, according to AdWeek. 
			Tom Forsythe, a spokesman for 
			General Mills, told the Times in an email that his company was 
			following approved practices, and that GM does not collect the 
			original child's email address, adding the company only sends a 
			single email to that child's friend.
 James Anderson, a Turner spokesman, also responded to the 
			Times via email, saying the Cartoon Network took compliance with 
			COPPA seriously and would closely review any accusations. A Subway 
			spokesman said essentially the same thing, the paper reported.
 
 The FTC is currently working to update children's privacy rules to 
			make sure they keep up with evolving technology.
 
 
			  
			  
			Sources
 
				
			 
			  
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