A New FTC Rule Prohibits Data Mining by Minors for Meta-Profits

 

As a result of an investigation by the Federal Trade Commission, Meta’s Facebook (NASDAQ: META) was accused of misleading parents about their kids’ protection, and the commission proposed tightening existing privacy agreements and preventing profit from minors’ personal information. 
A “blanket prohibition” has been proposed by the Federal Trade Commission to prevent Meta’s monetization of children’s data. A report by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) concluded that Facebook’s Meta company – previously known as Facebook – failed to comply with a privacy order that had been in place since 2020 by misrepresenting the control that Facebook Messenger gives to users’ parents, as well as how their data could be accessed by outside developers. 
The FTC makes several claims, including a failure to comply with the order, a misrepresentation regarding the ability of parents to control who their children communicate with through Messenger Kids, and a misrepresentation regarding the access it provides to certain app developers to private user data. 
It has been 20 years since the FTC began enforcing privacy measures. The most recen

[…]
Content was cut in order to protect the source.Please visit the source for the rest of the article.

This article has been indexed from CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents

Read the original article: