37d6e8c88a These reasons include communicating with parents, other family members, and friends; use of the service for educational purposes; and, because the child’s classmates use the service. In particular, given the high incidence of children lying about their age to gain access to sites that forbid them, it has not been clear whether children are evading age restrictions in contradiction of their parents’ rules and preferences, whether parents are agnostic or unaware of such restrictions, or whether parents are complicit in children’s participation on these sites. They were able to construct the Facebook identities of most of the schools current students, including their names, genders and profile pictures. Sign in or sign up to share your thoughts Flag as inappropriate Teen, 15 years old written by faithpeebles77 June 16, 2015 THANK YOU!! PREACH IT SISTA! Sign in or sign up to share your thoughts Flag as inappropriate Adult written by smilerbre405 May 12, 2015 I don't think younger kids should have any social media sites, I feel as if they should just start out with a email address then when they are 13-14 then start them out having a social media account and be friends with them. While in some ways this may encourage greater collaboration between parents and children (after all, few things are more powerful combining agents than a common obstacle), this was not the intended consequence of COPPA. Table 1: Background of study participants.Note: N=1,007; Due to rounding, some of the percentages in this table add up to 99%. I think a parent should check the kids account on social media. 14-15 year old should defiantly be allowed to have it as long as they have good behavior in real life and aren't overly immature. Oh, and about "Kuddle".
Eaton, Laura Kann, Steve Kinchen, Shari Shanklin, James Ross, Joseph Hawkins, William Harris, Richard Lowry, Tim McManus, David Chyen, Connie Lim, Lisa Whittle, Nancy D. Tap here for our Free App! Get all our media picks, personalized for your kids.Get the AppGet the AppNo thanks . Other parents should have the ability to make their own decisions. Were parents and their children able to gain access honestly, the site providers might well present them with child–appropriate experiences and information designed to enhance safety, provide for better privacy protections, and encourage parent–child discussions of online safety. Its all about privacy and your own actions so if your child does not put privacy on it can effect it all majorly because its all something we need on social media Sign in or sign up to share your thoughts Flag as inappropriate Teen, 13 years old written by Booklover1231 December 28, 2014 I believe that 11 and up can have a facebook. The data also point to unintended consequences of the COPPA model of regulation of Web–based services. Industry responses to COPPA COPPA has succeeded both in stopping some egregious predatory data practices and in raising some level of awareness of the issue of collecting data about children (U.S. At that point, a stranger could also see a list of her friends. Other commenters stated that age falsification is not a problem in practice, especially when Web sites follow Commission staff guidance and request age information in a neutral manner, then set session cookies to prevent children from later changing their age. Some of my friends didn't even realize what they were posting.
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