99-27740. Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 212 (Wednesday, November 3, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 59888-59915]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-27740]
    
    
    
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    Part III
    
    
    
    
    
    Federal Trade Commission
    
    
    
    
    
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    16 CFR Part 312
    
    
    
    Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 212 / Wednesday, November 3, 1999 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
    [[Page 59888]]
    
    
    
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
    
    16 CFR Part 312
    
    RIN 3084-AA84
    
    
    Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule 
    
    AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Federal Trade Commission issues its final Rule pursuant to 
    the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (``COPPA'' or 
    ``the Act''). Section 6502 of the Act requires the Commission to enact 
    rules governing the online collection of personal information from 
    children under 13 within one year of the date of the enactment of the 
    COPPA, October 21, 1998.
    
    DATES: The rule will become effective on April 21, 2000.
    
    ADDRESSES: Requests for copies of the Rule and the Statement of Basis 
    and Purpose should be sent to Public Reference Branch, Room 130, 
    Federal Trade Commission, 6th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., 
    Washington, D.C. 20580. Copies of these documents are also available at 
    the Commission's website, www.ftc.gov>.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Division of Advertising Practices: 
    Toby Milgrom Levin (202) 326-3156, Loren G. Thompson (202) 326-2049, or 
    Abbe Goldstein (202) 326-3423, Federal Trade Commission, 6th Street and 
    Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Rule implements the requirements of the 
    COPPA by requiring operators of websites or online services directed to 
    children and operators of websites or online services who have actual 
    knowledge that the person from whom they seek information is a child 
    (1) to post prominent links on their websites to a notice of how they 
    collect, use, and/or disclose personal information from children; (2) 
    with certain exceptions, to notify parents that they wish to collect 
    information from their children and obtain parental consent prior to 
    collecting, using, and/or disclosing such information; (3) not to 
    condition a child's participation in online activities on the provision 
    of more personal information than is reasonably necessary to 
    participate in the activity; (4) to allow parents the opportunity to 
    review and/or have their children's information deleted from the 
    operator's database and to prohibit further collection from the child; 
    and (5) to establish procedures to protect the confidentiality, 
    security, and integrity of personal information they collect from 
    children. As directed by the COPPA, the Rule also provides a safe 
    harbor for operators following Commission-approved self-regulatory 
    guidelines.
    
    Statement of Basis and Purpose
    
    I. Introduction
    
        Congress enacted the COPPA to prohibit unfair or deceptive acts or 
    practices in connection with the collection, use, or disclosure of 
    personally identifiable information from and about children on the 
    Internet.\1\
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        \1\ 15 U.S.C. 6501-6505.
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        Section 6502(b)(1) of the Act sets forth a series of general 
    privacy protections to prevent unfair or deceptive online information 
    collection from or about children, and directs the Commission to adopt 
    regulations to implement those protections. The Act requires operators 
    of websites directed to children and operators who knowingly collect 
    personal information from children to: (1) Provide parents notice of 
    their information practices; (2) obtain prior verifiable parental 
    consent for the collection, use, and/or disclosure of personal 
    information from children (with certain limited exceptions for the 
    collection of ``online contact information,'' e.g., an e-mail address); 
    (3) provide a parent, upon request, with the means to review the 
    personal information collected from his/her child; (4) provide a parent 
    with the opportunity to prevent the further use of personal information 
    that has already been collected, or the future collection of personal 
    information from that child; (5) limit collection of personal 
    information for a child's online participation in a game, prize offer, 
    or other activity to information that is reasonably necessary for the 
    activity; and (6) establish and maintain reasonable procedures to 
    protect the confidentiality, security, and integrity of the personal 
    information collected.\2\
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        \2\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1).
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        The COPPA authorizes the Commission to bring enforcement actions 
    for violations of the Rule in the same manner as for other rules 
    defining unfair or deceptive acts or practices under section 5 of the 
    Federal Trade Commission Act.\3\ In addition, section 6504 of the COPPA 
    authorizes state attorneys general to enforce compliance with the final 
    Rule by filing actions in federal court after serving prior written 
    notice upon the Commission when feasible.\4\
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        \3\ Section 6502(c) of the Act provides that the Rule shall be 
    treated as a rule issued under Sec. 18(a)(1)(B) of the FTC Act (15 
    U.S.C. 57a (a)(1)(B)).
        \4\ 15 U.S.C. 6504.
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        The Commission published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and 
    Request for Public Comment (``NPR'') in the Federal Register on April 
    27, 1999,\5\ and the 45-day comment period closed on June 11, 1999. The 
    Commission received 132 comments from a wide array of interested 
    parties, all of which were extremely informative and which the 
    Commission has considered in crafting the final Rule. The commenters 
    included private individuals; companies operating Internet sites or 
    businesses; public interest organizations; marketing and advertising 
    trade groups; library, school, and other educational organizations; 
    Federal government entities; State Attorneys General; publishers and 
    publishing trade groups; Internet service providers; and organizations 
    sponsoring Internet privacy seal programs.
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        \5\ 64 FR 22750 (Apr. 27, 1999) (to be codified at 16 CFR pt. 
    312).
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        Because of particular interest among commenters in the issue of how 
    to obtain verifiable parental consent under the Rule, Commission staff 
    conducted a public workshop on that issue on July 20, 1999, to obtain 
    additional information and learn more about the views expressed.\6\ The 
    32 panelists at the workshop included representatives from industry 
    (including website operators and technology companies), as well as 
    privacy advocates, consumer groups, and representatives of other 
    government agencies. Approximately 100 other parties also attended the 
    workshop. Panelists discussed methods of obtaining verifiable parental 
    consent that are currently in use; whether and how e-mail could be used 
    to obtain verifiable parental consent; and technologies or methods that 
    are under development that could be used in the future to obtain 
    verifiable parental consent. Workshop attendees were invited to comment 
    during question and answer sessions. The proceeding was transcribed, 
    and the transcript was placed on the public record.\7\ In addition, the 
    Commission accepted further public comment on issues raised at the 
    workshop. The workshop
    
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    comment period, which ended on July 30, 1999, yielded 14 comments.\8\
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        \6\ 64 FR 34595 (June 28, 1999) (announcement of the public 
    workshop).
        \7\ The transcript and all of the comments received in the 
    course of this proceeding appear on the FTC's website at 
    www.ftc.gov>. References to the workshop transcript are cited as 
    ``Speaker/affiliation (Workshop Tr. at ____)'' followed by the 
    appropriate page designation. Initial references to the comments are 
    cited as ``Name of commenter (Comment or Workshop comment number) at 
    (page number).''
        \8\ On July 27, 1999, the Commission also issued an Initial 
    Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (``IRFA'') under the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act, 64 FR 40525. The IRFA focused on the impact of the 
    proposed Rule on small businesses and sought additional public 
    comment on that issue. This final comment period closed on August 6, 
    1999. Five comments were received. These comments are cited as 
    ``Name of commenter (IRFA comment number) at (page number).''
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        In drafting this final Rule, the Commission has taken very 
    seriously the concerns expressed about maintaining children's access to 
    the Internet, preserving the interactivity of the medium, and 
    minimizing the potential burdens of compliance on companies, parents, 
    and children. The Commission believes that the final Rule strikes the 
    appropriate balance between these concerns and the Act's goals of 
    protecting children's information in the online environment. It looks 
    forward to continuing to work with industry, consumer groups, and 
    parents to ensure widespread compliance in as efficient a manner as 
    possible, to educate the public about online privacy protections, and 
    to assess the Rule's effectiveness on a periodic basis.\9\
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        \9\ Shortly after issuing this final Rule, the Commission plans 
    to develop and distribute educational materials to assist businesses 
    in complying with the Rule and to inform parents of the protections 
    provided by the COPPA.
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    II. The Rule
    
        As noted above, the Commission published the proposed Rule and 
    accompanying analysis in the Federal Register in April 1999. Unless 
    specifically modified herein, all of the analysis accompanying the 
    proposed Rule in the NPR is adopted and incorporated into this 
    Statement of Basis and Purpose for the final Rule.
    
    A. Section 312.2: Definitions
    
        Section 312.2 of the proposed Rule included definitions of a number 
    of key terms.\10\ The Commission sought comment as to whether these 
    definitions were clear, comprehensive, flexible, and appropriate.\11\ 
    In the Rule, the Commission has modified the definitions of four of 
    these terms: ``collects or collection,'' ``disclosure,'' ``personal 
    information,'' and ``third party.'' All other definitions have been 
    adopted without change.
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        \10\ 64 FR at 22751-53, 22763-64.
        \11\ 64 FR at 22761.
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    1. Definition of ``Child''
        In the proposed Rule, the Commission adopted the statutory 
    definition of ``child'' as ``an individual under the age of 13.'' \12\ 
    The Commission received only one comment on this issue, which supported 
    the definition.\13\ Thus, the final Rule retains the statutory 
    definition.
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        \12\ COPPA, 15 U.S.C. 6501(1). See 64 FR at 22751, 22763.
        \13\ American Psychological Association (``APA'') (Comment 106) 
    at 1.
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        2. Definition of ``Collects or Collection''
        The proposed Rule defined ``collects or collection'' to include 
    ``the direct or passive gathering of any personal information from a 
    child by any means, including but not limited to: (a) [a]ny online 
    request for personal information by the operator regardless of how that 
    personal information is transmitted to the operator; (b) [c]ollection 
    using a chat room, message board, or other public posting of such 
    information on a website or online service; or (c) [p]assive tracking 
    or use of any identifying code linked to an individual, such as a 
    cookie.'' \14\ The term was meant to encompass the many ways that 
    website operators could gather information from children.
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        \14\ 64 FR at 22751, 22763.
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        Responsive comments contended that subparagraph (a) swept within 
    the proposed Rule information requested online but submitted offline 
    that was clearly meant to be excluded under the COPPA.\15\ These 
    comments also noted that it would be burdensome to require a business 
    that solicits the same information from children in a number of ways, 
    including through the Internet, to determine the source of the request 
    in order to provide the required parental notice and seek consent for 
    information submitted online.
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        \15\ See generally, Direct Marketing Ass'n (``DMA'') (Comment 
    89) at 31-32; Kraft Foods, Inc. (``Kraft'') (Comment 67) at 2-3; 
    Council of Better Business Bureaus, Inc. (``CBBB'') (Comment 91) at 
    4; Viacom, Inc. (``Viacom'') (Comment 79) at 4-5; Time Warner, Inc. 
    (``Time Warner'') (Comment 78) at 6-7; Magazine Publishers of 
    America (``MPA'') (Comment 113) at 2. These comments pointed out 
    that the COPPA covers the collection of personal information, which 
    is defined in the statute as ``individually identifiable information 
    about an individual collected online. * * *'' 15 U.S.C. 6501(8). 
    Commenters also noted that the Floor Statement accompanying the Act 
    states ``[t]his is an online children's privacy bill, and its reach 
    is limited to information collected online from a child.'' 144 Cong. 
    Rec. S11657 (daily ed. Oct. 7, 1998) (Statement of Sen. Bryan).
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        The Commission is persuaded that the Congress intended the COPPA to 
    apply only to information collected online by an operator. Therefore, 
    based on the written comments, subparagraph (a) of the definition of 
    collects or collection has been modified to cover any request by the 
    operator that children submit information online.\16\
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        \16\ If, however, an operator combines in one database 
    information collected offline with information collected online such 
    that the operator cannot determine the source of the information, 
    the operator will be required to disclose all of that data in 
    response to a parent's request under section 312.6 of the Rule. See 
    Section II.E, infra.
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        Other commenters were concerned that including public postings in 
    the definition of ``collects or collection'' would confer liability on 
    operators of general audience (i.e., non-child-directed) chat sites for 
    unsolicited postings by children.\17\ The Commission believes that 
    these concerns are legitimate, and therefore the Rule now provides that 
    such sites would only be liable if they (1) have actual knowledge that 
    postings are being made by a child under 13, and (2) when they have 
    such knowledge, fail to delete any personal information before it is 
    made public, and also to delete it from their records.
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        \17\ ZapMe! Corp. (``ZapMe!'') (Comment 76) at 7; Talk City, 
    Inc. (``Talk City'') (Comment 110) at 2. See also Promotion 
    Marketing Ass'n. (``PMA'') (Comment 107) at 3.
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        For general audience sites, the Act explicitly covers operators who 
    have actual knowledge that they are collecting personal information 
    from children.\18\ Therefore, the operator of a general audience chat 
    site who has actual knowledge that a child is posting personal 
    information on the site must provide notice and obtain verifiable 
    parental consent if the child is to continue to post such information 
    in that site's chat room.\19\ In most cases, if the operator does not 
    monitor the chat room, the operator likely will not have the requisite 
    knowledge under the Act. However, where the operator does monitor the 
    chat room, the Commission has amended the Rule so that, if the operator 
    strips any posting of individually identifiable information before it 
    is made public (and deletes it from the operator's records), that 
    operator will not be deemed to have collected the child's personal 
    information.\20\
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        \18\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(a)(1). See also Rule section 312.3.
        \19\ Operators of sites directed to children that provide chat 
    rooms and bulletin boards and who do not delete personally 
    identifiable information from postings before they are made public 
    must always provide notice and obtain parental consent as provided 
    by the Rule.
        \20\ This amendment applies both to operators of websites 
    directed to children and to websites with actual knowledge that 
    information is being collected from a child. Because an operator who 
    deletes such information will not be deemed to have ``collected'' 
    it, that operator also will not have ``disclosed'' that information 
    under the Rule.
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        One group of commenters stated that requiring operators to get 
    parental consent in order for a child to participate in a chat room 
    would violate the child's First Amendment right to free speech.\21\ 
    These commenters also
    
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    asserted that the Commission's proposal went beyond what Congress 
    intended with this legislation.\22\ Congress, however, specifically 
    included such postings in the COPPA on the grounds that children could 
    be placed at risk in such fora, noting that one of the Act's goals was 
    ``to enhance parental involvement to help protect the safety of 
    children in online fora such as chatrooms, home pages, and pen-pal 
    services in which children may make public postings of identifying 
    information.'' \23\ As noted in the Commission's June 1998 report to 
    Congress, children's use of chat rooms and bulletin boards that are 
    accessible to all online users present the most serious safety risks, 
    because it enables them to communicate freely with strangers.\24\ 
    Indeed, an investigation conducted by the FBI and the Justice 
    Department revealed that these services are quickly becoming the most 
    common resources used by predators for identifying and contacting 
    children.\25\ Commenters also generally acknowledged that these are 
    among the most sensitive online activities.\26\
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        \21\ Center for Democracy and Technology, American Civil 
    Liberties Union, American Library Association (``CDT, et al.'') 
    (Workshop comment 11) at 2-4.
        \22\ Id.
        \23\ 144 Cong. Rec. S11657 (Statement of Sen. Bryan).
        \24\ Privacy Online: A Report to Congress at 5 (June 1998).
        \25\ Id. The concern may be heightened where such services are 
    directed to children because potential predators know that the 
    majority of the participants are likely to be underage.
        \26\ Center for Media Education, Consumer Federation of America, 
    Am. Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Am. Academy of 
    Pediatrics, Junkbusters Corp., Nat'l Alliance for Non-Violent 
    Programming, Nat'l Ass'n of Elementary School Principals, Nat'l 
    Consumers League, Nat'l Education Ass'n, Privacy Times and Public 
    Advocacy for Kids (``CME/CFA et al.'') (Comment 80) at 30; Viacom 
    (Comment 79) at 13-14; DMA (Workshop comment 02) at 1-2; Bagwell/MTV 
    Networks Online (Workshop Tr. 32-33); Kraft (Comment 67) at 4-5; 
    Children's Advertising Review Unit of the Council of Better Business 
    Bureaus (``CARU'') (Workshop comment 08) at 2; Cartoon Network, et 
    al. (Comment 77) at 18; Nikolai.com, Inc. (Comment 129) at 2; and 
    Consumers Union (Comment 116) at 3.
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        Several commenters expressed concerns that the proposed Rule would 
    similarly require operators to give notice and obtain parental consent 
    in order to give a child an e-mail account.\27\ The Commission notes 
    that, to the extent that operators who provide e-mail accounts keep 
    records of the e-mail addresses they have assigned, along with any 
    associated information, those operators can be considered to have 
    ``collected'' those e-mail addresses under the Act. Operators of sites 
    directed to children are therefore required to comply with the Act when 
    giving children e-mail accounts. For operators of general audience 
    sites, the Rule requires actual knowledge that information is being 
    collected from a child. Such operators would only be required to 
    provide notice and obtain parental consent if registration or other 
    information reveals that the person seeking the e-mail account is a 
    child.
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        \27\ See, e.g., Commercial Internet eXchange Ass'n and PSINet 
    Inc. (``CIX et al.'') (Comment 83) at 8; Zeeks.com (Comment 98) at 
    1; CDT et al. (Workshop comment 11) at 3 (noting same First 
    Amendment concerns as for chat rooms). Similar concerns were 
    expressed in connection with the proposed Rule's definition of 
    ``disclosure,'' which included ``any other means that would enable a 
    child to reveal personal information to others online.'' See Section 
    II.A.3, infra.
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        A number of commenters noted that operators might be responsible 
    for complying with all of the requirements of the Rule after receiving 
    an unsolicited e-mail from a child.\28\ If an operator of a site 
    directed to children receives such an e-mail, that contact is covered 
    under the Act's (and the Rule's) one-time e-mail exception.\29\ Under 
    that exception, an operator may collect a child's name and online 
    contact information for the purpose of responding one time in response 
    to a direct request from a child. This exception would allow an 
    operator to receive an e-mail from a child and provide a response 
    without providing parental notice and obtaining consent, as long as the 
    name and online contact information collected from the child are 
    deleted and not used for any other purpose.\30\ And again, in the case 
    of a general audience site, these requirements apply only if the site 
    receiving the e-mail has actual knowledge that it was sent by a child.
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        \28\ See, e.g., ZapMe! (Comment 76) at 7-8. See also Highlights 
    for Children, Inc. (``Highlights'') (Comment 124) at 2.
        \29\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(2)(A); section 312.5(c)(2) of the Rule. 
    See Section II.D.3, infra.
        \30\ Moreover, this exception would accommodate sites that 
    automate their responses to incoming e-mails, as long as the child's 
    name and online contact information are deleted and not used for any 
    other purpose. MLG Internet (Comment 119) at 2 (asking about 
    automated e-mail responses).
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        One commenter noted that a site could collect non-personally 
    identifiable information about a child without parental notice or 
    consent as long as that information was only tied to a screen name.\31\ 
    An operator who has solicited such information could obtain the child's 
    name through a subsequent solicitation, and would thus have evaded the 
    Act's requirement of prior parental consent.\32\ This is a valid 
    concern, but the Commission believes that the Rule does in fact address 
    the issue. Indeed, under the Rule, once such information is linked to 
    an identifier (the name), it becomes ``personal information'' and the 
    Rule requires the operator to provide notice and obtain consent for the 
    collection, use, and/or disclosure of all of the information.\33\
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        \31\ CDT (Comment 81) at 18.
        \32\ Id.
        \33\ See Section II.A.8, infra. Moreover, under section 312.6 of 
    the Rule, the operator must disclose that information to the parent 
    upon request and the parent may request that the operator delete 
    that information. See Section II.E, infra.
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    3. Definition of ``Disclosure''
        The definition of ``disclosure'' in the proposed Rule covered: (1) 
    The release of personal information collected from a child in 
    identifiable form by an operator for any purpose, except where the 
    operator provides the information to a person who provides support for 
    the internal operations of the website and who does not use that 
    information for any other purpose; \34\ and (2) making personal 
    information collected from a child publicly available in identifiable 
    form, including through public postings, posting of personal home 
    pages, messages boards, and chat rooms, or any other means that would 
    enable a child to reveal personal information to others online.\35\
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        \34\ The ``release of personal information'' is defined in the 
    Rule to mean the ``sharing, selling, renting, or any other means of 
    providing personal information to any third party.'' See section 
    312.2 of the Rule. For additional guidance as to whether an entity 
    is a ``third party'' under the Rule, see discussion, infra, 
    regarding definitions of ``operator'' and ``third party.''
        \35\ 64 FR 22752, 22764.
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        In the NPR, the Commission sought to clarify that entities that 
    provide fulfillment services or technical support would be considered 
    ``support for the internal operations of the website or online 
    service,'' and thus disclosures to such entities need not be disclosed 
    in the site's notices.\36\ The Commission also noted that such services 
    as merely providing the server for the website, or providing chat or e-
    mail service would also be considered ``support for the internal 
    operations of the website.'' \37\ The Commission cautioned, however, 
    that because operators are also required by the Act to establish 
    reasonable procedures to maintain the confidentiality, security, and 
    integrity of personal information collected from children,\38\ they 
    should take appropriate measures to safeguard such information in the 
    possession of those who provide support for the internal operations of 
    their websites.\39\
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        \36\ 64 FR at 22752.
        \37\ Id.
        \38\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(D).
        \39\ 64 FR at 22752. Some commenters objected to the notion of 
    holding operators liable for the action of contractors because 
    operators have no way of ensuring that contractors will follow the 
    Rule. See, e.g., DMA (Comment 89) at 35. The Act and the Rule 
    require operators to establish and maintain reasonable procedures to 
    protect the confidentiality, security, and integrity of personal 
    information collected from children. 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(D); 
    section 312.8 of the Rule. As long as the operator follows 
    reasonable procedures to ensure that such contractors protect the 
    information (for example, contractual provisions that limit the 
    contractors' ability to use the information), operators should not 
    be liable for the actions of contractors.
    
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        Two commenters expressed a concern that the last clause of the 
    proposed definition, which covered ``any other means that would enable 
    a child to reveal personal information to others online,'' would 
    include an Internet Service Provider (``ISP'') or cable company that 
    simply provides Internet access without offering any content or 
    actively collecting any information from children.\40\ Although the 
    Commission notes that this language was not meant to reach such 
    entities,\41\ it has decided to eliminate this language as confusing 
    and unnecessary.\42\
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        \40\ See CIX, et al. (Comment 83) at 8-9; National Cable 
    Television Association (``NCTA'') (Comment 71) at 6-8.
        \41\ See 64 FR at 22752. To the extent that ISPs do not operate 
    websites or online services that are directed to children, or 
    knowingly collect information from children, they are not subject to 
    the COPPA.
        \42\ One commenter also asked whether the term ``disclosure'' 
    covered the inclusion of a child's name on a list of contest 
    winners, which is often required under state laws. See PMA (Comment 
    107) at 4. If the operator collects only name and online contact 
    information, then the exception under section 312.5(c)(5)(iv) would 
    apply. However, if the operator collects additional information 
    online, then the release of that information would be considered a 
    disclosure under the Rule.
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    4. Definition of ``Internet''
        The proposed Rule's definition of ``Internet'' made clear that it 
    applied to the Internet in its current form and to any conceivable 
    successor.\43\ Given that the technology used to provide access to the 
    Internet will evolve over time, it is imperative that the Rule not 
    limit itself to current access mechanisms. The Commission received 
    three comments regarding this definition.\44\ One commenter suggested 
    that the Commission clarify that the definition ``clearly includes 
    networks parallel to or supplementary to the Internet such as those 
    maintained by the broadband providers * * * [and] intranets maintained 
    by online services which are either accessible via the Internet or have 
    gateways to the Internet.'' \45\ The Commission believes that the 
    proposed definition of ``Internet'' was sufficiently broad to encompass 
    such services and adopts that definition in the final Rule.
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        \43\ 64 FR at 22752, 22764.
        \44\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 18; E.A. Bonnett (Comment 
    126) at 1; CDT (Comment 81) at 10-11. Two of the comments praised 
    the proposed definition as comprehensive. E.A. Bonnett (Comment 126) 
    at 1; CDT (Comment 81) at 10-11.
        \45\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 18.
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    5. Definition of ``Online Contact Information''
        The Commission received several comments \46\ regarding the 
    definition of ``online contact information.'' \47\ One commenter 
    suggested that the Commission include in the definition such 
    identifiers as instant messaging user identifiers, which are 
    increasingly being used for communicating online.\48\ The Commission 
    believes that these identifiers already fall within the proposed 
    definition, which includes ``any other substantially similar identifier 
    that permits direct contact with a person online.'' \49\ After 
    reviewing the comments, the Commission has determined that no changes 
    to this definition are necessary.
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        \46\ CyberAngels (Comment 120) at 1; CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) 
    at 6-7; Aftab & Savitt (Comment 118) at 3-4; CDT (Comment 81) at 16-
    18.
        \47\ The definition in the proposed Rule was identical to the 
    one contained in the Act. See 15 U.S.C. 6501(12); 64 FR at 22752, 
    22764.
        \48\ CyberAngels (Comment 120) at 1.
        \49\ Another example of ``online contact information'' could be 
    a screen name that also serves as an e-mail address. See Section 
    II.A.8, infra.
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    6. Definition of ``Operator''
        The definition of ``operator'' is of central importance because it 
    determines who is covered by the Act and the Rule. Consistent with the 
    Act, the proposed Rule defined operator (with some limitations) as 
    ``any person who operates a website located on the Internet or an 
    online service and who collects or maintains personal information from 
    or about the users or visitors * * * or on whose behalf such 
    information is collected or maintained * * *'' \50\ In the NPR, the 
    Commission clarified the scope of the definition by listing a number of 
    factors to consider, including who owns and/or controls the 
    information, who pays for its collection and maintenance, the pre-
    existing contractual relationships regarding collection and maintenance 
    of the information, and the role of the website or online service in 
    collecting and/or maintaining the information (i.e., whether the site 
    participates in collection or is merely a conduit through which the 
    information flows to another entity).\51\ The Commission also clarified 
    that entities that merely provide access to the Internet, without 
    providing content or collecting information from children, would not be 
    considered operators.\52\ In the NPR, the Commission asked about the 
    impact of the proposed definition, and whether it was sufficiently 
    clear to provide notice as to who is covered by the Rule.\53\ After 
    carefully reviewing the comments received, the Commission has 
    determined that no changes to the proposed definition are necessary.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \50\ 15 U.S.C. 6501(2); 64 FR at 22752, 22764.
        \51\ 64 FR at 22752.
        \52\ Thus, ISPs and cable operators that merely offer Internet 
    access would not be considered operators under the Rule.
        \53\ 64 FR at 22761.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        A number of commenters proposed various tests to determine how 
    corporate affiliates should be treated under the Rule.\54\ The 
    Commission believes that an entity's status as an operator or third 
    party under the Rule should be determined not by its characterization 
    as a corporate affiliate, but by its relationship to the information 
    collected under the factors described in the NPR. Not all affiliates 
    play a role in collecting or maintaining the information from children, 
    and making an entity an operator subject to the Act simply because one 
    of its affiliates collects or maintains information from children 
    online would not serve the goals of the COPPA. If, however, the entity 
    has an interest in the data collected under the factors listed in the 
    NPR, then it, too, will be covered by the Rule.\55\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \54\ See, e.g., Council of Better Business Bureaus, Inc. 
    (``CBBB'') (Comment 91) at 6-7; Attorneys General of the States of 
    New York, Alabama, California, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, 
    Indiana, Maryland, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Vermont, and 
    Washington (``Attorneys General'') (Comment 114) at 6; PMA (Comment 
    107) at 4-5; Am. Ass'n of Advertising Agencies (``AAAA'') (Comment 
    134) at 3; Ass'n of Nat'l Advertisers (``ANA'') (Comment 93) at 6-7. 
    Some commenters argued in support of automatically including all 
    corporate affiliates as operators. Others thought that all 
    affiliates with identical privacy policies should be considered 
    operators, or, alternatively, that operators should be required to 
    disclose that an affiliate has a different privacy policy and 
    describe how it differs from the primary operator's. As noted in 
    Section II.C.3.c, infra, the notice is required to describe the 
    privacy policies of the various operators. One commenter suggested a 
    consumer perception standard: that an affiliate would be considered 
    an operator if a consumer would reasonably expect that the 
    affiliated entities are part of one organization that shares 
    information within itself. PMA (Comment 107) at 5. The Commission 
    believes that the proposed standard, which places responsibility for 
    compliance on the entities that control the information, is the most 
    workable test for who is an operator.
        \55\ In the NPR, the Commission stated that operators are 
    jointly responsible for implementing the requirements of the Rule. 
    64 FR at 22752. In an investigation into a potential Rule violation, 
    the Commission will examine all the facts and circumstances in 
    determining the appropriate party or parties to pursue. The 
    Commission likely will not pursue an entity that is an ``operator,'' 
    but has not facilitated or participated in, and has no reason to 
    know of, any Rule violations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter sought clarification of the status of network 
    advertising companies, or companies that provide banner ads on websites 
    or online
    
    [[Page 59892]]
    
    services.\56\ If such companies collect personal information directly 
    from children who click on ads placed on websites or online services 
    directed to children, then they will be considered operators who must 
    comply with the Act, unless one of the exceptions applies.\57\ 
    Moreover, if such companies collect personal information from visitors 
    who click on their ads at general audience sites, and that information 
    reveals that the visitor is a child, then they will be subject to the 
    Act. In addition, if they do not collect information from children 
    directly, but have ownership or control over information collected at a 
    host children's site, they will be considered operators. If, however, 
    no personal information is collected or maintained by such companies, 
    either directly or through the host website, then they will not be 
    deemed to be operators.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \56\ Media Inc., AdForce, Inc., DoubleClick, Inc., Engage 
    Technologies, Inc., Flycast Communications Corp., and Real Media, 
    Inc. (Comment 92) at 4-8.
        \57\ It may be appropriate for such companies to provide a joint 
    notice with the operator of the host website.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Some commenters sought greater clarity regarding the meaning of 
    ``actual knowledge'' that a particular visitor is a child and inquired 
    whether an operator of a general audience site has any duty to 
    investigate the age of its visitors.\58\ Actual knowledge will be 
    present, for example, where an operator learns of a child's age or 
    grade from the child's registration at the site or from a concerned 
    parent who has learned that his child is participating at the site. In 
    addition, although the COPPA does not require operators of general 
    audience sites to investigate the ages of their site's visitors, the 
    Commission notes that it will examine closely sites that do not 
    directly ask age or grade, but instead ask ``age identifying'' 
    questions, such as ``what type of school do you go to: (a) elementary; 
    (b) middle); (c) high school; (d) college.'' Through such questions, 
    operators may acquire actual knowledge that they are dealing with 
    children under 13.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \58\ See PMA (Comment 107) at 6; Attorneys General (Comment 114) 
    at 7. See also MLG Internet (Comment 119) at 1-2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Finally, one commenter sought assurance that an operator would not 
    be liable if his site contained a link to another site that was 
    violating the Rule.\59\ If the operator of the linking site is not an 
    operator with respect to the second site (that is, if there is no 
    ownership or control of the information collected at the second site 
    according to the factors laid out in the NPR), then the operator will 
    not be liable for the violations occurring at the second site.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \59\ MaMaMedia, Inc. (``MaMaMedia'') (Comment 85) at 7.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    7. Definition of ``Parent''
        The Act and the proposed Rule defined ``parent'' as ``includ[ing] a 
    legal guardian.'' \60\ The Commission received two comments regarding 
    this definition, both of which sought additional guidance concerning 
    the Rule's application in non-traditional family situations.\61\ The 
    Commission believes that the proposed definition is sufficiently 
    flexible to account for a variety of family structures and situations, 
    including situations where a child is being raised by grandparents, 
    foster parents, or other adults who have legal custody. Therefore, the 
    Commission retains the definition of parent contained in the proposed 
    Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \60\ 15 U.S.C. 6501(7); 64 FR at 22752, 22764.
        \61\ Ass'n of Educational Publishers (``EdPress'') (Comment 130) 
    at 2; Highlights (Comment 124) at 1.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    8. Definition of ``Personal Information''
        The definition of ``personal information'' is another critical part 
    of the Rule because it specifies the type of information covered by the 
    Rule. The proposed definition included a number of different types of 
    individually identifiable information, including name, address, and 
    phone number; e-mail address; and other types of information that could 
    be used to locate an individual either online or offline.\62\ The 
    proposed definition also covered non-individually identifiable 
    information (e.g., information about a child's hobbies or toys) that is 
    associated with an identifier.\63\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \62\ 64 FR at 22752-22753, 22764.
        \63\ Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter asked the Commission to clarify that operators are 
    not required to provide parental notice or seek parental consent for 
    collection of non-individually identifiable information that is not and 
    will not be associated with an identifier.\64\ The Commission believes 
    that this is clear in both the Act and the Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \64\ See National Retail Federation (``NRF'') (Comment 95) at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Several commenters sought further guidance on whether the use of 
    screen names would trigger the Act's requirements.\65\ If a screen name 
    is not associated with any individually identifiable information, it is 
    not considered ``personal information'' under this Rule.\66\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \65\ ZapMe! (Comment 76) at 8-9; KidsOnLine.com (Comment 108) at 
    1-2; TRUSTe (Comment 97) at 3.
        \66\ One commenter also asked whether operators would be 
    required to ensure that a screen name chosen by a child did not 
    contain individually identifiable information. TRUSTe (Comment 97) 
    at 3. Operators do not have a specific duty to investigate whether a 
    screen name contains such information. However, an operator could 
    give children warnings about including such information in screen 
    names, especially those that will be disclosed in a public forum 
    such as a chat room.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Another commenter criticized the proposed Rule on the grounds that 
    it encourages operators to set up sites using screen names.\67\ This 
    commenter argued that it is important to have accountability online--
    i.e., that it is important for operators to be able to identify and 
    take action against visitors who post inappropriate information or 
    harass other online visitors. The Commission agrees that these are 
    important considerations, but notes that the Rule does not foreclose 
    operators from taking such precautions. Operators are free to request 
    parental consent to collect such information. Moreover, the exception 
    to the requirement of prior parental consent under section 
    312.5(c)(5)(i) of the Rule allows operators to collect the child's 
    online contact information for this very purpose.\68\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \67\ KidsOnLine.com (Comment 108) at 1-2.
        \68\ See also 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(2)(E)(i). As noted above, an 
    operator who wishes to collect name and online contact information 
    under this exception may not use or disclose that information for 
    any other purpose. An operator, however, who collects other personal 
    information and links it with online contact information collected 
    under this exception would be in violation of the Rule unless the 
    operator provided parental notice and obtained verifiable parental 
    consent for the collection of all of that information.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter noted that there are some persistent identifiers that 
    are automatically collected by websites and can be considered 
    individually identifying information, such as a static IP address or 
    processor serial number.\69\ If this type of information were 
    considered ``personal information,'' the commenter noted, then nearly 
    every child-oriented website would automatically be required to comply 
    with the Rule, even if no other personal information were being 
    collected. The Commission believes that unless such identifiers are 
    associated with other individually identifiable personal information, 
    they would not fall within the Rule's definition of ``personal 
    information.''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \69\ CDT (Comment 81) at 16. See also E.A. Bonnett (Comment 126) 
    at 2-3.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Several commenters asked whether information stored in cookies 
    falls within the definition of personal information.\70\ If the 
    operator either collects individually identifiable information using 
    the cookie or collects non-individually identifiable information using 
    the cookie that is
    
    [[Page 59893]]
    
    combined with an identifier, then the information constitutes 
    ``personal information'' under the Rule, regardless of where it is 
    stored.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \70\ See, e.g., Consumers Union (Comment 116) at 4.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        After reviewing the comments, the Commission has decided to retain 
    the definition of ``personal information'' with slight modifications. 
    In response to the suggestion of one commenter, one item was added to 
    subparagraph (f) of the definition: a photograph of the individual, 
    when associated with other information collected online that would 
    enable the physical or online contacting of the individual.\71\ The 
    Commission is also making slight modifications to ensure consistency 
    within the definition.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \71\ Aftab & Savitt (Comment 118) at 4. This commenter also 
    asked the Commission to remove the phrase ``collected online'' from 
    this definition in order to cover information that is submitted to 
    an operator offline, then posted online by the operator. While we 
    are cognizant of the risks posed by such practices, the Commission 
    believes that the COPPA does not apply to information submitted to 
    an operator offline. See Section II.A.2, supra, concerning the 
    definition of ``collection.''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    9. Definition of ``Third Party''
        The proposed Rule defined the term ``third party'' as ``any person 
    who is neither an operator with respect to the collection of personal 
    information * * * nor a person who provides support for the internal 
    operations of the website or online service.'' \72\ Under the Rule, an 
    operator is required to provide notice of its practices with respect to 
    the disclosure of information to third parties and to allow parents to 
    choose whether the operator may disclose their children's information 
    to third parties.\73\ Because third parties are not operators, they are 
    not responsible for carrying out the provisions of the Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \72\ 64 FR at 22753, 22764.
        \73\ See Sections II.C.3.d, and II.D.1, infra.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Comments regarding this definition raised issues similar to those 
    raised in response to the proposed definition of ``operator''--
    specifically, when and whether corporate affiliates would be considered 
    ``operators'' or ``third parties.'' As noted above, the Commission 
    believes that the most appropriate test for determining an entity's 
    status as an operator or third party is to look at the entity's 
    relationship to the data collected, using the factors listed in the 
    NPR.\74\ If an entity does not meet the test for operator, that entity 
    will be considered a third party.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \74\ See Section II.A.6, supra; 64 FR at 22752.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter asked that the Commission require third parties to 
    comply with the Rule.\75\ However, the statute applies only to the 
    practices of the operator, and the Commission does not have the 
    authority to extend liability to third parties.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \75\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 6, 11.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        After reviewing the comments, the Commission has made minor 
    revisions to the definition of ``third party'' to maintain consistency 
    across the Rule. These revisions consist of adding the words ``and 
    maintenance`` following ``collection,'' and clarifying that, in order 
    to be excluded from the definition, a person who provides internal 
    support for the website may not disclose or use information protected 
    under this Rule for any other purpose.
    10. The Definition of ``Obtaining Verifiable Parental Consent''
        The proposed Rule included a definition of ``obtaining verifiable 
    parental consent'' that was substantially similar to the definition 
    contained in the COPPA.\76\ The term was defined to mean ``making any 
    reasonable effort (taking into consideration available technology) to 
    ensure that before personal information is collected from a child, a 
    parent of the child'' receives notice of the operator's information 
    practices and consents to those practices. The Commission received no 
    comments suggesting modification to this definition, and therefore 
    retains the proposed definition.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \76\ See 64 FR 22753, 22764; 15 U.S.C. 6501(9).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    11. Definition of ``Website or Online Service Directed to Children''
        In the proposed Rule, the Commission listed a number of factors 
    that the Commission would consider in determining whether a site would 
    be ``directed to children,'' including, among other things, the site's 
    ``subject matter, visual or audio content, age of models, language or 
    other characteristics of the website or online service. * * *''\77\ The 
    Commission also stated in the proposed Rule that it would consider 
    competent and reliable empirical evidence regarding audience 
    composition as well as evidence regarding the intended audience of the 
    site.\78\ In addition, under the proposed Rule, a general audience 
    website would not be deemed to be directed to children simply because 
    it referred or linked to another website or online service that is 
    directed to children.\79\ Finally, if a general audience site has a 
    distinct children's ``portion'' or ``area,'' then the operator would be 
    required to provide the protections of the Rule for visitors to that 
    portion of the site.\80\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \77\ 64 FR 22753, 22764.
        \78\ Id.
        \79\ Id.
        \80\ Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Several commenters asked for more guidance about the factor 
    analysis laid out in this definition.\81\ One commenter asked that the 
    Commission clarify that the presence of only one of the listed factors 
    would not cause a site to be classified as ``directed to children''; 
    rather that all of the factors would be taken into account.\82\ In 
    response, the Commission notes that the proposed definition makes it 
    clear that the Commission will look at the overall character of the 
    site--and not just the presence or absence of one or more factors--in 
    determining whether a website is directed to children.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \81\ JuniorNet Corp. (``JuniorNet'') (Comment 100) at 2; Int'l 
    Digital Software Ass'n (``IDSA'') (Comment 103) at 2; CDT (Comment 
    81) at 20-21; MLG Internet (Comment 119) at 2; Time Warner (Comment 
    78) at 4, 5.
        \82\ JuniorNet (Comment 100) at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Another commenter noted that operators should not be able to 
    construct a ``veil of ignorance'' where the operator can determine 
    through questions whether a visitor is a child without specifically 
    asking for the visitor's age.\83\ As discussed above in Section II.A.6 
    concerning the definition of ``operator,'' the Commission will closely 
    examine such sites to determine whether they have actual knowledge that 
    they are collecting information from children. A similar concern was 
    raised with respect to sites that ask for age ranges that include both 
    children and teens (e.g., a ``15 and under'' category).\84\ Because it 
    is simple for operators to craft a ``12 and under'' age range, the 
    Commission will look closely at sites that do not offer such a range if 
    it appears that their operators are trying to avoid compliance with the 
    Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \83\ Consumers Union (Comment 116) at 4-5.
        \84\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 7; Attorneys General 
    (Comment 114) at 7. See also TRUSTe (Comment 97) at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Section 312.3: Regulation of Unfair or Deceptive Acts or Practices 
    in Connection With the Collection, Use, and/or Disclosure of Personal 
    Information From and About Children on the Internet
    
        Section 312.3 of the proposed Rule set out the Rule's general 
    requirements, which were detailed in the later provisions.\85\ The 
    Commission received no comments that directly pertained to section 
    312.3 of the proposed Rule, which was a restatement of the requirements 
    laid out in the Act,\86\ and therefore retains it without change. 
    Comments regarding the sections
    
    [[Page 59894]]
    
    implementing its requirements are discussed in the relevant sections 
    below.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \85\ 64 FR at 22753, 22764.
        \86\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    C. Section 312.4: Notice
    
    1. Section 312.4(a): General Principles of Notice
        The COPPA mandates that an operator provide notice on its website 
    and to parents of ``what information is collected from children by the 
    operator, how the operator uses such information, and the operator's 
    disclosure practices regarding such information.'' \87\ The proposed 
    Rule set out general principles of notice, followed by a specific set 
    of guidelines for the online placement and content of those notices, to 
    ensure that parents receive all the information that they would find 
    material when reviewing a site.\88\ As noted in the NPR, the operator's 
    notice will form the basis for a parent's decision whether to give the 
    operator consent to collect, use, and/or disclose personal information 
    from his or her child.\89\ In order to provide informed consent, a 
    parent must have a clear idea of what the operator intends to do.\90\ 
    Therefore, the proposed Rule required an operator's notice to ``be 
    clearly and understandably written,'' \91\ be complete, and * * * 
    contain no unrelated, confusing, or contradictory materials.'' \92\ The 
    Commission believes that these are the core principles underlying a 
    consent-based system and, therefore, retains this section in the final 
    Rule.\93\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \87\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(A)(i). One commenter stated that 
    Congress included these general guidelines in the Act as a 
    performance standard, rather than intending them to be a source of 
    detailed regulations. Yahoo! Inc, theglobe.com, inc., DoubleClick, 
    Inc. (``Yahoo et al.'') (Comment 73) at 2. Congress, however, 
    specifically delegated to the Commission the authority to issue 
    regulations to implement the Act.
        \88\ Sections 312.4(a), (b); 64 FR at 22753-56, 22764-65.
        \89\ 64 FR at 22754-55.
        \90\ The Commission notes that it has authority under this 
    section, as well as under Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission 
    Act, to take action against operators whose notices are deceptive or 
    misleading.
        \91\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 9; The McGraw-Hill Companies 
    (``McGraw-Hill'') (Comment 104) at 6. One commenter asked whether 
    the Commission would apply a particular standard in evaluating how a 
    notice is written. Jeff Sovern, St. John's University School of Law 
    (``Sovern'') (Comment 33) at 3-4. Traditionally, the Commission has 
    applied a ``reasonable consumer'' standard in evaluating whether a 
    notice is clearly and understandably written. Because the notices 
    required by the Act are intended for parents, the Commission will 
    look at whether they are written such that a reasonable parent can 
    read and comprehend them.
        \92\ 64 FR at 22754.
        \93\ Two commenters voiced support for these general principles. 
    See Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 7; Kraft (Comment 67) at 1.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Section 312.4(b)(1): Notice on the Website or Online Service--
    Placement of the Notice
        Section 312.4(b)(1) of the proposed Rule set forth the requirements 
    for online placement of the notice of the operator's information 
    practices. It required operators to place a link to the notice on the 
    home page of the website or online service such that a typical visitor 
    would see the link without having to scroll down from the initial 
    viewing screen.\94\ In addition, the proposed Rule required operators 
    to post a link to that notice in a similar manner at each place on the 
    website or online service where information is collected from 
    children.\95\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \94\ 64 FR at 22754.
        \95\ Id. Several commenters supported the use of other 
    mechanisms for providing notice, such as pop-up or interstitial 
    pages, which typically appear temporarily when visitors move from 
    one part of the site to another. America Online, Inc. (``AOL'') 
    (Comment 72) at 11; NRF (Comment 95) at 3; iCanBuy.com (Comment 101) 
    at 2. The Commission notes that pop-up or interstitial pages will 
    only satisfy the notice requirements of the Rule if they are clear, 
    prominent, and easily accessible to users, i.e., they do not 
    disappear after the initial viewing or users can re-access them 
    through a clear and prominent link on the home page.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        A large number of commenters noted that with the multitude of Web 
    browsers available and the advent of ever-smaller machines that can 
    access the Internet, it may not be technically feasible to ensure that 
    the link to the notice can be seen without scrolling down from the 
    initial viewing screen.\96\ The Commission acknowledges that the 
    proposed Rule's requirement regarding the placement of the online 
    notices may not be a workable standard. Therefore, the Commission has 
    modified section 312.4(b)(1)(ii) to require that a link to the notice 
    be placed ``in a clear and prominent place and manner on the home page 
    of the website or online service.'' ``Clear and prominent'' means that 
    the link must stand out and be noticeable to the site's visitors 
    through use, for example, of a larger font size in a different color on 
    a contrasting background. The Commission does not consider ``clear and 
    prominent'' a link that is in small print at the bottom of the home 
    page, or a link that is indistinguishable from a number of other, 
    adjacent links.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \96\ See, e.g., Am. Advertising Fed. (``AAF'') (Comment 87) at 
    2; ANA (Comment 93) at 5; Dell Computer Corp. (``Dell'') (Comment 
    102) at 3-4; McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 7; Time Warner (Comment 
    78) at 9; Viacom (Comment 79) at 6-7.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Some commenters noted that general audience sites with distinct 
    children's areas should be allowed to post the link to the children's 
    privacy policy at the home page of the children's area, rather than the 
    home page of the overall site.\97\ The Commission believes that this is 
    a sensible approach to providing notice. Parents who are reviewing the 
    operator's practices with respect to children would likely go directly 
    to the children's area; therefore, operators of sites with distinct 
    children's areas must post a prominent link at the home page of that 
    area.\98\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \97\ ANA (Comment 93) at 5; MPA (Comment 113) at 3-4; DMA 
    (Comment 89) at 22-23; McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 7.
        \98\ One comment argued that the notice requirements would 
    require operators of general audience sites to have two physically 
    separate privacy policies--one for adults and one for children. 
    Kraft (Comment 67) at 4. Operators are free to combine the privacy 
    policies into one document, as long as the link for the children's 
    policy takes visitors directly to the point in the document where 
    the operator's policies with respect to children are discussed, or 
    it is clearly disclosed at the top of the notice that there is a 
    specific section discussing the operator's information practices 
    with regard to children.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Further, in response to comment, section 312.4(b)(1)(iii) has been 
    modified to require that a link to the notice be placed ``at each area 
    on the website or online service where children directly provide, or 
    are asked to provide, personal information and in close proximity to 
    the requests for information in each such area.'' The comment noted--
    and the Commission agrees--that it makes sense to require that the link 
    be in close proximity to the initial request for information in an area 
    so that visitors do not have to scroll up or down the page to find the 
    link.\99\ In response to comments, the Commission also changed the 
    requirement of notice at each ``place'' where children provide 
    information to notice at each such ``area'' in order to make clear that 
    there does not need to be a link accompanying each question, but simply 
    at each separate area where such information is collected.\100\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \99\ Mars, Inc. (``Mars'') (Comment 86) at 10.
        \100\ See, e.g., AOL (Comment 72) at 8-11.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    3. Section 312.4 (b)(2) and (c)(1)(i)(B): Content of the Notice
        Section 312.4(b)(2) of the proposed Rule details the information 
    that operators must include in their notice on the site. That 
    information was also required to be included in the notice to the 
    parent under Section 312.4(c)(1)(i)(B).\101\ Under the proposed Rule, 
    operators were required to include in their notices, among other 
    things: (1) names and contact information for all operators; (2) the 
    types of personal information collected through the site and how such 
    information is collected; (3) how the personal information would be 
    used; (4) whether the personal
    
    [[Page 59895]]
    
    information would be disclosed to third parties, the types of 
    businesses in which those third parties are engaged, whether the third 
    parties have agreed to take steps to protect the information, and a 
    statement that parents have the right to refuse to consent to the 
    disclosure of their child's personal information to third parties; (5) 
    that the operator may not condition a child's participation in an 
    activity on the provision of more personal information than is 
    necessary to participate in the activity; and (6) that the parent may 
    review, make changes to, or have deleted the child's personal 
    information.\102\ Many of the comments addressing these sections 
    expressed concern that they required the inclusion of too much 
    information in the notices. As discussed below, the Commission believes 
    that most of the information required in the proposed Rule would be 
    material to parents in deciding whether to consent to their child's 
    participation in a site. However, in order to reduce the length of the 
    notice, the Commission has eliminated certain information that it has 
    determined would be of limited benefit to parents.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \101\ 64 FR at 22754-56, 22765.
        \102\ Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        a. Section 312.4(b)(2)(i). This section of the proposed Rule 
    required operators to include in the notice the name, address, phone 
    number, and e-mail address of all operators collecting or maintaining 
    personal information from children through the website or online 
    service.103 Some commenters objected to including this 
    information in the notice because it would make the notice unwieldy. 
    Operators can minimize the length of the notice by designating a single 
    entity as a central contact point for any inquiries regarding the 
    information practices of the site's operators. The Commission, however, 
    believes that it is essential that all operators be identified in the 
    notice, even if full contact information is not provided, so that 
    parents know who will see and use their children's personal 
    information. Therefore, the Commission has modified this provision 
    accordingly. Operators who do not wish to designate a single contact 
    may still minimize the length of the notice by including in the notice 
    on the site a hyperlink to a separate page listing the 
    information.104
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        \103\ 64 FR at 22754, 22765.
        \104\ In response to two comments, the Commission notes that 
    simply providing a hyperlink to the home pages of the other 
    operators, however, would not provide adequate notice for parents. 
    DMA (Comment 89) at 23-24; AOL (Comment 72) at 12. It would not only 
    be burdensome for parents, but some entities that would be 
    categorized as ``operators'' (i.e., those ``on whose behalf'' 
    personal information was collected) may not even have websites.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Several comments also noted that data-sharing relationships in the 
    online world change quickly, sometimes on a weekly basis,105 
    and that it would be burdensome for operators to revise their notices 
    with each change, as the proposed Rule required, particularly in the 
    case of the notice to the parent.106 While the Commission 
    believes that it is reasonable to expect operators to keep the notice 
    on the site current, it agrees that it would be burdensome for 
    operators to send numerous updated notices to parents. Therefore, as 
    discussed in Section II.C.4, below, it has modified the Rule to require 
    a new notice to the parent only where there will be a material change 
    in the collection, use, and/or disclosure of personal information from 
    the child. Thus, for example, if the operator plans to disclose the 
    child's personal information to a new operator with different 
    information practices than those disclosed in the original notice, then 
    a new consent would be required.107
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \105\ PMA (Comment 107) at 7-8; DMA (Comment 89) at 23-24. See 
    also McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 7.
        \106\ 64 FR at 22755. In the NPR, the Commission stated that 
    additional notices to the parent would be required if the operator 
    wished to disclose the child's personal information to parties not 
    covered by the original consent, including parties created by a 
    merger or other change in corporate structure.
        \107\ Marketing diet pills, for example, would be a materially 
    different line of business than marketing stuffed animals.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        b. Section 312.4(b)(2)(ii). Under this section of the proposed 
    Rule, operators were required to disclose the types of personal 
    information collected from children and whether that information is 
    collected directly or passively.108 In the NPR, the 
    Commission clarified that this section did not require operators to 
    disclose to parents every specific piece of information collected from 
    children, but rather the types or categories of personal information 
    collected, like name, address, telephone number, social security 
    number, hobbies, and investment information.109 The 
    Commission cautioned operators to use categories that were descriptive 
    enough that parents could make an informed decision about whether to 
    consent to the operator's collection and use of the 
    information.110
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \108\ 64 FR at 22754, 22765.
        \109\ 64 FR at 22754.
        110 Id. For example, stating ``We collect your child's name, e-
    mail address, information concerning his favorite sports, hobbies, 
    and books'' would be sufficient under the Rule. It would not be 
    necessary for the operator to state ``We ask for your child's name 
    and e-mail address, and whether he likes to play baseball, soccer, 
    football, or badminton. * * *''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Some commenters noted that the proposed Rule required operators to 
    provide too much detail in the notice concerning the types of 
    information collected from children.111 These commenters 
    felt that a more general notice would give the operator more 
    flexibility to change its activities without having to return to the 
    parent for additional consent.112 The Commission believes 
    that a more general notice may not reveal to parents that the operator 
    collects information that the parent does not want discussed or 
    divulged, like personal financial information. Therefore, the 
    Commission is retaining this portion of the Rule. However, as noted 
    above, these concerns should be alleviated by the Commission's 
    amendment to the Rule regarding ``material changes.'' 113
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \111\ McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 6-7; AAF (Comment 87) at 2.
        \112\ Id.
        \113\ See Section II.C.4, infra. In addition, as noted in note 
    9, supra, the Commission plans to develop educational materials to 
    assist operators in complying with the Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        c. Section 312.4(b)(2)(iii). Section 312.4(b)(2)(iii) of the 
    proposed Rule required operators to notify parents about how their 
    child's personal information ``is or may be used by the operator, 
    including but not limited to fulfillment of a requested transaction, 
    recordkeeping, marketing back to the child, or making it publicly 
    available through a chat room or by other means.'' 114 In 
    the NPR, the Commission noted that operators must provide enough 
    information for parents to make informed decisions, without listing 
    every specific or possible use of the information.115 Many 
    commenters expressed the view that the proposed Rule would require an 
    operator to provide such detail that they would inevitably have to send 
    new notices and obtain new consents for every minor change in the 
    operator's practices.116 Again, these concerns should be 
    alleviated by the Rule amendment regarding ``material changes.'' See 
    Section II.C.4, infra.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \114\ 64 FR at 22754-55, 22765.
        \115\ 64 FR at 22754.
        \116\ See supra note 106 and accompanying text.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Because this section of the proposed Rule referred only to ``the 
    operator,'' one commenter asked how websites should address situations 
    in which there are multiple operators collecting information through 
    the site but who use children's personal information in different 
    ways.117 Specifically, the commenter asked whether each 
    operator was required to post a separate notice, or whether a single 
    notice could be used. Where there are multiple operators with different 
    information
    
    [[Page 59896]]
    
    practices, there should be one notice summarizing all of the 
    information practices that will govern the collection, use, and/or 
    disclosure of children's personal information through the site. Thus, 
    the Commission has modified the Rule to clarify that a discussion of 
    all policies governing the use of children's information collected 
    through the site should be included in the notice.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \117\ Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 8.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        d. Section 312.4(b)(2)(iv). Under this provision of the proposed 
    Rule, an operator was required to disclose whether children's personal 
    information was disclosed to third parties, and if so, the types of 
    business in which those third parties were engaged, as well as whether 
    those third parties had agreed to maintain the confidentiality, 
    security, and integrity of the personal information obtained from the 
    operator.118 In addition, the operator was required to 
    notify the parent that he or she had the option of consenting to the 
    operator's collection and use of the child's information without 
    consenting to the disclosure of that information to third 
    parties.119 After reviewing all the relevant comments, the 
    Commission has determined that no changes to this section are 
    necessary.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \118\ 64 FR at 22755.
        \119 \Id. For a more detailed discussion of withholding consent 
    to the disclosure of personal information to third parties, see 
    Section II.D.1, infra.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter noted that the COPPA ``requires only that an operator 
    describe its own practices. * * *'' 120 The Commission 
    believes that the information required in this section of the proposed 
    Rule falls within the rubric of ``the operator's disclosure practices 
    for such information.'' 121 Parents need to know the steps 
    an operator has taken to ensure that third parties will protect their 
    children's data in order to provide meaningful consent.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \120\ DMA (Comment 89) at 24, citing 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(A)(i).
        \121\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(A)(i).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Some commenters felt that providing information concerning the 
    businesses engaged in by third parties would be overly 
    burdensome.122 Under this section, however, operators are 
    not required to provide detailed information concerning third party 
    businesses, but only to describe the ``types of business'' in which 
    third parties who will receive children's information are engaged--for 
    example, list brokering, advertising, magazine publishing, or 
    retailing.123 The Commission believes that it is not unduly 
    burdensome to determine the general line of business of the companies 
    with whom one does business. Moreover, this information will enable 
    parents to provide meaningful consent to third party disclosures.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \122\ See e.g., AAF (Comment 87) at 3; CBBB (Comment 91) at 11; 
    PMA (Comment 107) at 8; TRUSTe (Comment 97) at 1.
        \123\ 64 FR at 22755.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Commenters again pointed out that relationships between companies 
    in the online environment change rapidly, which would make notices 
    difficult to compose and keep current.124 Changes in the 
    identities of third parties would necessitate repeated notices to 
    parents, burdening both the operator and the parent.125 
    Another commenter suggested that rather than give notice of third 
    parties' information practices, operators should be allowed simply to 
    provide a warning to parents to review those practices.126 
    Once again, these concerns should be alleviated by the fact that the 
    disclosure is only of the types of businesses engaged in by third 
    parties, and new notice and consent are required only if there has been 
    a material change in the way that the operator collects, uses, and/or 
    discloses personal information. See Section II.C.4, below.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \124\ TRUSTe (Comment 97) at 1-2; McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 
    7; AAF (Comment 87) at 3; PMA (Comment 107) at 8.
        \125 \Id.
        \126\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 11. The Commission believes that 
    requiring parents to search out this information, which may not even 
    be available or accessible, would be unduly burdensome.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Still other commenters stated that the Commission should require 
    operators to disclose more detailed information regarding third 
    parties' information practices than the proposed Rule required, 
    including whether a third party has weaker standards than the 
    operator.127 The Commission believes that the proposed 
    requirement--that operators state whether or not the third parties have 
    agreed to maintain the confidentiality,128 security, and 
    integrity of children's data B strikes the appropriate balance between 
    a parent's need for information and an operator's need for an efficient 
    means of complying with the Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \127\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 23-24; Electronic Privacy 
    Information Center (``EPIC'') (Comment 115) at 8-9; Attorneys 
    General (Comment 114) at 8.
        \128\ The Commission expects that third parties who have agreed 
    to maintain the confidentiality of information received from 
    operators will not disclose that information further.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Alternatively, one of these commenters requested that operators be 
    prohibited from disclosing children's personal information to any third 
    party unless that party not only complies with the Act, but also has 
    the same privacy policy as the operator.129 The Act 
    explicitly applies to ``any website or online service directed to 
    children that collects personal information from children or the 
    operator of a website or online service that has actual knowledge that 
    it is collecting personal information from a child.'' 130 
    Therefore, the Commission cannot extend liability to third parties.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \129\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 23. See also CDT (Comment 
    81) at 23.
        \130\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(A).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        e. Section 312.4(b)(2)(v). Under Section 312.4(b)(2)(v) of the 
    proposed Rule, operators were required to state in their notices that 
    the Act prohibits them from conditioning a child's participation in an 
    activity on the child's disclosing more personal information than is 
    reasonably necessary to participate in that activity.131 One 
    commenter objected to including such a statement in the notice, on the 
    grounds that it does not provide parents with helpful 
    information.132 The Commission believes that this 
    information is material to parents and will assist them in evaluating 
    the reasonableness of an operator's requests for information. 
    Therefore, the Commission has decided to retain this provision.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \131\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(C); 64 FR at 22755, 22765, citing 15 
    U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(C). See also 64 FR at 22758, 22766.
        \132\ Mars (Comment 86) at 4.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        f. Section 312.4(b)(2)(vi). This section of the proposed Rule 
    required operators to describe in the notice on the site parents' right 
    to review personal information provided by their 
    children.133 It generally tracked the requirements in 
    section 312.6 of the proposed Rule 134 by requiring notice 
    of a parent's ability to review, make changes to, or have deleted the 
    child's personal information. In the NPR, the Commission sought public 
    comment on whether this information was needed in the notice on the 
    site, or only in the notice to the parent.135
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \133\ 64 FR at 22755, 22765.
        \134\ 64 FR at 22757-58, 22766. For a detailed discussion of 
    section 312.6, see Section II.E, infra.
        \135\ See 64 FR at 22762.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Some commenters believed that it was only necessary to include this 
    information in the notice to the parent, because it is only relevant 
    once parents have consented to the collection of their children's 
    information.136 Other commenters, however, felt notice of 
    parents' right to review children's information should be included in 
    the notice on the site so that parents can evaluate a site while 
    surfing with their children.137 The Commission also notes
    
    [[Page 59897]]
    
    that if the parent accidentally deletes or misplaces the notice 
    received from the operator, he or she would likely turn to the notice 
    on the site for information on reviewing the child's information. If 
    that information were not in the notice on the site, the parent may be 
    foreclosed from exercising the right to review the child's information. 
    Therefore, the Commission has retained this provision.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \136\ DMA (Comment 89) at 19-20; PMA (Comment 107) at 8-9 
    (operator should be able to choose whether to include this 
    information in the notice).
        \137\ Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 8-9; E.A. Bonnett 
    (Comment 126) at 4; CBBB (Comment 91) at 12; CME/CFA et al. (Comment 
    80) at 24; TRUSTe (Comment 97) at 1-2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    4. Section 312.4(c): Notice to a Parent
        This provision of the proposed Rule required operators to ``make 
    reasonable efforts, taking into account available technology, to ensure 
    that a parent of a child receives notice of an operator's practices 
    with regard to the collection, use, and/or disclosure of the child's 
    personal information, including any collection, use, and/or disclosure 
    to which the parent has not previously consented.'' 138 
    After reviewing the relevant comments, the Commission has amended this 
    provision to require new notice to the parent only when there is a 
    material change in the way the operator collects, uses, and/or 
    discloses personal information from the child.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \138\ 64 FR at 22755, 22765.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In the NPR, the Commission noted that ``reasonable efforts'' to 
    provide a parent with notice under this section could include sending 
    the notice to the parent by postal mail or e-mail, or having the child 
    print out a form to give to the parent. These methods were intended to 
    be non-exclusive examples.139 The Commission also noted that 
    operators must send the parent an updated notice and request for 
    consent ``for any collection, use, or disclosure of his or her child's 
    personal information not covered by a previous consent.'' 
    140 Examples of situations where new notice and request for 
    consent would be needed included if the operator wished to use the 
    information in a manner that was not included in the original notice, 
    such as disclosing it to parties not covered by the original consent, 
    including parties created by a merger or other corporate 
    combination.141
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \139\ Id. One commenter requested that we include this 
    information in the text of the Rule. DMA (Comment 89) at 27. The 
    Commission believes that the performance standard enunciated in this 
    provision is appropriate in light of the operator's need for 
    flexibility and the additional protections that are provided by the 
    parental consent requirement. As discussed below, the Rule provides 
    more specific guidance as to the appropriate mechanisms for 
    obtaining parental consent See Section II.D.2, infra.
        \140\ 64 FR at 22755, 22765
        \141\ Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Many commenters argued that the Commission's interpretation 
    concerning when a new notice and request for consent would be required 
    was burdensome and unnecessary.142 Given the high rate of 
    merger activity in this industry, the commenters asserted, operators 
    would be required to send many additional notices to 
    parents.143 Moreover, commenters noted that many mergers do 
    not change the nature of the business the operator engages in or how 
    the operator uses personal information collected from children. 
    Therefore, many additional notices to parents under the proposed 
    interpretation of this provision would not provide parents with 
    meaningful information.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \142\ See, e.g., AOL (Comment 72) at 14-15; DMA (Comment 89) at 
    26; Kraft (Comment 67) at 2, 5-6. See also CBBB (Comment 91) at 13-
    14.
        \143\ Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission agrees with these comments. In order to balance an 
    operator's need for efficiency and parents' need for relevant 
    information, the Commission has amended the Rule to require new notice 
    and consent only when there is a material change in how the operator 
    collects, uses, or discloses personal information from children. For 
    example, if the operator obtained consent from the parent for the child 
    to participate in games which required the submission of limited 
    personal information but now wishes to offer chat rooms to the child, 
    new notice and consent will be required. In addition, if an operator 
    (e.g., a toy company) merged with another entity (e.g., a 
    pharmaceutical company) and wished to use a child's personal 
    information to market materially different products or services than 
    those described in the original notice (e.g., diet pills rather than 
    stuffed animals), new notice and consent would be required. Likewise, 
    new notice and consent would be required to disclose the information to 
    third parties engaged in materially different lines of business than 
    those disclosed in the original notice (e.g., marketers of diet pills 
    rather than marketers of stuffed animals). On the other hand, if the 
    operator had parental consent to disclose the child's personal 
    information to marketers of stuffed animals, it does not need to obtain 
    a new consent to disclose that information to other marketers of 
    stuffed animals.
        One commenter suggested that the Rule also requires the operator to 
    obtain parental confirmation that the notice was received, either 
    through a return e-mail or a business reply postcard.\144\ The 
    Commission believes that this proposal would burden parents and 
    operators without adding significantly to the protection of children 
    online. In most cases, the operator's receipt of parental consent will 
    serve as confirmation that the parent received the notice.\145\ 
    Likewise, in most instances, if the parent does not receive the notice, 
    then the operator simply will not receive consent.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \144\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 24-25. Similarly, one 
    commenter noted that many parents share an e-mail account with their 
    children. A & E Television Networks (``AETN'') (Comment 90) at 17-
    18. In these situations, the commenter argued, it would be 
    impossible for the operator to determine whether the notice has been 
    received by the parent. Id. In many cases, however, the children 
    will have the incentive to give the notice to the parent in order to 
    obtain parental consent. Further, as noted above, in most cases, the 
    operator's receipt of parental consent will confirm that the parent 
    has received the notice.
        \145\ See Section II.D.2 infra, for a detailed discussion of the 
    requirements for obtaining verifiable parental consent under Section 
    312.5 of the Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter suggested that the Commission permit the notice to 
    the parent to take the form of an e-mail with an embedded hyperlink to 
    the notice on the site.\146\ In response, the Commission notes that the 
    notice to the parent must contain additional information that is not 
    required in the notice on the site.\147\ However, as long as the 
    additional, required information is clearly communicated to parents in 
    the e-mail, and the hyperlink to the notice on the site is clear and 
    prominent, operators may include the hyperlink to the notice on the 
    site in an e-mail to parents.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \146\ Mars (Comment 86) at 12.
        \147\ For example, the notice to the parent must contain 
    information concerning how to provide parental consent (section 
    312.4(c)(1)(ii)).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        a. Section 312.4(c)(1) (i) and (ii): information in the notice to a 
    parent. The proposed Rule required an operator's notice to a parent to 
    include all the information included in the notice on the site (section 
    312.4(c)(1)(i)(B)), as well as additional information. In cases that do 
    not implicate one of the exceptions to prior parental consent under 
    section 312.5(c), an operator must tell the parent that he or she 
    wishes to collect personal information from the child (section 
    312.4(c)(1)(i)(A)) and may not do so unless and until the parent 
    consents, and the operator must describe the means by which the parent 
    can provide that consent (section 312.4(c)(1)(ii)).\148\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \148\ 64 FR at 22755, 22765. One commenter thought that the 
    notice should also inform parents that they have the option of 
    denying consent. CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 12. The Commission 
    believes that a right of refusal is implied in a request for 
    consent, and therefore is not modifying this provision.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In the NPR, the Commission requested public comment on whether 
    there was additional information that
    
    [[Page 59898]]
    
    should be included in the notice.\149\ One commenter suggested that the 
    notice include a statement recommending that parents warn their 
    children not to post personal information in chat rooms or other public 
    venues.\150\ While the Commission does not believe this information 
    should be required in the notice under the COPPA, it strongly 
    encourages parents, operators, and educators to teach children about 
    the dangers of posting personal information in public fora. After 
    reviewing the comments concerning these provisions, the Commission 
    believes that no changes are necessary.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \149\ 64 FR at 22762.
        \150\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 13.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        b. Section 312.4(c)(1)(iii) and (iv): Notices under the multiple-
    contact exception, section 312.5(c)(3), and the child safety exception, 
    section 312.5(c)(4). In cases where an operator wishes to collect a 
    child's name and online contact information for purposes of responding 
    more than once to a specific request of the child under Section 
    312.5(c)(3), or for the purpose of protecting the safety of a child 
    participating on the website or online service under Section 
    312.5(c)(4), the operator was required to provide notice to the parent, 
    with an opportunity to opt out of future use or maintenance of the 
    child's personal information. Section 312.4(c)(1) (iii) and (iv) 
    required the operator to notify the parent of the operator's intended 
    use of the information, the parent's right to refuse to permit further 
    contact with the child, or further use or maintenance of the 
    information, and that ``if the parent fails to respond to the notice, 
    the operator may use the information for the purpose(s) stated in the 
    notice.'' \151\ The Commission received only one comment regarding this 
    provision \152\ and has determined that no changes are necessary.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \151\ 64 FR at 22756, 22765.
        \152\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 12 (generally requesting 
    more information in the notices).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Because the types of contact with children covered under section 
    312.5(c) (3) and (4) do not require a parent's affirmative consent, the 
    operator must clearly notify the parent that, in these instances, if 
    the parent fails to respond to the notice, the operator may use the 
    information for the purpose stated in the notice.\153\ The Commission 
    expects operators to process in a timely manner responses from parents 
    prohibiting the use of their children's information.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \153\ 64 FR at 22757, 22765-66.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    D. Section 312.5: Verifiable Parental Consent
    
    1. Section 312.5(a): General Requirements
        Section 312.5(a) of the proposed Rule set forth two requirements: 
    (1) That operators obtain verifiable parental consent before any 
    collection, use, or disclosure of personal information from children, 
    including any collection, use and/or disclosure to which the parent had 
    not previously consented; and (2) that the operator give the parent the 
    option to consent to collection and use of the child's personal 
    information without consenting to its disclosure to third parties.\154\ 
    In the NPR, the Commission also stated that, because the Act required 
    parental consent prior to any collection, use, and/or disclosure, the 
    parental consent requirement applied to the subsequent use or 
    disclosure of information already in possession of an operator as of 
    the effective date of the proposed Rule.\155\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \154\ 64 FR at 22756, 22765.
        \155\ Id. at 22751.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Commenters generally supported the principle of prior parental 
    consent.\156\ However, several argued that, by requiring parental 
    consent for future use of information collected before the effective 
    date of the Rule, the Commission was attempting to apply the Act 
    retroactively.\157\ They also stated that it would be extremely costly 
    and burdensome to obtain consent for information collected years ago, 
    especially in instances where they were unaware of a child's past or 
    current age or had no information on how to contact the parents.\158\ 
    The Commission is persuaded that the Act should not be interpreted to 
    cover information collected prior to its effective date. While the Act 
    clearly gives parents control over the use and disclosure of 
    information, and not just its collection,\159\ it also appears to 
    contemplate that such control be exercised only with regard to 
    information ``collected'' under the Act--i.e., collected after the 
    Act's effective date.\160\ Further, the Commission believes that it 
    could be difficult and expensive for operators to provide notice and 
    consent for information collected prior to the Rule's effective date. 
    Therefore, the Commission has eliminated this requirement from the 
    Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \156\ See, e.g., Gail Robinson (Comment 132); Tessin J. Ray 
    (Comment 131); BAWSELADI (Comment 133); Deb Drellack (Comment 20); 
    Valorie Wood (Comment 36); Deanie Billings (Comment 37); Nancy C. 
    Zink (Comment 38); Susan R. Robinson (Comment 42); Joyce Patterson 
    (Comment 43); Elaine Bumpus (Comment 44); Greg Anderson (Comment 
    46); Deanna (Comment 47); Mark E. Clark (Comment 48); Sue Bray 
    (Comment 50); Cindy L. Hitchcock (Comment 55); Stephanie Brown 
    (Comment 50); Samantha Hart (Comment 59); Tammy Howell (Comment 59); 
    Jean Hughes (Comment 60); dinky (Comment 61); PrivaSeek (Comment 
    112) at 2; CDT (Comment 81) at 25; Consumers Union (Comment 116) at 
    1; EPIC (Comment 115) at 5, 9; FreeZone (IRFA comment 01) at 2; 
    Kidsonline.com (IRFA comment 02) at 1; AAF (Comment 87) at 2; CBBB 
    (Comment 91) at 1-2; CARU (Workshop comment 08) at 3; AAAA (Comment 
    134) at 2, 5; Mars (Comment 86) at 1; Time Warner (Comment 78) at 
    10; Viacom (Comment 79) at 9-10; Children's Television Workshop 
    (``CTW'') (Comment 84) at 2, 6. See also 144 Cong. Rec. at S11659 
    (List of Supporters of Children's Internet Privacy Language).
        \157\ DMA (citing Landgraf v. U.S. Film Products, 511 U.S. 244 
    (1994)). See also EdPress (Comment 130) at 2; AAF (Comment 87) at 3-
    4; ANA (Comment 93) at 3-4; Grolier Enterprises (Comment 111) at 4; 
    IDSA (Comment 103) at 7-8; McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 5; MPA 
    (Comment 113) at 4; NRF (Comment 95) at 1-2; Time Warner Inc. 
    (Comment 78) at 3-4; Walt Disney Company and Infoseek Corp. 
    (``Disney, et al.'') (Comment 82) at 12-13.
        \158\ IDSA (Comment 103) at 7; TRUSTe (Comment 97) at 2-3.
        \159\ See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(B)(ii) (giving parents the 
    opportunity at any time to refuse to permit further use, disclosure, 
    or maintenance of information collected from their children); 15 
    U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(A)(ii) (requiring operators to obtain verifiable 
    parental consent for the collection, use, and/or disclosure of 
    personal information from children).
        \160\ See 144 Cong. Rec. at S11658 (Statement of Sen. Bryan) 
    (stating that parents can opt out of further collection, use, or 
    maintenance of their child's information and that ``[t]he opt out * 
    * * operates as a revocation of consent that the parent has 
    previously given'').
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission notes, however, that notwithstanding any prior 
    relationship that an operator has with the child, any collection of 
    ``personal information'' by the operator after the effective date is 
    covered by the Rule. Thus, for example, if an operator collected a 
    child's name and e-mail address before the effective date, but sought 
    information regarding the child's street address after the effective 
    date, the later collection would trigger the Rule's requirements. 
    Similarly, if after the effective date, an operator continued to offer 
    activities involving the ongoing collection and disclosure of personal 
    information from children (e.g., a chatroom or message board), or began 
    offering such activities for the first time, notice and consent would 
    be required for all participating children regardless of whether they 
    had previously registered or participated at the site.
        The Commission also notes that, for information collected prior to 
    the effective date of the Rule, it retains the authority to pursue 
    unfair or deceptive acts or practices under Section 5 of the Federal 
    Trade Commission Act. Thus, the Commission will continue to examine 
    information practices in use before the effective date of the COPPA for 
    deception and unfairness, and will
    
    [[Page 59899]]
    
    pursue enforcement in appropriate circumstances.\161\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \161\ See GeoCities, Docket No. C-3849 (Final Order Feb. 12, 
    1999); Liberty Financial Cos., Inc., Docket No. C-3891 (Final Order 
    Aug. 12, 1999). See also Staff Opinion Letter, July 17, 1997, issued 
    in response to a petition filed by the Center for Media Education, 
    at www.ftc.gov/os/1997/9707/cenmed.htm>.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Many commenters also objected to the requirement that operators 
    obtain a new parental consent for any changes to the collection, use, 
    and/or disclosure practices which were the subject of a previous 
    consent.\162\ As in the notice section of the Rule,\163\ they argued 
    that notification of minor changes would be extremely burdensome, 
    especially in light of constant changes taking place in the online 
    world, and unnecessary to achieve the purposes of the COPPA.\164\ As 
    noted above, the Commission agrees that the proposed requirement is 
    unduly broad and would be overly burdensome, and is therefore amending 
    the Rule to make clear that a new parental consent is required only if 
    there is a material change in the operator's collection, use, and/or 
    disclosure practices.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \162\ IDSA (Comment 103) at 5-6; CBBB (Comment 91) at 13-14; DMA 
    (Comment 89) at 26; Aftab & Savitt (Comment 118) at 5; ANA (Comment 
    93) at 6-7.
        \163\ See Section II.C.4, supra.
        \164\ One commenter supported this provision on the basis that 
    not requiring it would render parental consent meaningless. 
    Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 10. However, even one commenter 
    who supported the requirement still expressed concern that parents 
    might be ``badgered'' by too many of these requests. CME/CFA et al. 
    (Comment 80) at 13.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Finally, some commenters objected to the proposed Rule's 
    requirement that parents be given an opportunity to provide consent for 
    the collection and use of information without consenting to its 
    disclosure to third parties.\165\ Commenters argued that this 
    requirement is not included in the COPPA and that it interferes with an 
    operator's right under the COPPA to terminate service to a child whose 
    parent refuses to permit further use, maintenance, or collection of the 
    data.\166\ Other commenters supported this requirement as important to 
    the protection of children's privacy.\167\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \165\ Section 312.5(a)(2). See, e.g., DMA (Comment 89) at 25; 
    NRF (Comment 95) at 4; McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 7; PMA (Comment 
    107) at 11.
        \166\ ANA (Comment 93) at 6; IDSA (Comment 103) at 4-5; DMA 
    (Comment 89) at 25; PMA (Comment 107) at 11 (all referring to 
    section 312.6(c) of the proposed Rule and 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(3)). The 
    purpose of that provision was to enable operators to offer some 
    online activities that require children to provide personal 
    information, e.g., chat rooms, which may require the operator to 
    collect an e-mail address for security purposes. Under that 
    provision, operators may bar children whose parents have revoked 
    consent for the operator's use of the necessary information from 
    participating in those activities. The Commission does not believe 
    that disclosure to outside parties--other than those, such as 
    fulfillment services, that provide support for the internal 
    operations of the website--is reasonably necessary for an operator 
    to provide online activities.
        \167\ EPIC (Comment 115) at 9-10; Junkbusters (Comment 66) at 1. 
    See also CDT (Comment 81) at 25; CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 13; 
    Sovern (Comment 33) at 4; Mars (Comment 86) at 12-13; TRUSTe 
    (Comment 97) at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission believes that giving parents a choice about whether 
    information can be disclosed to third parties implements the clear 
    goals of the COPPA to give parents more control over their children's 
    personal information, limit the unnecessary collection and 
    dissemination of that information, and preserve children's access to 
    the online medium.\168\ The Act requires consent for the collection, 
    use, or disclosure of information,\169\ thus expressing the intent that 
    parents be able to control all of these practices. Although the Act 
    does not explicitly grant parents a separate right to control 
    disclosures to third parties, the Commission believes that this is a 
    reasonable and appropriate construction of the Act, particularly in 
    light of the rulemaking record and other considerations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \168\ See, e.g., 144 Cong. Rec. at S11657, S11658 (Statement of 
    Sen. Bryan).
        \169\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(A)(ii).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Indeed, the record shows that disclosures to third parties are 
    among the most sensitive and potentially risky uses of children's 
    personal information.\170\ This is especially true in light of the fact 
    that children lose even the protections of the Act once their 
    information is disclosed to third parties.\171\ The Commission believes 
    that these risks warrant providing parents with the ability to prevent 
    disclosures to third parties without foreclosing their children from 
    participating in online activities. In addition, the Act prohibits 
    collecting more information than is reasonably necessary to participate 
    in an activity,\172\ showing Congressional intent to limit information 
    practices (such as disclosures to third parties) that do not facilitate 
    a child's experience at the site. Finally, the Commission believes that 
    allowing parents to limit disclosures to third parties will increase 
    the likelihood that they will grant consent for other activities and 
    therefore preserve children's access to the medium.\173\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \170\ See CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 26-27; Mars (Comment 
    86) at 13; Kraft (Comment 67) at 4-5; Viacom (Comment 79) at 13-14. 
    See also Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 4 (citing 1997 survey 
    showing that 97% of parents whose children use the Internet believe 
    that website operators should not sell or rent children's personal 
    information).
        \171\ Thus, for example, parents cannot access information in 
    the possession of third parties, or require that it be deleted, as 
    they can for operators subject to the Rule. See 15 U.S.C. 
    6502(b)(1)(B)(ii),(iii). Nor can they prohibit future use of 
    information in the possession of third parties. Compare 15 U.S.C. 
    6502(b)(1)(B)(ii). In fact, parents are likely to be unaware of the 
    identities and specific information practices of many of the third 
    parties that obtain their children's information. See Section 
    II.C.3.d, supra (operators need only disclose types of business 
    engaged in by third parties and whether those third parties have 
    agreed to maintain the confidentiality, security, and integrity of 
    personal information received from operator).
        \172\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(C) (prohibiting an operator from 
    conditioning participation on the disclosure of more information 
    than necessary to participate in an activity).
        \173\ One study found that 97% of parents online did not want 
    their children's information disclosed to third parties, suggesting 
    that those parents would be more likely to grant consent if they 
    could limit such disclosures. Louis Harris & Associates and Dr. Alan 
    F. Westin, ``Commerce, Communication, and Privacy Online: A National 
    Survey of Computer Users,'' 1997, at 75.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Thus, the Commission believes that providing parents with a choice 
    about whether their children's information can be disclosed to third 
    parties is within the authority granted by the COPPA, consistent with 
    the rulemaking record, and important to the protection of children's 
    privacy. The Commission is therefore retaining this provision.
    2. Section 312.5(b): Mechanisms
        Section 312.5(b) of the proposed Rule required that operators make 
    reasonable efforts to obtain verifiable parental consent, taking into 
    consideration available technology.\174\ Consistent with the language 
    of the COPPA, the proposed Rule further clarified that the methods used 
    to obtain verifiable parental consent must be reasonably calculated, in 
    light of available technology, to ensure that the person providing 
    consent is the child's parent.\175\ In the NPR, the Commission provided 
    examples of methods that might satisfy these standards, and sought 
    comment on the feasibility, costs, and benefits of those methods, as 
    well as any others that the Commission should consider.\176\ To gather 
    additional relevant information, the Commission held a workshop devoted 
    solely to this issue.\177\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \174\ 64 FR at 22756, 22765.
        \175\ Id.; 15 U.S.C. 6501(9).
        \176\ 64 FR at 22756.
        \177\ 64 FR at 34595.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        While commenters and participants at the workshop generally 
    supported the concept of prior parental consent, they differed on what 
    would constitute a verifiable mechanism under this provision. In 
    particular, there was considerable debate over whether e-mail based 
    mechanisms could provide adequate assurance that the person providing 
    consent was the child's parent.
    
    [[Page 59900]]
    
        Because of concerns that a child using e-mail could pretend to be a 
    parent and thereby effectively bypass the consent process,\178\ some 
    commenters favored methods that would provide additional confirmation 
    of the parent's identity.\179\ These include use of a form to be signed 
    by the parent and returned to the operator by postal mail or fax 
    (``print-and-send''); (2) use of a credit card in connection with a 
    transaction; (3) having the parent call a toll-free number staffed with 
    trained personnel; (4) use of e-mail accompanied by a valid digital 
    signature; and 5) other electronic methods that are currently available 
    or under development.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \178\ This is of particular concern where a child shares an e-
    mail account with a parent, which is a common practice. See CME/CFA 
    et al. (Comment 80) at 28; APA (Comment 106) at 2; Attorneys General 
    (Comment 114) at 11; AETN (Comment 90) at 17-18. In fact, one 
    workshop participant reported that 40% of its registered parents 
    shared an e-mail address with their children. Aledort/Disney 
    (Workshop Tr.153). Another participant reported that 10-20% of its 
    registered parents shared the same e-mail address as their children. 
    Herman/iCanBuy.com (Workshop Tr 153-54).
        \179\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 28; APA (Comment 106) at 1-
    2; Nat'l Ass'n of Elementary School Principals (``NAESP'') (Comment 
    96) at 1; CARU (Workshop comment 08) at 1-2; Consumers Union 
    (Comment 116) at 5-6. See also Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 11 
    (supporting the traditional offline consent methods). One commenter 
    stressed the need for a high standard for parental consent because 
    children under the age of 13 do not have the developmental capacity 
    to understand the nature of a website's request for information and 
    its implications for privacy. APA (Comment 106) at 1-2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Some commenters took the position that print-and-send was the 
    method least subject to falsification;\180\ they also noted that, 
    because it is used by schools, most parents are familiar with it.\181\ 
    In addition, participants at the workshop noted that industry members 
    currently use print-and-send to ensure that they are obtaining parental 
    permission in certain circumstances--for example, when obtaining 
    consent to publish a child's art work or letter, or to send a contest 
    winner a prize.\182\ Commenters also supported the use of credit cards 
    in obtaining parental consent on the grounds that few, if any, children 
    under the age of 13 have access to credit cards.\183\ With regard to 
    the use of a toll-free number, commenters and workshop participants 
    noted that, with proper training, employees can easily learn to 
    differentiate between children and adult callers, and that parents 
    prefer this method.\184\ Commenters also supported use of digital 
    signatures to obtain consent, stating that they would effectively 
    verify identity and are currently available.\185\ Finally, testimony at 
    the workshop showed that there are a number of other electronic 
    products and services that are available now, or under development, 
    that could be used to confirm a parent's identity and obtain consent. 
    These included services that would provide a parent with a digital 
    signature, password, PIN number, or other unique identifier after 
    determining that the person seeking the identifier is an adult.\186\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \180\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 18; CARU (Workshop comment 08) at 2; 
    NAESP (Comment 96) at 1.
        \181\ NAESP (Comment 96) at 1. This commenter noted that young 
    children rarely falsify their parents' signatures. Id. See also 
    Douglas L. Brown (Comment 21); Don and Annette Huston (Comment 22).
        \182\ Bagwell/MTV Networks Online (Workshop Tr. 30, 35); 
    Randall/MaMaMedia (Workshop Tr. 28); Aledort/Disney (Workshop Tr. 
    151); FreeZone Network (IRFA comment 01) at 2; Aftab & Savitt 
    (Comment 118) at 6. One comment identified four children's websites 
    that have implemented offline consent mechanisms pursuant to the 
    CARU guidelines. CARU (Workshop comment 08) at 2; see also CBBB 
    (Comment 91) at 23.
        \183\ AOL (Comment 72) at 18-19; iCanBuy.com (Comment 101) at 1; 
    Mars (Comment 86) at 13. Among other things, credit cards can be 
    used to set up a ``master account'' for the parent with an e-mail 
    address to be used exclusively by the parent. Curtin/AOL (Workshop 
    Tr. 36-7); Aftab (Comment 117) at 3. See also KidsOnLine.com 
    (Comment 108) at 3; Talk City (Comment 110) at 3 (supporting the use 
    of a credit card as a method of consent).
        \184\ CARU (Workshop comment 08) at 2; CME/CFA et al. (Comment 
    80) at 14; Aftab (Workshop Tr. at 52).
        \185\ See Brandt/VeriSign (Workshop Tr. 199-202) and (Comment 
    99) at 1-4 (stating that one year to 18 months would be sufficient 
    time for testing and adoption of digital technology applications); 
    Teicher/CyberSmart! (Workshop Tr. 191-92, 199); Lucas/PrivaSeek 
    (Workshop Tr. 244-45, 299-300) and (Comment 112) at 4 (noting that 
    the next step is the adoption of digital signatures by online 
    businesses so that they can be made widely available to consumers); 
    Hill/ZeroKnowledge (Workshop Tr. 269-73); Johnson/Equifax Secure, 
    Inc. (Workshop Tr. 250-59).
        \186\ For example, one workshop participant described a service 
    now under development which would use schools to assist in issuing a 
    digital certificate to a child after obtaining parental consent. 
    Teicher/CyberSmart! (Workshop Tr. 190-94; 196-97; 199). Another 
    announced that his portal site would soon launch an e-mail 
    authentication system that could verify the age or profession of a 
    person, and then assign that person an e-mail address associated 
    with his age or status, e.g., John.doe@validadult.com; 
    Mary.teacher@validteacher.com. Ismach/BizRocket.com (Workshop 
    comment 12) at 1-3; (Workshop Tr. 231-232). Still another has 
    developed a permission-based infomediary service that will enable 
    consumers to set their preferences as to how their information may 
    be disclosed online. PrivaSeek (Comment 112) at 1. Under this 
    service, which is expected to be launched by the end of the year, a 
    parent could be assigned a password or digital signature following 
    initial verification. The charge to participating websites is 
    anticipated to be $0.10-$0.20 per name. Lucas/PrivaSeek (Workshop 
    Tr. 242-49); PrivaSeek (Comment 112) at 1.
        In addition, another company is currently providing digital 
    credentials (a certificate, PIN or password) to consumers after 
    authenticating their identity. The company estimates that the cost 
    for sites to use this service is $3 to $4 per customer. Johnson/
    Equifax Secure (Workshop Tr. 249-59). Another company offers a 
    service that enables a child to make purchases, with a parent's 
    permission, at participating websites. Parents use a credit or debit 
    card to establish an account and then authorize the sites to be 
    accessed and the amounts to spend. Herman/iCanBuy.com (Workshop Tr. 
    185-190). Yet another company is also planning to launch (by spring 
    2000) a free verification service that uses both credit and bank 
    cards in conjunction with algorithms to verify the validity of the 
    card numbers. The card number would be checked at the consumer's 
    browser and would not be collected or transferred over the Internet, 
    addressing some consumers' concerns about using credit cards online. 
    Oscar Batyrbaev (Comment 125) at 1; Batyrbaev/eOneID.com (Workshop 
    Tr. 235-39). Parents without online access will be able to obtain 
    verification by telephone. Id.
        Finally, another online company will provide parents and 
    children with digital pseudonyms that, following initial 
    verification using a digital signature, can be used to verify 
    identity. Hill/ZeroKnowledge (Workshop Tr. 268-73). See also Brandt/
    VeriSign (Workshop Tr. 195-96, 199-202 ).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Many commenters, however, criticized some of these methods for the 
    costs and burdens they are likely to impose on operators. Regarding 
    print-and-send, one commenter cited a figure of $2.81 per child to 
    process mailed or faxed parental consent forms.\187\ Another noted an 
    80% decline in online subscriptions to its magazine when it switched 
    from an online subscription model to a form that had to be downloaded 
    and mailed.\188\ Still others pointed out that there is no way to 
    authenticate a signature to be sure that it is actually the parent who 
    has signed the form.\189\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \187\ Clarke/KidsCom.com (Workshop Tr. 22). See also Cartoon 
    Network et al. (Comment 77) at 8 (estimating that cost to open and 
    sort written consent forms is about $0.08 to $0.31 per child). 
    Another comment estimated that the cost per consent by fax and mail, 
    including overhead, were $0.94 and $0.89, respectively. Zeeks.com 
    (IRFA comment 05) at Attachment (``Compliance Cost Estimate'').
        \188\ Time Warner (Comment 78) at 11. Other commenters stated 
    that offline methods might be inconvenient or labor-intensive for 
    parents. Dell (Comment 102) at 2; Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 
    77) at 6; DMA (Comment 89) at 6-8; Grolier (Comment 111) at 1-2.
        \189\ Richard Storey (Comment 02) at 1; PMA (Comment 107) at 3-
    4, 10; PrivaSeek Inc. (Comment 112) at 3.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Regarding the use of credit cards, commenters noted that operators 
    would be charged a fee for each transaction,\190\ that not every parent 
    has a credit card,\191\ and that some parents do not
    
    [[Page 59901]]
    
    like to use credit cards online.\192\ One credit card company opposed 
    the use of credit cards in this manner because it could foster 
    unauthorized use and undermine systems used to detect fraud.\193\ 
    Commenters also noted that the use of a toll-free number would require 
    operators to hire personnel just to answer phones, and would therefore 
    be costly.\194\ Finally, a number of commenters contended that while 
    digital signatures and other electronic methods may be promising 
    alternatives, they are not yet widely available, and therefore are 
    impracticable as current methods of compliance.\195\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \190\ Disney et al. (Comment 82) at 8; MPA (Comment 113) at 5; 
    DMA (Comment 89) at 7. Two comments stated that credit cards cost up 
    to $3 per verification to process. Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 
    77) at 10-11; DMA (Comment 89) at 7. One company experienced costs 
    ranging from $2 to $3 per verification. Aftab (Workshop Tr. 17).
        \191\ McGraw-Hill (Comment 104 ) at 3; Cartoon Network et al. 
    (Comment 77) at 9; KidsOnLine.com (Comment 108) at 3; DMA (Comment 
    89) at 7. Some commenters also thought consumers might be troubled 
    by the privacy implications of divulging personal information for 
    the purpose of granting consent. Brian Burke (Comment 05); Disney et 
    al. (Comment 82) at 9; PrivaSeek (Comment 112) at 3; Cartoon Network 
    et al. (Comment 77) at 9-10; PMA (Comment 107) at 110; EPIC (Comment 
    115) at 10; DMA (Comment 89) at 7; Viacom (Comment 79) at 11.
        \192\ Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 77) at 9-11; DMA (Comment 
    89) at 7; PMA (Comment 107) at 10; Viacom (Comment 79) at 11.
        \193\ Visa USA, Inc. (Comment 75) at 2. The Commission 
    recognizes that there may be risks in using credit cards for this 
    purpose, but notes that this method is already being used for 
    similar purposes--for example, to verify that a person is over 18 
    for purposes of obtaining access to adult materials online. See 
    amicus of Senators Oxley and Coates; eOneID.com (Workshop comment 
    09) at Appendix A.
        \194\ Alison J. Richards (Comment 105) at 1; MPA (Comment 113) 
    at 5; Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 77) at 11-2. One commenter 
    estimated that the cost for telephone consents would be $0.97 for an 
    automated answering system, the tapes of which would then need to be 
    manually swept to weed out children and enter data into the system. 
    Zeeks.com (IRFA Comment 05) at Attachment (``Compliance Cost 
    Estimate''). Another commenter estimated the cost of a live operator 
    to be $55 per hour plus training costs. Cartoon Network et al. 
    (Comment 77) at 12.
        \195\ Richard Storey (Comment 02) at 1; Viacom (Comment 79) at 
    12; Disney et al. (Comment 82) at 8-9; DMA (Comment 89) at 5; Alison 
    J. Richards (Comment 105) at 1; Amazon.com (Comment 109) at 3; 
    Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 77) at 13-15; Grolier (Comment 111) 
    at 1; CBBB (Comment 91) at 16-17.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In response to a request for comment on whether e-mail alone would 
    satisfy the Act's requirements, commenters presented a variety of 
    views. A number of commenters opposed use of e-mail on the grounds that 
    it is easily subject to circumvention by children.\196\ While a 
    significant number of commenters advocated the use of e-mail,\197\ most 
    of them acknowledged that taking additional steps in conjunction with 
    e-mail would increase the likelihood that the consent was submitted by 
    the parent and not the child.\198\ Such steps would include: the use of 
    PIN numbers or passwords; \199\ sending follow-up e-mails to the parent 
    to increase the likelihood that the parent will see the request for 
    consent; \200\ or allowing e-mail consent only if the parent and child 
    have different e-mail addresses.\201\ Still others recommended 
    including in the e-mail questions to which the child would be unlikely 
    to know the answer.\202\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \196\ Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 11; Robert F. Reid 
    (Comment 06); Joseph C. DeMeo (Comment 08); Patrick O'Heffernan 
    (Comment 17); NAESP (Comment 96) at 1; APA (Comment 106) at 2; 
    Consumers Union (Comment 116) at 5; CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 
    15.
        \197\ Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 77) at 15-18; Disney et 
    al. (Comment 82) at 7-9; Time Warner (Comment 78) at 10-11; DMA 
    (Comment 89) at 5-6. Several commenters stated that Congress must 
    have intended e-mail to be used for consent purposes because the Act 
    allows online contact information to be collected for the purpose of 
    seeking parental consent. Id. (citing 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(2)(B)). Some 
    commenters stated that, in their experience, parents preferred to 
    use e-mail to grant consent. Bagwell/MTV Networks Online (Workshop 
    Tr. 33-34); Aftab (Workshop Tr. 31).
        \198\ See Aledort/Disney (Workshop Tr. 149-51); Bruening/TRUSTe 
    (Workshop Tr. 39); CARU (Workshop comment 08) at 2; Viacom (Comment 
    79) at 13; Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 77) at 17; NRF (Comment 
    95) at 4.
        \199\ AAAA (Comment 134) at 2; ANA (Comment 93) at 2; Talk City 
    (Comment 110) at 3.
        \200\ Disney et al. (Comment 82) at 9; DMA (Comment 89) at 6.
        \201\ AAAA (Comment 134) at 2; ANA (Comment 93) at 2; NRF 
    (Comment 95) at 4; MPA (Comment 113) at 5; DMA (Comment 89) at 6. 
    The Commission notes that, because children can easily obtain 
    multiple e-mail addresses from free e-mail services, this method may 
    not ensure verifiability.
        \202\ NRF (Comment 95) at 4; Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 77) 
    at 17; Time Warner (Comment 78) at 11; DMA (Comment 89) at 6. The 
    Commission notes that this method could pose problems if it requires 
    operators to verify the ``answer'' to the questions, or if the child 
    is reasonably sophisticated.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Finally, many commenters urged the Commission to temporarily adopt 
    a standard under which the consent mechanism required would depend upon 
    how the operator intended to use the information (i.e., a ``sliding 
    scale'').\203\ Such an approach would permit operators to obtain 
    consent at a reasonable cost until secure electronic mechanisms become 
    more widely available and affordable. Generally, these commenters 
    advocated use of an e-mail based mechanism for purposes of consenting 
    to an operator's internal use of information, such as an operator's 
    marketing to a child based on the child's preferences, but a ``higher'' 
    method of consent, such as use of a credit card or print-and-send form, 
    for purposes of consenting to activities that present greater risks to 
    children.\204\ In comments and at the workshop, commenters cited public 
    postings by children (e.g., in chat rooms and on bulletin boards), as 
    well as disclosures of information to third parties, as activities that 
    pose such risks.\205\ Other commenters opposed the ``sliding scale'' on 
    the ground that it could permit the use of consent mechanisms that fall 
    short of the COPPA's requirements.\206\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \203\ See, e.g., Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 77) at 18 
    (suggesting that sliding scale sunset in five years); DMA (Workshop 
    comment 02) at 1-3 (suggesting that the Commission reexamine the 
    scale after a specific period of time or at a point when technology 
    has changed); Viacom (Comment 79) at 9-10, 12-14 (five year sunset 
    date); Kraft (Comment 67) at 5; Bagwell/MTV Networks Online 
    (Workshop Tr. 32-33); CBBB (Comment 91) at 15-18; CTW (Comment 84) 
    at 6-7; CARU (Workshop Comment 08) at 1-2; Mars (Comment 86) at 13-
    14; PMA (Comment 107) at 4, 11. See also Herman/iCanBuy.com 
    (Workshop Tr. 209) (if adopted, should sunset within 12-18 months); 
    Teicher/CyberSmart! (Workshop Tr. 199) (predicting significant 
    changes in technology that would permit sunset within 18 months).
        \204\ Bagwell/MTV Networks Online (Workshop Tr. 32-33); Kraft 
    (Comment 67) at 5.
        \205\ Kraft (Comment 67) at 4-5; Cartoon Network et al. (Comment 
    77) at 18; ANA (Comment 93) at 2; CBBB (Comment 91) at 15-18; PMA 
    (Comment 107) at 11; CARU (Workshop Comment 08) at 1; Viacom 
    (Comment 79) at 13; and Bagwell/MTV Networks Online (Workshop Tr. 
    33). The legislative history also reflects special concern for 
    children's safety in such online fora as chat rooms, home pages, and 
    pen-pal services in which children may make public postings of 
    identifying information. See 144 Cong. Rec. S11657 (Statement of 
    Sen. Bryan).
        \206\ See, e.g., CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 7.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In determining whether a particular method of obtaining consent is 
    ``verifiable'' under the COPPA, the Commission must consider: (1) 
    whether the method ensures that it is the parent providing the consent; 
    and (2) whether the method is a ``reasonable effort,'' taking into 
    consideration available technology. In determining what is a 
    ``reasonable effort'' under the COPPA, the Commission believes it is 
    also appropriate to balance the costs imposed by a method against the 
    risks associated with the intended uses of the information collected. 
    Weighing all of these factors in light of the record, the Commission is 
    persuaded that temporary use of a ``sliding scale'' is an appropriate 
    way to implement the requirements of the COPPA until secure electronic 
    methods become more available and affordable.
        The record shows that certain methods of consent--print-and-send, 
    credit card, toll-free number with trained personnel, and digital 
    signature--provide appropriate assurances that the person providing 
    consent is the child's parent, and thus satisfy the first part of the 
    inquiry.\207\ In addition, testimony at the Commission's workshop shows 
    that a number of electronic products and services, which could also be 
    used to verify a parent's identity and obtain consent, are currently 
    available or under development.\208\ The record also shows, however, 
    that some of these methods may be costly and others may not be widely 
    available at the present time.
    
    [[Page 59902]]
    
    Therefore, under the second prong of the inquiry, the Commission 
    believes that, until reliable electronic methods of verification become 
    more available and affordable, these methods should be required only 
    when obtaining consent for uses of information that pose the greatest 
    risks to children.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \207\ Print-and-send and digital signatures were listed as 
    acceptable consent mechanisms in Senator Bryan's Floor Statement. 
    See 144 Cong. Rec. S11657.
        \208\ See note 186, supra, describing such services.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Thus, under the ``sliding scale,'' the more reliable methods of 
    consent will be required for activities involving chat rooms, message 
    boards, disclosures to third parties, and other ``disclosures'' as 
    defined in Section 312.2 of the Rule.\209\ As noted above, these 
    methods include the methods identified in the NPR (print-and-send, 
    credit card, toll-free number, and digital signatures),\210\ as well as 
    other reliable verification products and services to the extent that 
    they are currently available. To minimize costs, the Rule makes clear 
    that such methods also include the use of e-mail, as long as it is 
    accompanied by a PIN or password obtained through one of the above 
    procedures.\211\
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        \209\ See also 15 U.S.C. 6501(4).
        \210\ 64 FR at 22756.
        \211\ For example, there may be verifying services available to 
    operators that would verify a parent's identity and then provide the 
    parent with a PIN or password for use with e-mail. Upon receipt of 
    the parent's consent via e-mail, an operator could confirm the 
    parent's identity with the verifying service. Similarly, as noted 
    above, an operator could use e-mail, as long as it were sent through 
    an account set up by an adult using a credit card (a ``master 
    account''), and reserved for the adult's use. See note 184, supra.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        For internal uses of information, operators will be permitted to 
    use e-mail to obtain consent, as long as some additional steps are 
    taken to provide assurances that the parent is providing the consent. 
    Based on the comments, the Commission is persuaded that e-mail alone 
    does not satisfy the COPPA because it is easily subject to 
    circumvention by children.\212\ The additional steps include sending a 
    delayed confirmatory e-mail to the parent following receipt of consent, 
    or obtaining a postal address or telephone number from the parent \213\ 
    and confirming the parent's consent by letter or telephone call.\214\ 
    If such consent mechanisms are used, the operator must notify parents 
    that they can revoke any consent given in response to the earlier e-
    mail.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \212\ Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 11; Robert F. Reid 
    (Comment 06); Joseph C. DeMeo (Comment 08); Patrick O'Hefferman 
    (Comment 17); NAESP (Comment 96) at 1; APA (Comment 106) at 2; 
    Consumers Union (Comment 116) at 5; CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 
    28. In particular, where a parent and child share the same e-mail 
    account, as is often the case, a child may easily pretend to be the 
    parent and provide consent for himself. See note 179, supra.
        \213\ The Commission expects that operators will keep 
    confidential any information obtained from parents in the course of 
    obtaining parental consent or providing for parental review of 
    information collected from a child.
        \214\ One variation on this approach would require not only a 
    confirmatory e-mail to the parent, but also a response from the 
    parent confirming the consent. Aledort/Disney (Workshop Tr. 149-
    150). See also Disney (Workshop comment 06) at 12. Using this 
    method, one workshop participant reported that 33% of parents 
    granted consent; 30% declined consent; and 37% never responded. 
    Aledort/Disney (Workshop Tr. 152).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Based on evidence in the record, the Commission believes that use 
    of a ``sliding scale'' is necessary only in the short term, and that, 
    with advances in technology, companies will soon be able to use more 
    reliable verifiable electronic methods in all of their 
    transactions.\215\ Indeed, as noted above, the record shows that a 
    number of products and services, including digital signatures, will 
    soon be more widely available to facilitate verifiable parental consent 
    at reasonable cost. The Commission therefore plans to phase out the 
    ``sliding scale'' two years from the effective date of the Rule (i.e., 
    April 2002), unless presented with evidence showing that the expected 
    progress in available technology has not occurred.\216\ The Commission 
    will conduct a review of this issue, using notice and comment, 
    approximately eighteen months from the effective date of the Rule 
    (i.e., in October 2001).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \215\ Likewise, with advances in technology, the use of e-mail 
    (without the more reliable methods of verification) may no longer be 
    regarded as a ``reasonable effort'' under the Rule.
        \216\ Comments and testimony at the workshop showed that digital 
    signatures and other reliable electronic methods are likely to be 
    widely available and affordable within approximately a year to 
    eighteen months from the July 1999 the workshop. See Brandt/VeriSign 
    (Workshop Tr. 199-202). See also note 188, supra (other secure 
    electronic methods are available now or will be available within a 
    year from the date of the workshop). Thus, the proposed Rule's 
    longer timetable for implementing the ``sliding scale''--two years 
    from the Rule's effective date or almost three years from the date 
    of the workshop--should provide ample time for these mechanisms to 
    develop and become widely available.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission believes that temporary adoption of this ``sliding 
    scale'' fulfills the statutory requirement that efforts to provide 
    ``verifiable parental consent'' be ``reasonable.'' It provides 
    operators with cost-effective options until more reliable electronic 
    methods become available and affordable, while providing parents with 
    the means to protect their children.
    3. Section 312.5(c): Exceptions to Prior Parental Consent
        The COPPA sets forth five exceptions to the general requirement 
    that operators obtain verifiable parental consent before collecting 
    personal information from children.\217\ These limited exceptions were 
    intended to facilitate compliance with the Rule, allow for seamless 
    interactivity in a wide variety of circumstances, and enable operators 
    to respond to safety concerns.\218\ Indeed, many of the concerns raised 
    by the commenters, are, in fact, addressed in these exceptions.\219\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \217\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(2).
        \218\ See 144 Cong. Rec. S11658 (Statement of Sen. Bryan).
        \219\ See, e.g., Section II.A.8, supra, regarding the use of the 
    exception to maintain website security.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        This subsection of the proposed Rule permitted an operator, without 
    prior parental consent, to collect: (1) a parent's or child's name and 
    online contact information to seek parental consent or to provide 
    parental notice; 220 (2) a child's online contact 
    information in order to respond on a one-time basis to a specific 
    request of the child (e.g., to provide one-time homework help or to 
    send a document); 221 (3) a child's online contact 
    information in order to respond directly more than once to a specific 
    request of the child (e.g., to provide an online magazine subscription, 
    or a contest entry and subsequent award) 222 when such 
    information is not used to contact the child beyond the scope of that 
    request, and the operator provides the parent with notice and an 
    opportunity to opt-out; 223 and (4) the name and online 
    contact information of the child to the extent reasonably necessary to 
    protect the safety of a child participating on the 
    website.224 Furthermore, under the proposed Rule, the 
    operator may collect, use, or disseminate such information as necessary 
    to protect the security or the integrity of the site or service, to 
    take precautions against liability, to respond to judicial process, or, 
    to the extent permitted under other provisions of law,
    
    [[Page 59903]]
    
    to provide information to law enforcement agencies or for an 
    investigation related to public safety.225 A workshop 
    participant noted that these exceptions include some of the most 
    popular and common online activities.226
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \220\ Section 312.5(c)(1).
        \221\ Section 312.5(c)(2). This exception also requires that the 
    operator not use the information to recontact the child and that the 
    operator delete the information from its records. If the website 
    wishes to retain the child's e-mail address for future homework 
    assistance, then it would fall into the scope of the exception in 
    section 312.5(c)(3) and require parental notice and opt-out. 
    Moreover, if the operator wishes to use the information collected 
    under this--or any other--exception for other purposes, then the 
    operator must follow the notice and consent requirements of the 
    Rule.
        \222\ Section 312.5(c)(3). Sending an electronic postcard where 
    the website retains the online contact information until the 
    postcard is opened would fall under this exception. However, where 
    the operator's postcard system sends the requested postcard without 
    maintaining the online contact information, this collection would 
    fall under section 312.5(c)(2).
        \223\ Section 312.5(c)(3).
        \224\ Section 312.5(c)(4). For example, operators may collect 
    online contact information from children participating in their chat 
    rooms in order to report to authorities a child's claim that he is 
    being abused.
        \225\ Section 312.5(c)(5). Thus, an operator may collect limited 
    information in order to protect the security of its site, for 
    example, from hackers.
        \226\ Sehgal-Kolbet/CARU (Workshop Tr. 40-41). See also CARU 
    (Workshop comment 08) at 2-3.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        A number of commenters had specific suggestions with regard to 
    modifying the exceptions.227 However, the Commission 
    believes that the exceptions, which closely track the statutory 
    language, strike the appropriate balance between an operator's 
    legitimate need to collect information without prior parental consent 
    and the safety needs of children. It is therefore retaining the 
    language of the exceptions as proposed.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \227\ For example, some commenters suggested that the Rule 
    define ``a reasonable time'' for obtaining consent and deleting 
    information under section 312.5(c)(1). PMA (Comment 107) at 12; Mars 
    (Comment 86) at 14; CBBB (Comment 91) at 19; CME/CFA et al. (Comment 
    80) at 14. See also CDT (Comment 81) at 27. The Commission believes 
    that the time period for obtaining consent may vary depending on the 
    mechanism used; however, it expects operators to delete information 
    obtained under this exception in a timely manner.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    4. Response to Comments Requesting an Exception for Information 
    Collection in the Educational Setting
        Numerous commenters raised concerns about how the Rule would apply 
    to the use of the Internet in schools.228 Some commenters 
    expressed concern that requiring parental consent for online 
    information collection would interfere with classroom activities, 
    especially if parental consent were not received for only one or two 
    children.229 In response, the Commission notes that the Rule 
    does not preclude schools from acting as intermediaries between 
    operators and parents in the notice and consent process, or from 
    serving as the parents' agent in the process. For example, many schools 
    already seek parental consent for in-school Internet access at the 
    beginning of the school year. Thus, where an operator is authorized by 
    a school to collect personal information from children, after providing 
    notice to the school of the operator's collection, use, and disclosure 
    practices, the operator can presume that the school's authorization is 
    based on the school's having obtained the parent's consent.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \228\ Association of American Publishers (``AAP'') (Comment 70) 
    at 4-5; EdPress (Comment 130) at 1-2; MaMaMedia (Comment 85) at 3-4; 
    ZapMe! (Comment 76) at 4-5; ALA (Comment 68) at 2-3.
        \229\ Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Operators may wish to work with schools to educate parents about 
    online educational activities that require websites to collect personal 
    information in the school setting. To ensure effective implementation 
    of the Rule, the Commission also intends to provide guidance to the 
    educational community regarding the Rule's privacy protections.
    
    E. Section 312.6: Right of Parent To Review Personal Information 
    Provided by Child
    
        Section 312.6 of the proposed Rule set forth the requirements for 
    providing parental access to personal information collected from the 
    child, including what information must be disclosed and how the parent 
    could be properly identified.230 In the NPR, the Commission 
    sought comment regarding methods of identification, particularly in 
    non-traditional family situations, and technological advances under 
    development that might ease the process.231
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \230\ 64 FR at 22757-58, 22766.
        \231\ 64 FR at 22762-63.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    1. Access to Information
        The proposed Rule contemplated a two-step approach to parental 
    review under Secs. 312.6(a) (1) and (3). First, upon request of a 
    properly identified parent, the operator was required to tell the 
    parent what types of personal information have been collected from the 
    child (e.g., ``Your child has given us his name, address, e-mail 
    address, and a list of his favorite computer games''). Second, if 
    requested, the operator was required to provide the specific personal 
    information collected from the child.232
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \232\ 64 FR at 22757-22758.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter suggested that operators be required to provide 
    parents with the option of directly requesting the specific information 
    collected.233 As was explained in the NPR, operators, after 
    obtaining proper identification, can in fact skip the first step 
    relating to disclosure of the types of information collected, and 
    simply allow parents to review the specific information.234 
    Section 312.6(a) was not intended to mandate unnecessary steps, but 
    rather to allow for flexibility for all parties. In some instances, 
    parents may be satisfied with learning the types of information 
    collected and may not need to see the specific personal information 
    provided by the child. Similarly, if a parent asks only for the 
    specific information collected from the child, the operator need not 
    first provide a general list of the categories of information 
    collected.235
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \233\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 16.
        \234\ 64 FR at 22758 n.11. However, as noted in the discussion 
    of parental verification below, the Commission has modified the Rule 
    to require proper identification only for access to the child's 
    specific personal information, not for the types of information 
    collected, as originally proposed.
        \235\ One commenter suggested that parental access be limited in 
    cases where the operator has collected minimal personal information, 
    such as an e-mail address for the sole purpose of sending a periodic 
    newsletter or similar mailing, to a simple confirmation that the 
    child is on the mailing list. AOL (Comment 72) at 19. In response, 
    the Commission notes that the COPPA requires access to all 
    information collected from children, regardless of the 
    circumstances. See 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(B).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Another commenter called for operators to provide information 
    within a reasonable time or within a specified number of days, and 
    suggested that information should be provided to parents on an ongoing 
    basis.236 The Commission declines to prescribe a specific 
    time period applicable to all parental requests for information, but 
    expects that operators will respond to such requests promptly and 
    without imposing undue burdens on parents. In addition, the Commission 
    believes that requiring operators to provide information to the parent 
    on an ongoing basis would be unduly burdensome for both operators and 
    parents, who may not need or want this information from the operator.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \236\ Sovern (Comment 33) at 5.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Parent's Right To Review Information Provided by the Child
        Sections 312.6(a)(2) and (3) of the proposed Rule allowed parents 
    to review, change, and delete personal information collected from their 
    children.237 Many commenters objected to granting parents 
    the right to change information,238 asserting that it was 
    unduly burdensome and went beyond the language of the 
    Act.239 Other commenters noted that a right to alter data is 
    much broader than the right to correct data,240 and 
    expressed concern that parents might use this right to
    
    [[Page 59904]]
    
    change or delete grades or test scores at educational sites in conflict 
    with federal education statutes and state policies.241
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \237\ 64 FR at 22757-58, 22766.
        \238\ See NRF (Comment 95) at 4; DMA (Comment 89) at 17-19; ANA 
    (Comment 93) at 6; MPA (Comment 113) at 5-6. See also McGraw-Hill 
    (Comment 104) at 8.
        \239\ Commenters also asserted that allowing parents to change 
    the information provided by their children threatens the 
    confidentiality, security, and integrity of information in the 
    operator's possession, putting the operator in jeopardy of violating 
    section 312.8 of the Rule. See NRF (Comment 95) at 4; DMA (Comment 
    89) at 17-19; MPA (Comment 113) at 5-6. See also McGraw-Hill 
    (Comment 104) at 8; Section II.G, infra. Two commenters also stated 
    that this provision was unnecessary in light of the parent's right 
    under section 312.6(a)(2) to prohibit further collection, use, and 
    maintenance of information and to have information deleted. NRF 
    (Comment 95) at 4; MPA (Comment 113) at 5-6.
        \240\ DMA (Comment 89) at 17-18; MPA (Comment 113) at 5-6.
        \241\ AAP (Comment 70) at 4; McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 4, 8.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Based on the comments, the Commission is revising the Rule to 
    eliminate the proposed Rule's requirement that parents be allowed to 
    change information provided by their children. Even in the absence of a 
    regulatory requirement, however, the Commission believes that operators 
    may choose to permit parents to correct data given operators' strong 
    incentives to maintain accurate information.242 The 
    Commission also agrees that the opportunity to refuse to permit further 
    use or to delete information under section 312.6(a)(2) adequately 
    protects the interests of the child and parent in this context.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \242\ One commenter observed that sites should be willing to 
    permit changes as a matter of good customer service if any 
    information is inaccurate. NRF (Comment 95) at 4. Similarly, another 
    commenter noted that it, and many other organizations, already 
    permit customers to correct data in some way. McGraw-Hill (Comment 
    104) at 8.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter noted that a child may not want a parent to know 
    about certain information--for example where the child is seeking 
    guidance regarding problems with the parent.243 The Act does 
    not give the Commission the authority, however, to exempt certain kinds 
    of information from the right of parental review.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \243\ MPA (Comment 113) at 5.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Another commenter asked the Commission to consider whether a 
    parent's request to delete data should also extend to third parties who 
    have received that information from the operator.244 As 
    noted above, the Act covers the actions of ``operators,'' not third 
    parties. However, the Commission encourages operators to structure 
    their contractual arrangements with third parties to require compliance 
    with requests for deletion where practicable.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \244\ Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 9.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter asked whether and how long an operator would be 
    required to maintain personal information for review.245 
    More specifically, the commenter requested that the Commission revise 
    the Rule to include a statement that an operator is not required to 
    maintain all personal information collected from the child indefinitely 
    in anticipation of a subsequent request for review by a 
    parent.246 This is particularly important, noted the 
    commenter, where an operator wishes to delete personal information 
    quickly--for example when monitoring a chat room or message 
    board.247 The Commission does not believe it is necessary to 
    so modify the Rule, but reiterates that if a parent seeks to review his 
    child's personal information after the operator has deleted it, the 
    operator may simply reply that it no longer has any information 
    concerning that child.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \245\ AOL (Comment 72) at 19.
        \246\ Such a statement was included in the NPR. 64 FR at 22758 
    n.12.
        \247\ AOL (Comment 72) at 19-20.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Another commenter asserted that Congress did not intend that an 
    operator be required to scour all of its databases for all personal 
    information about a child, whether collected online or offline, in 
    response to a request from the parent.248 As currently 
    amended, the Rule applies only to personal information submitted 
    online,249 and, therefore, a parent's access rights under 
    the Act do not generally extend to data collected 
    offline.250 Nevertheless, if an operator maintains the 
    information such that its source (online or offline) cannot be 
    determined, the Commission would expect the operator to allow the 
    parent to review all of the information. Similarly, if the operator has 
    collected information prior to the effective date of the Rule, but 
    maintains it in a database with information collected online after the 
    effective date in such a way that its source cannot be determined, then 
    the operator should allow the parent access to all of the information.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \248\ IDSA (Comment 103) at 6-7.
        \249\ See Section II.A.2, supra.
        \250\ Operators must, however, allow parents to review 
    information that was collected online but maintained offline.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    3. Right To Prohibit Further Use and Collection of the Child's 
    Information
        Section 312.6(a)(2) of the proposed Rule allowed parents to refuse 
    to permit the operator's further use or collection of the child's 
    personal information and to direct the operator to delete the 
    information.251 One commenter asserted that, according to 
    the legislative history, the parental opt-out serves as a revocation of 
    previous consent but does not preclude the operator from seeking 
    consent from the parent for the same or different activities in the 
    future.252 Therefore, this commenter suggested revising the 
    provision to specify that the refusal was limited to activities covered 
    ``under the consent previously given.'' 253 The Commission 
    agrees with the commenter's interpretation of this provision, but 
    believes that such a modification is not necessary. The Act requires 
    operators to allow parents to refuse to permit further use or future 
    collection of personal information from their children.254 
    Operators, however, are free to request a new consent from a parent if 
    the child seeks to participate at the site in the future.255
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \251\ 64 FR at 22757-58, 22766. The Commission expects that 
    operators will act upon requests under section 312.6(a)(2) in a 
    timely fashion, especially with regard to chat and third party 
    disclosures, where safety concerns are often heightened.
        \252\ DMA (Comment 89) at 19-20.
        \253\ Id.
        \254\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(B)(ii).
        \255\ Section 312.6(c) of the Rule retains the Act's proviso 
    that an operator may terminate service to a child whose parent has 
    refused to permit the operator's further use or collection of 
    information from the child, or has directed the operator to delete 
    the child's information. 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(3). As noted in the NPR, 
    the operator's right to terminate service to a child is limited by 
    section 312.7 of the Rule, which prohibits operators from 
    conditioning a child's participation in a game, the offering of a 
    prize, or another activity on the child disclosing more personal 
    information than is reasonably necessary to participate in the 
    activity. 64 FR at 22758, 22766. Section 312.7 tracks the language 
    of the statute. See 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(C). See also CME/CFA et al. 
    (Comment 80) at 35-36 (supporting this reading of the Act).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    4. Parental Verification
        The COPPA requires operators to provide parents with ``a means that 
    is reasonable under the circumstances for the parent to obtain any 
    personal information collected from [the] child.'' 256 In 
    recognition of the danger inherent in requiring an operator to release 
    a child's personal information, the Commission, in section 312.6(a) of 
    the proposed Rule, required operators to ensure that the person seeking 
    to review such information was the child's parent, taking into account 
    available technology, without unduly burdening the 
    parent.257 In the NPR, the Commission suggested appropriate 
    means of complying with this provision, including using a password in 
    conjunction with the parental consent process.258
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \256\ 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(B)(iii).
        \257\ 64 FR at 22757, 22766. See also 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(B) 
    (requiring ``proper identification'' of parents).
        \258\ 64 FR at 22758. The other method suggested was using a 
    photocopy of the parent's driver's license.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Some commenters contended that parental verification was not 
    necessary for access to the types or categories of personal information 
    collected from the child under Sec. 312.6(a)(1).\259\ The Commission 
    agrees, particularly since the same types or categories of information 
    must already be disclosed
    
    [[Page 59905]]
    
    in the operator's notice.\260\ Accordingly, the Rule has been modified 
    to eliminate the requirement of parental identification for review of 
    the types of information collected from children.\261\ However, under 
    Sec. 312.6(a)(3), proper parental identification will be required for 
    access to the specific information collected from a child.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \259\ CDT (Comment 81) at 29-30. See also Time Warner (Comment 
    78) at 13-14; DMA (Comment 89) at 17 (stringent identification 
    requirements not necessary). One commenter stated that assuming an 
    operator collects the same categories of information from visitors, 
    access requirements could be met with a website form that tells 
    parents the data categories maintained. CDT (Comment 81) at 29-30. 
    The Commission believes that this method would be appropriate in 
    cases where the request for information takes place online.
        \260\ See also 64 FR at 22758 n.13 (stating that it may be 
    acceptable for an operator to use a less stringent method of 
    parental identification when giving out the types of information 
    collected from children).
        \261\ However, operators responding to requests under 
    Sec. 312.6(a)(1) may not reveal the names of any children from whom 
    they have collected personal information. This change should also 
    address the concerns of other commenters who felt the Commission's 
    proposed approach to parental review was cumbersome and confusing. 
    EPIC (Comment 115) at 5; Highlights (Comment 124) at 2-3.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Another commenter suggested that parents seeking review under this 
    section should be required to provide operators with their children's 
    identifying information (in the categories that the operator collects) 
    in order to prove identity.\262\ The operator would then disclose only 
    the non-individually identifiable information (e.g., hobbies) that the 
    operator had collected from the child.\263\ The commenter believed that 
    this would prevent a non-parent from obtaining information from the 
    operator that would enable him to contact the child offline.\264\ 
    However, this procedure would not, in fact, prevent access to a child's 
    information by someone other than the parent, because many of the 
    child's relatives and friends would be able to provide individually 
    identifying information such as a telephone number or address. 
    Moreover, the Act requires parental access to ``any'' personal 
    information collected from the child.\265\ The Commission therefore 
    cannot limit the disclosures as suggested.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \262\ CDT (Comment 81) at 29-30.
        \263\ Id.
        \264\ Id.
        \265\ See 15 U.S.C. 6503(b)(1)(B).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        A number of commenters addressed the methods of verification that 
    could be used to identify parents who seek access to their children's 
    specific personal information. Several supported the option of using a 
    password-protected e-mail or other secure method, which was 
    specifically suggested in the NPR.\266\ Another commenter noted that, 
    in order to discourage requests from non-parents, requests for 
    information could be made in writing, with confirmation sent to the 
    home address.\267\ The Commission recognizes that a number of methods 
    might be appropriate for parental verification under this section, and 
    allows the operator the flexibility to choose among them. Consistent 
    with the verifiable parental consent requirements for ``disclosures'' 
    under the Rule, acceptable methods would include print-and-send, use of 
    a credit card in connection with a transaction, use of a toll-free 
    number staffed by trained personnel, digital signatures, and use of an 
    e-mail accompanied by a PIN number or a password obtained through one 
    of the verification methods listed above.\268\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \266\ CDT (Comment 81) at 29; CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 34 
    (supporting such a system until digital signatures become widely 
    available); CBBB (Comment 91) at 22-24. See 64 FR at 22758 and n.14.
        \267\ MPA (Comment 113) at 4-5.
        \268\ As noted in note 213, supra, the Commission expects that 
    operators will keep confidential any information obtained from 
    parents in the process of obtaining consent or providing for 
    parental review of information collected from a child.
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        One commenter considered photocopies of a driver's license to be 
    unnecessarily invasive, viewing a password system as preferable.\269\ 
    While the Commission agrees that submission of a driver's license may 
    not be preferable to some parents, it should be retained as an option.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \269\ EPIC (Comment 115) at 5-6. Another commenter found 
    requiring photocopies of drivers' licenses to be problematic since 
    they may reveal additional personal information to the operator 
    (such as parents' social security numbers) which parents should not 
    be required to disclose. CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 35. One 
    commenter identified practicality and feasibility problems in 
    connection with requiring a driver's license. CBBB (Comment 91) at 
    22.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission did not receive much feedback on technological 
    advances under development that might ease the process of parental 
    identification. Two commenters referred to digital signatures but noted 
    they are not yet generally available.\270\ The World Wide Web 
    Consortium's Platform for Privacy Preferences Project (P3P) was also 
    cited as a technology under development that might be used by operators 
    and parents in the future.\271\ As noted above, the Commission will 
    continue to monitor technological advances that might play a useful 
    role in identifying parents.\272\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \270\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 35; CBBB (Comment 91) at 
    16, 23-24.
        \271\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 23-24.
        \272\ See note 186, supra (discussing products and services that 
    are available or under development).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    5. Good Faith and Reasonable Procedures Under Section 312.6(b)
        Section 312.6(b) of the proposed Rule, which tracked the language 
    of the Act, stated that disclosures under section 312.6(a)(3) that were 
    made in good faith and by following reasonable procedures would not 
    give rise to liability under any Federal or State law.\273\ 
    Nonetheless, several commenters raised concerns about liability.\274\ 
    Two commenters called for specific examples of precautions that 
    industry could take to protect itself against liability under other 
    laws.\275\ Comments also indicated that verification methods that would 
    satisfy section 312.6(a)(3) should be listed in the Rule itself in 
    order to provide certainty regarding the reasonableness of an 
    operator's action under that provision.\276\ One commenter asserted 
    that parental requests for information should be in writing so the 
    operator has a record to show good faith compliance with the Rule.\277\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \273\ 64 FR at 22757-58, 22766. See also 15 U.S.C. 6502(a)(2).
        \274\ See generally DMA (Comment 89) at 15-16; Time Warner 
    (Comment 78) at 12-13; EdPress (Comment 130) at 2.
        \275\ DMA (Comment 89) at 16; Time Warner (Comment 78) at 13.
        \276\ DMA (Comment 89) at 17; Time Warner (Comment 78) at 13.
        \277\ DMA (Comment 89) at 17.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission recognizes the potential risks associated with the 
    access provision and the related concerns about liability. The 
    Commission believes, however, that the language of the Rule, which is 
    identical to the language set forth in the Act,\278\ strikes the proper 
    balance in protecting the interests of the child, operator, and parent. 
    An operator can assume that if it employs reasonable procedures to 
    implement section 312.6(a)(3), including those listed above and in the 
    NPR,\279\ an inadvertent, good faith disclosure of a child's 
    information to someone who purports to be a parent will not give rise 
    to liability under any Federal or State laws.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \278\ See 15 U.S.C. 6502(a)(2).
        \279\ 64 FR at 22757-58.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Finally, one commenter stated that reasonable procedures for 
    disclosure should account for situations where the consenting parent is 
    unavailable as a result of death, divorce, or desertion.\280\ The 
    Commission understands that family situations can change and that 
    circumstances may arise where it will be necessary to provide access to 
    a party other than the consenting parent.\281\ The Rule is not intended 
    to preclude disclosures in such circumstances as long as they satisfy 
    the ``good faith'' and ``reasonable procedures'' standards.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \280\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 16.
        \281\ It should be noted that the Rule's definition of 
    ``parent'' in section 312.2 provides some flexibility in addressing 
    changing family situations. See Section II.A.7, supra.
    
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    [[Page 59906]]
    
    F. Section 312.7: Prohibition Against Conditioning a Child's 
    Participation on Collection of Personal Information
    
        Section 312.7 of the proposed Rule, which tracks the language of 
    the Act and is retained in the final Rule, prohibited operators from 
    conditioning a child's participation in a game, the offering of a 
    prize, or another activity on the child's disclosing more personal 
    information than is reasonably necessary to participate in such 
    activity.\282\ This section prohibits operators from tying the 
    provision of personal information to such popular and persuasive 
    incentives as prizes or games, while preserving children's access to 
    such activities.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \282\ 64 FR at 22758, 22766; 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(C). One 
    commenter supporting this provision stated that children should not 
    be enticed to turn over personal information. CDT (Comment 81) at 
    30.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    G. Section 312.8: Confidentiality, Security, and Integrity of Personal 
    Information Collected From Children
    
        Under section 312.8 of the proposed Rule, operators were required 
    to establish and maintain reasonable procedures to protect the 
    confidentiality, security, and integrity of personal information 
    collected from children.\283\ More specifically, operators must have 
    adequate policies and procedures for protecting children's personal 
    information from loss, misuse, unauthorized access, or disclosure. In 
    the NPR, the Commission offered a number of options that operators 
    could use to implement this provision,\284\ and sought comment 
    regarding practices that are commonly used, practices that provide the 
    strongest protection, and the costs of implementation.\285\ After 
    reviewing the comments, the Commission has decided to retain this 
    provision, which tracks the requirements of the Act.\286\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \283\ 64 FR at 22758-59, 22766.
        \284\ Protections identified in the NPR included: designating an 
    individual in the organization to be responsible for maintaining and 
    monitoring the security of the information; requiring passwords for 
    access to the personal information; creating firewalls; utilizing 
    encryption; implementing access control procedures in addition to 
    passwords; implementing devices and procedures to protect the 
    physical security of the data processing equipment; storing the 
    personal information collected online on a secure server that is not 
    accessible from the Internet; installing security cameras and 
    intrusion-detection software to monitor who is accessing the 
    personal information; or installing authentication software to 
    determine whether a user is authorized to enter through a firewall. 
    64 FR at 22758.
        \285\ 64 FR at 22763.
        \286\ See 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(D).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Commenters suggested procedures for complying with this provision, 
    including: using secure web servers and firewalls; \287\ deleting 
    personal information once it is no longer being used; \288\ limiting 
    employee access to data \289\ and providing those employees with data-
    handling training; \290\ and carefully screening the third parties to 
    whom such information is disclosed.\291\ The Commission agrees that 
    these are appropriate measures to take under this provision.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \287\ Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 12; CME/CFA et al. 
    (Comment 80) at 36.
        \288\ Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 12; CME/CFA et al. 
    (Comment 80) at 36; CDT (Comment 81) at 30.
        \289\ Attorneys General (Comment 114) at 12; CME/CFA et al. 
    (Comment 80) at 36.
        \290\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 36.
        \291\ Id. at 17.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter noted that security procedures requiring special 
    hardware, software, and/or encryption are costly.\292\ The Commission 
    is mindful of the potential costs of complying with the Rule, and thus, 
    allows operators to choose from a number of appropriate methods of 
    implementing this provision.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \292\ iCanBuy.com (Comment 101) at 4.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    H. Section 312.9: Enforcement
    
        This section of the proposed Rule stated that a violation of the 
    Commission's rules implementing the COPPA would be treated as a 
    violation of a rule defining an unfair or deceptive act or practice 
    prescribed under section 18(a)(1)(B) of the Federal Trade Commission 
    Act, 15 U.S.C. 57a(a)(1)(B). The Commission has modified this provision 
    to incorporate the final citation form for relevant provisions of the 
    Act.\293\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \293\ See 15 U.S.C. 6502(c).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    I. Section 312.10: Safe Harbors
    
    1. In General
        This section of the Rule provides that an operator's compliance 
    with Commission-approved self-regulatory guidelines serves as a safe 
    harbor in any enforcement action for violations of this Rule.\294\ As 
    the Commission noted in the NPR, this section serves as an incentive 
    for industry self-regulation; by allowing flexibility in the 
    development of self-regulatory guidelines, it ensures that the 
    protections afforded children under this Rule are implemented in a 
    manner that takes into account industry-specific concerns and 
    technological developments.\295\ To receive safe harbor treatment, an 
    operator can comply with any Commission-approved guidelines. The 
    operator need not independently apply for approval if in fact the 
    operator is fully complying with guidelines already approved by the 
    Commission that are applicable to the operator's business.\296\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \294\ Seventeen commenters addressed this provision of the 
    proposed Rule. MaMaMedia (Comment 85) at 3-4; IDSA (Comment 103) at 
    7; ANA (Comment 93) at 2-3; MLG Internet (Comment 119) at 2; AAAA 
    (Comment 134) at 4; Consumers Union (Comment 116) at 6; SNAP/
    CollegeEdge (Comment 123) at 1; Mars (Comment 86) at 15-16; CBBB 
    (Comment 91) at 27-37; TRUSTe (Comment 97) at 2; Bonnett (Comment 
    126) at 6; DMA (Comment 89) at 27-29; CME/CFA, et al. (Comment 80) 
    at 37; McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 8-9; PrivacyBot.com (Comment 32) 
    (unpaginated); Disney (Comment 82) at 10; EPIC (Comment 115) at 6-7.
        \295\ 64 FR at 22759.
        \296\ Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In an enforcement action, the Commission has the burden of proving 
    non-compliance with the Rule's requirements. The standards enunciated 
    in the Rule thus remain the benchmark against which industry's conduct 
    will ultimately be judged. Compliance with approved guidelines, 
    however, will serve as a safe harbor in any enforcement action under 
    the Rule. That is, if an operator can show full compliance with 
    approved guidelines, the operator will be deemed in compliance with the 
    Rule. The Commission retains discretion to pursue enforcement under the 
    Rule if approval of the guidelines was obtained based upon incomplete 
    or inaccurate factual representations, or if there has been a 
    substantial change in circumstances, such as the failure of an industry 
    group to obtain approval for a material modification to its 
    guidelines.\297\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \297\ Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Criteria for Approval of Self-Regulatory Guidelines
        Section 312.10(b)(1) of the proposed Rule stated that, in order to 
    be approved by the Commission, self-regulatory guidelines must require 
    subject operators to implement the protections afforded children under 
    the proposed Rule.\298\ Two commenters were concerned that this 
    provision was not sufficiently flexible to serve as an incentive for 
    self-regulation. They expressed the view that the Rule should not 
    dictate the content of self-regulatory guidelines.\299\ Another 
    commenter stated that the Commission should allow a wide range of self-
    regulation.\300\ The Commission believes that the language of the 
    proposed Rule conveyed less flexibility in this regard than was 
    originally intended. The Rule therefore clarifies that promulgators of 
    self-
    
    [[Page 59907]]
    
    regulatory guidelines may comply with this section by requiring subject 
    operators to implement ``substantially similar requirements that 
    provide the same or greater protections for children as those contained 
    in sections 312.2-312.8 of the Rule.'' \301\ Under section 312.10(c) of 
    the Rule, the burden remains with persons seeking Commission approval 
    of guidelines to demonstrate that the guidelines in fact meet this 
    standard.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \298\ Id.
        \299\ DMA (Comment 89) at 27 (stating that, rather than 
    prescribe the content of self-regulatory guidelines, the Commission 
    should approve guidelines based upon their ``overall merits''); MLG 
    Internet (Comment 119) at 2 (stating that the Commission should 
    allow self-regulatory groups to create rules that meet the COPPA's 
    goals).
        \300\ Mars (Comment 86) at 16.
        \301\ Of course, promulgators of guidelines may also require 
    subject operators to implement the precise information practices set 
    forth in the Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In a similar vein, some commenters believed that the particular 
    assessment mechanisms and compliance incentives listed as options in 
    sections 312.10(b)(2) and 312.10(b)(3), respectively, of the proposed 
    Rule were, in fact, mandatory practices.\302\ In the NPR, the 
    Commission sought to clarify that these sections set out performance 
    standards and that the listed methods were only suggested means for 
    meeting these standards.\303\ In light of the confusion evidenced by 
    the comments, the Commission has amended these sections to make this 
    express.\304\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \302\ DMA (Comment 89) at 28; PrivacyBot.com (Comment 32) 
    (unpaginated). One commenter expressed the view that by requiring 
    self-regulatory groups affirmatively to monitor their members' 
    compliance, rather than take action only in response to consumer 
    complaints, the proposed Rule in effect deputizes industry 
    organizations to police their members on the Commission's behalf. 
    DMA (Comment 89) at 28. However, the Commission believes that, to 
    the contrary, the Rule's safe harbor provisions allow industry to 
    craft effective alternatives to Commission enforcement.
        \303\ 64 FR at 22759.
        \304\ One commenter was concerned that section 312.10(b)(2) 
    could be read to require ``manual,'' but not ``automated'' means of 
    independently assessing subject operators' compliance with self-
    regulatory guidelines. PrivacyBot.com (Comment 32) (unpaginated) and 
    (IRFA comment 03) at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Thus, section 312.10(b)(2) of the Rule makes explicit that its 
    requirement that guidelines include an effective, mandatory mechanism 
    for the independent assessment of subject operators' compliance is a 
    performance standard. Similarly, section 312.10(b)(3) of the Rule 
    states that its requirement that guidelines include effective 
    incentives for subject operators' compliance is a performance standard. 
    Both section 312.10(b)(2) and 312.10(b)(3) of the Rule include 
    suggested means of meeting their respective performance standards and 
    provide that those performance standards may be satisfied by other 
    means if their effectiveness equals that of the listed alternatives. 
    The Commission believes that the Rule therefore provides the 
    flexibility sought by the commenters.
        In the NPR, the Commission stated that operators could not rely 
    solely on self-assessment mechanisms to comply with section 
    312.10(b)(2).\305\ Commenters were divided on the issue of whether the 
    Commission should permit self-assessment as a means of measuring 
    operators' compliance with self-regulatory guidelines. Some believed 
    that self-assessment, without more, is not an adequate means of 
    measuring compliance.\306\ Others believed that the Commission should 
    not impose an independent assessment requirement on operators that 
    choose not to join third-party compliance programs, as long as their 
    information practices satisfy the COPPA.\307\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \305\ 64 FR at 22759.
        \306\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 37; CBBB (Comment 91) at 
    31.
        \307\ McGraw-Hill (Comment 104) at 9. See also Mars (Comment 86) 
    at 15 (stating that the Commission should permit self-assessment).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        On balance, the Commission believes that a performance standard 
    that incorporates independent assessment is appropriate and necessary. 
    Under the safe harbor provision, the Commission looks to the 
    promulgators of guidelines, in the first instance, to ensure that those 
    guidelines are effectively implemented. The Commission believes that 
    independent assessment is the best way to ensure that operators are 
    complying with the guidelines.\308\ The Commission notes, however, that 
    the Rule does not prohibit the use of self-assessment as one part of an 
    organization's efforts under section 312.10(b)(2) to measure subject 
    operators' compliance with the Rule, nor does it preclude individual 
    operators who have not joined third-party programs from assessing their 
    own compliance. The Rule does, however, prohibit the use of self-
    assessment as the only means of measuring compliance with self-
    regulatory guidelines.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \308\ One commenter suggested that the Commission award safe 
    harbor status only to non-profit self-regulatory programs or for-
    profit groups whose self-regulatory decisions are insulated from 
    owner or investor control. CBBB (Comment 91) at 33-34. The 
    Commission believes it is unnecessary to so limit eligibility for 
    safe harbor status and further believes that the test for 
    eligibility should be the substance of self-regulatory guidelines, 
    rather than the corporate structure of their promulgators.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Several commenters suggested that the Commission require that self-
    regulatory guidelines include an array of specific practices not listed 
    in the proposed Rule. Such practices include, for example: 
    comprehensive information practice reviews as a condition of membership 
    in self-regulatory programs,\309\ annual compliance affidavits to be 
    submitted by subject operators to self-regulatory organizations,\310\ 
    quarterly monitoring of operators' information practices by self-
    regulatory groups,\311\ public reporting of disciplinary actions taken 
    by trade groups against subject operators in publications other than 
    trade publications,\312\ and referral to the Commission of all 
    violations of approved guidelines \313\ or all failures to comply with 
    a self-regulatory group's disciplinary dictates.\314\ Many of these 
    ideas have merit, and self-regulatory groups may wish to include some 
    or all of them in their proposed guidelines. The Commission does not, 
    however, believe that it should require adoption of any specific 
    practice or practices as a prerequisite to certification under the 
    Rule. Self-regulatory groups or other promulgators of guidelines are 
    best suited to determine the appropriateness of such measures, in light 
    of the Rule's requirements. The Commission will review the adequacy of 
    the proposed enforcement programs in considering specific safe harbor 
    requests.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \309\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 29-30.
        \310\ Id. at 32.
        \311\ E.A. Bonnett (Comment 126) at 6.
        \312\ CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) at 37.
        \313\ Id. 
        \314\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 32.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    3. Request for Commission Approval of Self-Regulatory Guidelines
        Section 312.10(c)(1)(iii) of the proposed Rule required that 
    persons seeking approval of guidelines submit a statement to the 
    Commission demonstrating that their proposed guidelines, including 
    assessment mechanisms and compliance incentives, comply with the 
    proposed Rule.\315\ One commenter suggested that the Commission 
    eliminate this requirement.\316\ The Commission believes that the 
    burden of demonstrating compliance properly rests on proponents of 
    Commission approval and that the guideline approval process will 
    benefit from proponents' explanations of their rationale for approval. 
    Therefore, the Commission has retained this requirement in the Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \315\ 64 FR at 22759-60. One commenter requested that the 
    Commission clarify the status under the Freedom of Information Act 
    of proprietary information submitted to the Commission under this 
    section. CBBB (Comment 91) at 37. The Commission believes this is 
    unnecessary, as such information would be protected from disclosure 
    under section 6(f) of the Federal Trade Commission Act and Exemption 
    4 of the Freedom of Information Act, to the extent that it 
    constitutes ``trade secrets and commercial or financial information 
    obtained from a person [that is] privileged or confidential.'' FTCA 
    Section 6(f), 15 U.S.C. 46(f); FOIA Exemption 4, 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4).
        \316\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 36.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Section 312.10 of the proposed Rule did not include a provision 
    governing
    
    [[Page 59908]]
    
    approval of changes in previously approved self-regulatory guidelines. 
    Several commenters suggested that the Commission amend the proposed 
    Rule to include such a provision.\317\ Therefore, section 312.10(c)(3) 
    of the Rule now provides that promulgators of approved self-regulatory 
    guidelines must submit proposed changes and all supporting 
    documentation for review and approval by the Commission. The Commission 
    recognizes, however, the need for efficiency in reviewing proposed 
    changes to approved guidelines. Only changes in approved guidelines 
    will be subject to public notice and comment, not the unaffected 
    portions of the guidelines.\318\ Section 312.10(c)(3) of the Rule also 
    requires that proponents of changes in approved guidelines submit a 
    statement describing how the proposed changes comply with the Rule and 
    how they affect existing guideline provisions.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \317\ ANA (Comment 93) at 3; Mars (Comment 86) at 17; and MLG 
    Internet (Comment 119) at 2.
        \318\ 64 FR at 22760.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Other comments suggested that the Commission should shorten the 
    180-day period for Commission action on submissions,\319\ specify a 
    time period for public comment (e.g., 30-45 days),\320\ ``toll'' 
    (rather than restart, as proposed in the NPR) the 180-day period for 
    Commission action in the event of an incomplete submission of 
    supporting documents,\321\ and make guidelines effective upon 
    publication of the Commission's decision, rather than 45 days from 
    publication in the Federal Register as stated in the NPR.\322\ After 
    considering the comments, the Commission agrees that the guidelines 
    should become effective upon publication of Commission approval.\323\ 
    However, it declines to adopt a single, specific time period for public 
    comment, as the appropriate period may well vary with the complexity 
    and novelty of the guidelines submitted. Further, the Commission does 
    not believe the 180-day time period should be shortened or tolled 
    during the comment period, but notes that it intends to complete its 
    review within the statutory period.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \319\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 36. This commenter suggested a 90-day 
    review period.
        \320\ Id.
        \321\ Id.; Mars (Comment 86) at 17.
        \322\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 36.
        \323\ One commenter requested that the Commission maintain a 
    list of parties interested in being contacted by the Commission when 
    proposed guidelines are published in the Federal Register and on the 
    Commission's website. EPIC (Comment 115) at 7. The Commission 
    believes that publication of proposed guidelines is, as a general 
    matter, sufficient notice of their submission for approval.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    4. Records
        Section 312.10(d)(1) of the proposed Rule required that industry 
    groups or other persons seeking safe harbor treatment maintain consumer 
    complaints for a period not to exceed three years.\324\ As one 
    commenter noted, however, the proposed Rule did not specify the length 
    of time required for maintaining the other documents specified in this 
    section, e.g., records of disciplinary actions against subject 
    operators and records of independent assessments of subject operators' 
    compliance.\325\ The Commission agrees that this inconsistency is 
    unnecessarily confusing. Therefore, the Rule now clarifies that 
    industry groups or other persons seeking safe harbor treatment must 
    maintain all documents required by this section for a period of three 
    years.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \324\ 64 FR at 22760.
        \325\ CBBB (Comment 91) at 37.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    J. Section 312.11: Rulemaking Review
    
        Section 312.11 of the proposed Rule retained the Act's requirement 
    that the Commission initiate a review proceeding to evaluate the Rule's 
    implementation no later than five years after the effective date of the 
    Rule and report its results to Congress.\326\ The Commission stated in 
    the NPR that the review will address the Rule's effect on: practices 
    relating to the collection and disclosure of children's information; 
    children's ability to access information of their choice online; and 
    the availability of websites directed to children. In addition, 
    eighteen months after the effective date of the Rule, the Commission 
    will conduct a review of available mechanisms for obtaining verifiable 
    parental consent, as discussed above in Section II.D.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \326\ 15 U.S.C. 6506. Two commenters called for conducting the 
    review in three years rather than five. CME/CFA et al. (Comment 80) 
    at 17; CDT (Comment 81) at 31. The Commission believes that the 
    COPPA's five year requirement is appropriate, but will consider 
    undertaking a review sooner if warranted.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    K. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act (as amended 44 U.S.C. 
    3507(d)), the Commission submitted the proposed Rule to the Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB) for review.\327\ The OMB has approved the 
    Rule's information collection requirements.\328\ The Commission did not 
    receive any comments that necessitate modifying its cost estimates for 
    the Rule's notice requirements.\329\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \327\ The Commission's Supporting Statement submitted to OMB as 
    part of the clearance process has been made available on the public 
    record of this rulemaking. See Supporting Statement for Information 
    Collection Provisions at http://www.ftc.gov/os/1999/9906/
    childprivsup.htm>.
        \328\ The assigned OMB clearance number is 3084-0117.
        \329\ See 64 FR at 22761 (estimating total burden of 18,000 
    hours for first year, and 1800 hours for subsequent years).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    L. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        The NPR did not include an initial regulatory flexibility analysis 
    (IRFA) under the Regulatory Flexibility Act \330\ based on a 
    certification that the proposed Rule would not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. Nonetheless, 
    the Commission invited public comment on the proposed Rule's effect on 
    small entities to ensure that no significant impact would be 
    overlooked.\331\ The Commission received two responsive comments 
    suggesting that it publish an IRFA.\332\ While the Commission believed 
    that such an analysis was not technically required, it issued an IRFA 
    to provide further information and opportunity for public comment on 
    the small business impact, if any, of the Rule.\333\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \330\ 5 U.S.C. 603.
        \331\ See 64 FR at 22761.
        \332\ Hons. George Gekas and James Talent, U.S. House of 
    Representatives (Comment 74) at 4; U.S. Small Business 
    Administration (Comment 128) at 4-5.
        \333\ 64 FR 40525.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        This final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) incorporates the 
    Commission's initial findings, as set forth in the NPR; addresses the 
    comments submitted in response to the IRFA notice; and describes the 
    steps the agency has taken in the final Rule to minimize the impact on 
    small entities consistent with the objectives of the COPPA.
    
    Succinct Statement of the Need for, and Objectives of, the Rule
    
        The Rule prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices in 
    connection with commercial websites' and online services' collection 
    and use of personal information from and about children by: (1) 
    Enhancing parental involvement in a child's online activities in order 
    to protect the privacy of children in the online environment; (2) 
    helping to protect the safety of children in online fora such as chat 
    rooms, home pages, and pen-pal services in which children may make 
    public postings of identifying information; (3) maintaining the 
    security of children's personal information collected online; and (4) 
    limiting the collection and disclosures of personal information without 
    parental consent. The Commission was
    
    [[Page 59909]]
    
    required by the COPPA to issue implementing regulations.\334\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \334\ 15 U.S.C. 6502.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Summary of the Significant Issues Raised by the Public Comments in 
    Response to the IRFA; Summary of the Assessment of the Agency of 
    Such Issues; and Statement of Any Changes Made in the Rule as a 
    Result of Such Comments
    
        In the IRFA, the Commission sought comment regarding the impact of 
    the proposed Rule and any alternatives the Commission should consider, 
    with a specific focus on the effect of the Rule on small entities.\335\ 
    The Commission received five comments, which discussed issues also 
    addressed in the Statement of Basis and Purpose, above, including 
    notice, verifiable parental consent, security, and safe harbors.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \335\ 64 FR at 40527-28.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    1. New Notice and Request for Consent
    
        One commenter contended that the requirement for new notice and 
    consent for different uses of a child's personal information under the 
    notice and consent sections of the proposed Rule threatened smaller 
    operators that rely on mergers and marketing alliances to help build 
    their business.\336\ The commenter recommended that new notice and 
    consent should be required only when there is a material change in 
    intended uses or practices.\337\ As explained in Section II.C.4 and 
    II.D.1, above, the Commission has modified its position to require new 
    notice and consent only if there is a material change in the 
    collection, use, or disclosure of personal information from children.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \336\ KidsOnLine.com (IRFA Comment 02) at 1.
        \337\ Id.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Verifiable Parental Consent
    
        Another commenter expressed concern that the proposed Rule's 
    consent requirement would result in high compliance costs and a 
    substantial reduction in traffic to small sites.\338\ According to the 
    commenter, a child's use of collaborative educational tools on the 
    Internet should be treated differently from the collection and use of 
    personal contact information by marketers. The commenter, who called 
    for parental notification and opt-out for such collaborative uses, was 
    especially concerned about the loss of business from schools.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \338\ Zeeks.com (IRFA Comment 05) at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission does not have discretion under the statute to waive 
    the requirement of verifiable parental consent.\339\ As noted above in 
    Section II.D.4, the Rule does not preclude schools from acting as 
    intermediaries between operators and parents in the notice and consent 
    process, or from serving as the parent's agent in the process. Thus, 
    the Rule should not hinder businesses that provide services to schools.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \339\ See 15 U.S.C. 6502; section 312.3 of the Rule. Another 
    commenter suggested that operators be permitted to collect some 
    personal information to establish a relationship with the child in 
    exchange for limited access to the site (such as games) without 
    obtaining consent. KidsOnLine.com (IRFA Comment 02 ) at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission is sensitive to commenters' concerns about increased 
    costs and reduced traffic to sites. Accordingly, the Commission has 
    temporarily adopted a sliding scale approach to verifiable parental 
    consent to minimize burdens and costs for operators while still 
    providing for parental control of children's personal information. As 
    more fully described in Section II.D, inexpensive e-mail mechanisms may 
    be used to obtain parental consent for the collection of information 
    for internal uses, such as an operator's marketing to a child based on 
    information collected about the child's preferences. Only where 
    information is subject to ``disclosure'' under section 312.2 of the 
    Rule will the other methods of consent be required and, even then, 
    operators will have a range of mechanisms from which to choose. 
    Further, even after the sliding scale is phased out two years from the 
    Rule's effective date, operators will be able to choose from a number 
    of consent methods, many of which are expected to be less costly and 
    more widely available at that time.\340\ Finally, for certain uses of 
    children's personal information, no consent will be required at all 
    under the exceptions to prior parental consent set forth in section 
    312.5(c) of the Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \340\ See supra note 1868. As described more fully above, the 
    Commission will undertake a review eighteen months after the 
    effective date of the Rule to determine through public comment 
    whether technology has progressed as expected. The impact on small 
    businesses will again be carefully considered.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    3. Confidentiality, Security, and Integrity of Information
    
        One commenter found the security methods identified in section 
    312.8 of the proposed Rule to be effective, but suggested that small 
    entities should not be held to the same standards as larger entities 
    when evaluating adequate protection under the Rule.\341\ As noted 
    earlier, the Rule allows operators flexibility in selecting security 
    procedures in accordance with their particular needs.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \341\ KidsOnLine.com (IRFA Comment 02) at 1.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    4. Safe Harbors
    
        A commenter suggested that section 312.10 of the proposed Rule 
    should more clearly recognize the role automation can play in assessing 
    an operator's compliance with privacy seal programs.\342\ As explained 
    above in Section II.I.2, section 312.10(b)(2) includes a performance 
    standard requiring only that assessment mechanisms be effective, 
    mandatory, and independent. In addition to the examples listed in the 
    Rule, that performance standard may be satisfied by other equally 
    effective means. Thus, the Rule does not preclude the use of automated 
    assessment tools that meet the performance standard.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \342\ PrivacyBot.com (IRFA Comment 03) at 2. This commenter 
    noted that the examples listed the NPR appeared to call for manual 
    assessment mechanisms.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which 
    the Rule Will Apply or an Explanation of Why No Such Estimate Is 
    Available
    
        The Rule applies to any commercial operator of an online service or 
    website directed to children or any commercial operator that has actual 
    knowledge that it is collecting personal information from a child.\343\ 
    A precise estimate of the number of small entities that fall within the 
    Rule is not currently feasible, in part, because the definition of a 
    website directed to children turns on a number of factors that will 
    require a factual analysis on a case-by-case basis.\344\ In connection 
    with the NPR, IRFA, and the public workshop on verifiable parental 
    consent, the Commission has not received any comments providing an 
    estimate of the number of small entities to which the Rule will apply.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \343\ Section 312.3. The Rule does not apply to nonprofit 
    entities. Section 312.2 (definition of ``operator'').
        \344\ Under section 312.2, in determining whether a commercial 
    website or online service is directed to children, the Commission 
    will consider its subject matter, visual or audio content, age of 
    models, language or other characteristics of the website or online 
    service, as well as whether advertising promoting or appearing on 
    the website or online service is directed to children.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Description of the Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other 
    Compliance Requirements of the Rule, Including an Estimate of the 
    Classes of Small Entities That Will Be Subject to the Requirement 
    and the Type of Professional Skills Necessary for Preparation of 
    the Report or Record
    
        The Commission incorporates by reference its description of the 
    projected reporting, recordkeeping and other compliance requirements of 
    the Rule, as
    
    [[Page 59910]]
    
    set forth in the IRFA.\345\ The Office of Management and Budget has 
    approved the information collection of the Rule \346\ based on the 
    Commission's earlier submission for clearance, which has been made 
    available on the public record of this rulemaking.\347\ The Commission 
    has not received any comments that necessitate modifying its previous 
    description of projected compliance requirements.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \345\ See 64 FR at 40526-27.
        \346\ The OMB clearance number is 3084-0117.
        \347\ See Supporting Statement for Information Collection 
    Provisions at http://www.ftc.gov/os/1999/9906/childprivsup.htm>.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Description of the Steps the Agency Has Taken To Minimize the 
    Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities, Consistent With the 
    Stated Objectives of Applicable Statutes, Including a Statement of 
    the Factual, Policy, and Legal Reasons for Selecting the 
    Alternative Adopted in the Final Rule and Why Each of the Other 
    Significant Alternatives to the Rule Considered by the Agency Which 
    Affect the Impact on Small Entities Was Rejected
    
        The Rule incorporates the many performance standards set forth in 
    the statute.\348\ Thus, operators are free to choose among a number of 
    compliance methods based upon their individual business models and 
    needs. Although the Rule's provisions impose some costs, the 
    requirements of notice, verifiable parental consent, access, and 
    security are mandated by the COPPA itself. The Commission has sought to 
    minimize the burden on all businesses, including small entities, by 
    adopting flexible standards; \349\ however, it does not have the 
    discretion to create exemptions from the Act based on an operator's 
    size. Likewise, while the Rule attempts to clarify, consolidate, and 
    simplify the statutory requirements for all entities, \350\ the 
    Commission has little discretion, if any, to mandate different methods 
    or schedules for small entities that would undermine compliance with 
    the Act.\351\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \348\ See, e.g., sections 312.4(c), 312.5.
        \349\ See 5 U.S.C. 603(c)(3). The notice requirements, for 
    example, have been designed to minimize the burdens on operators in 
    a variety of ways. Section 312.4(b) of the Rule permits operators to 
    post ``links'' to the required notices, rather than state the 
    complete text. Similarly, in response to industry concerns about 
    technical feasibility, the Commission has eliminated the requirement 
    that the link must be seen without having to scroll down from the 
    initial viewing screen. See Section II.C.2, supra.
        \350\ See 5 U.S.C. 603(c)(2).
        \351\ For example, the COPPA requires the online posting of 
    privacy policies by websites and online services. A waiver for small 
    entities of that prior notice requirement (e.g., by permitting 
    notice after the fact) would be inconsistent with the statutory 
    mandate. See 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(A)(i).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Nevertheless, throughout the rulemaking proceeding, the Commission 
    has sought to gather information regarding the economic impact of the 
    COPPA's requirements on all operators, including small entities. The 
    NPR, for example, included a number of questions for public comment 
    regarding the costs and benefits associated with notice and 
    consent.\352\ Similarly, the subsequent IRFA notice invited public 
    comment specifically on the issue of small business impact.\353\ In 
    addition, the agenda for the public workshop on verifiable parental 
    consent included topics designed to elicit economic impact information. 
    In connection with the workshop, the Commission invited additional 
    public comment.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \352\ 64 FR at 22761-63.
        \353\ 64 FR 40525.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission has carefully considered responsive comments that 
    suggested a variety of alternatives in developing the final Rule. The 
    discussion below reviews some of the significant alternatives 
    considered and the basis for the Commission's decisions with regard to 
    certain notice, parental consent, access, security, and safe harbor 
    requirements.
    
    1. New Notice and Request for Consent
    
        Many commenters contended that requiring operators to undertake new 
    notice and consent under sections 312.4(c) and 312.5 for any use not 
    covered by a parent's previous consent was burdensome and 
    unnecessary.\354\ The Commission is sensitive to the objections raised, 
    particularly with respect to mergers, which occur often in this 
    industry and which would trigger new notice and consent requirements 
    even where there was no significant change in the operator's 
    information practices. Eliminating this requirement altogether, 
    however, would prevent parents from receiving material information that 
    could affect their decisions regarding their child's online 
    activities.\355\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \354\ See supra note 143.
        \355\ For example, an operator might initially use a child's 
    information only for internal marketing purposes and then later 
    undertake a new use involving disclosures to third parties. Such a 
    change would likely be important to the parent's consent decision.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In response to comments, including those of small businesses,\356\ 
    the Commission has modified the Rule to require new notice and consent 
    only if there will be a material change in how the operator collects, 
    uses, or discloses personal information from children.\357\ This 
    modification should substantially reduce the costs of compliance.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \356\ See KidsOnLine.com (IRFA Comment 02) at 1.
        \357\ See also Section II.C.3.a, supra (discussing section 
    312.4(b)(2)(i) (content of notice)).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Verifiable Parental Consent
    
        Throughout the rulemaking, the Commission has sought input on what 
    mechanisms may be used to satisfy the COPPA's verifiable parental 
    consent requirement. As described more fully in Section II.D. above, 
    the Commission has temporarily adopted a ``sliding scale'' approach 
    that depends upon the use of the child's personal information. This 
    approach was recommended by many industry members seeking to preserve 
    flexibility for operators while achieving the objectives of the 
    Act.\358\ To minimize burdens until more reliable electronic methods 
    become more available and affordable, it allows use of e-mail for 
    internal uses of personal information, as long as additional steps are 
    taken to verify a parent's identity.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \358\ See supra note 203 and accompanying text.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Some commenters had contended that use of e-mail alone should be an 
    acceptable method of consent under section 312.5 of the Rule.\359\ 
    Commenters also criticized methods such as print-and-send, credit card, 
    toll-free numbers, and digital signatures for the costs and burdens 
    they might impose.\360\ Based on the comments and workshop discussion, 
    the Commission does not believe that use of e-mail alone adequately 
    satisfies the statutory requirement that operators make reasonable 
    efforts to obtain verifiable parental consent, taking into 
    consideration available technology.\361\ According to many commenters, 
    e-mail is easily subject to circumvention by children.\362\ In 
    particular, where a child and parent share the same e-mail account, as 
    is often the case, a child may easily pretend to be a parent and 
    provide consent for himself.\363\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \359\ See supra note 197 and accompanying text.
        \360\ See supra notes 187-195 and accompanying text.
        \361\ See 15 U.S.C. 6501(9).
        \362\ See supra note 196 and accompanying text.
        \363\ See supra note 178 and accompanying text.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission does not expect that declining to permit use of e-
    mail alone will impose significant costs in terms of foregone 
    activities. Websites will be able to engage in many activities that do 
    not trigger any prior consent requirements pursuant to the exceptions 
    to parental consent set forth in section 312.5(c).\364\ According to a 
    workshop participant, these exceptions cover some of the most popular 
    and common online activities,
    
    [[Page 59911]]
    
    including newsletters, contests, and online magazine 
    subscriptions.\365\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \364\ See Section II.D.3, supra. Prior parental consent is not 
    required pursuant to these exceptions. However, in some instances, 
    operators must provide parents with notice and an opportunity to opt 
    out. See section 312.5(c)(3).
        \365\ See supra note 226.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Moreover, where e-mail mechanisms are employed for internal uses 
    under the sliding scale, the additional steps required under section 
    312.5 (such as sending a confirmatory e-mail to the parent following 
    receipt of consent) should not be especially onerous given the 
    availability and ease of automated technology.\366\ Thus, the 
    additional steps required should have no deterrent effect on operators 
    (or parents).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \366\ A number of commenters recognized that taking additional 
    steps would increase the likelihood that it is the parent who is 
    providing consent, and some websites already undertake such 
    measures. See supra notes 198-203 and accompanying text.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Only for activities that entail ``disclosure'' of a child's 
    personal information, as defined in the Rule, such as chat rooms, 
    message boards, pen-pal services, and personal home pages, will the 
    higher method of consent be triggered.\367\ The comments and public 
    workshop discussion provide considerable support for the principle that 
    such activities warrant a higher level of protection, given the 
    heightened safety concerns.\368\ In order to ensure maximum flexibility 
    within this upper tier of the sliding scale, a range of mechanisms will 
    be acceptable under the Rule, including postal mail, facsimile, credit 
    card in connection with a transaction, toll-free numbers, and digital 
    signatures.\369\ To minimize costs, once a parent has provided consent 
    through one of these methods and obtained a PIN or password, an 
    operator may subsequently obtain consent through an e-mail accompanied 
    by such PIN or password.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \367\ To minimize burdens on general audience sites, the 
    Commission has revised the Rule so that if a chat room monitor 
    strips any posting of individually identifiable information before 
    it is made public, the operator will not be deemed to have 
    ``collected'' the child's personal information for purposes of the 
    Rule. See Section II.A.2, supra (discussing section 312.2's 
    definition of ``collects or collection''). Moreover, because the 
    individually identifiable information has been deleted, the operator 
    will not have ``disclosed'' that information under the Rule.
        \368\ See supra note 205 and accompanying text.
        \369\ See section 312.5(b).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In adopting the sliding scale for a two-year period following the 
    Rule's effective date, the Commission has sought to minimize any 
    burdens of compliance until advancements in technology provide more 
    reliable electronic methods at low cost. Based on reports from industry 
    members, the Commission expects that this will occur soon.\370\ To 
    assess whether such developments have in fact occurred as expected, the 
    Commission will undertake a review, using notice and comment, 
    approximately eighteen months after the Rule's effective date. All 
    businesses, including small entities, will be given the opportunity to 
    comment on economic impact issues at that time.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \370\ See Section II.D.2 and note 186, supra.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        If technology progresses as expected, operators should have a wide 
    variety of reasonable and effective options for providing verifiable 
    parental consent. Therefore, phasing out the sliding scale should not 
    impose undue burdens on operators seeking to comply with the Rule. 
    Moreover, the Commission's amendment to the Rule requiring new notice 
    and consent only in the case of Amaterial changes' to an operator's 
    information practices should further reduce operators' burdens.
    
    3. Parental Access to Information
    
        In implementing the COPPA's parental access requirement,\371\ the 
    Commission has adopted flexible standards and sought to eliminate any 
    unnecessary provisions in the Rule. For example, section 312.6(a)(3) 
    requires that operators provide a means of review that ensures that the 
    requestor is a parent, taking into account available technology, and 
    that is not unduly burdensome to the parent. In response to comments 
    that the proposed Rule's right to change information went beyond the 
    statute and was onerous, the Commission has omitted that provision from 
    the Rule. To eliminate unnecessary costs, the Rule also no longer 
    requires parental verification for access to the types or categories of 
    personal information collected from the child under section 
    312.6(a)(1). However, consistent with the COPPA, which recognized the 
    safety concerns inherent in granting access to the child's specific 
    information, proper parental verification will be required for access 
    to that information under section 312.6(a)(3). As with verifiable 
    parental consent, operators may choose from among a variety of 
    verification methods, including both online and offline methods.\372\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \371\ See 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(B)(iii).
        \372\ The Commission will continue to monitor technological 
    advances that might play a useful role in identifying parents for 
    purposes of granting access. The Commission agrees with comments 
    that it is currently premature to mandate the use of certain 
    mechanisms still under development or not yet widely available. See 
    CBBB (Comment 91) at 24.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    4. Confidentiality, Security, and Integrity of Information
    
        As required under the Act, the Rule seeks to ensure a baseline 
    level of protection for children's personal information.\373\ The 
    Commission recognizes that certain security procedures may be more 
    costly for smaller entities than larger entities.\374\ Accordingly, 
    section 312.8 allows operators flexibility in selecting reasonable 
    procedures in accordance with their business models.\375\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \373\ See 15 U.S.C. 6502(b)(1)(D).
        \374\ See KidsOnLine.com (IRFA Comment 02) at 1.
        \375\ See note 284, supra.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    5. Safe Harbors
    
        The safe harbor provisions also utilize performance standards in 
    order to minimize burdens and provide incentives for industry self-
    regulation, as required by the COPPA.\376\ In response to concerns that 
    the proposed Rule appeared inflexible, the Commission has clarified in 
    section 312.10(b)(1) that promulgators of self-regulatory guidelines 
    may comply with the safe harbor provisions by requiring subject 
    operators to implement ``substantially similar requirements that 
    provide the same or greater protections for children'' as those 
    contained in the Rule. The Commission also has adopted performance 
    standards for the assessment mechanisms and compliance incentives in 
    sections 312.10(b)(2) and (b)(3). In addition to the examples listed in 
    the Rule, these performance standards may be satisfied by other equally 
    effective means. In order to maximize efficiency, the Rule further 
    provides that only material changes in approved guidelines will be 
    subject to the public notice and comment required under this section.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \376\ See 15 U.S.C. 6503.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Final Rule
    
    List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 312
    
        Children, Children's online privacy protection, Communications, 
    Computer technology, Consumer protection, Data protection, Electronic 
    mail, E-mail, Information practices, Internet, Online service, Privacy, 
    Record retention, Safety, Trade practices, Website, Youth.
        Accordingly, the Federal Trade Commission amends 16 CFR chapter I 
    by adding a new Part 312 to read as follows:
    
    PART 312--CHILDREN'S ONLINE PRIVACY PROTECTION RULE
    
    Sec.
    312.1  Scope of regulations in this part.
    312.2  Definitions.
    312.3  Regulation of unfair or deceptive acts or practices in 
    connection with the collection, use, and/or disclosure of personal 
    information from and about children on the Internet.
    312.4  Notice.
    
    [[Page 59912]]
    
    312.5  Parental consent.
    312.6  Right of parent to review personal information provided by a 
    child.
    312.7  Prohibition against conditioning a child's participation on 
    collection of personal information.
    312.8  Confidentiality, security, and integrity of personal 
    information collected from children.
    312.9  Enforcement.
    312.10  Safe harbors.
    312.11  Rulemaking review.
    
    312.12  Severability.
        Authority: Secs. 15 U.S.C. 6501 et seq.
    
    
    Sec. 312.1  Scope of regulations in this part.
    
        This part implements the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act 
    of 1998, (15 U.S.C. 6501, et seq.,) which prohibits unfair or deceptive 
    acts or practices in connection with the collection, use, and/or 
    disclosure of personal information from and about children on the 
    Internet. The effective date of this part is April 21, 2000.
    
    
    Sec. 312.2  Definitions.
    
        Child means an individual under the age of 13.
        Collects or collection means the gathering of any personal 
    information from a child by any means, including but not limited to:
        (a) Requesting that children submit personal information online;
        (b) Enabling children to make personal information publicly 
    available through a chat room, message board, or other means, except 
    where the operator deletes all individually identifiable information 
    from postings by children before they are made public, and also deletes 
    such information from the operator's records; or
        (c) The passive tracking or use of any identifying code linked to 
    an individual, such as a cookie.
        Commission means the Federal Trade Commission.
        Delete means to remove personal information such that it is not 
    maintained in retrievable form and cannot be retrieved in the normal 
    course of business.
        Disclosure means, with respect to personal information:
        (a) The release of personal information collected from a child in 
    identifiable form by an operator for any purpose, except where an 
    operator provides such information to a person who provides support for 
    the internal operations of the website or online service and who does 
    not disclose or use that information for any other purpose. For 
    purposes of this definition:
        (1) Release of personal information means the sharing, selling, 
    renting, or any other means of providing personal information to any 
    third party, and
        (2) Support for the internal operations of the website or online 
    service means those activities necessary to maintain the technical 
    functioning of the website or online service, or to fulfill a request 
    of a child as permitted by Sec. 312.5(c)(2) and (3); or
        (b) Making personal information collected from a child by an 
    operator publicly available in identifiable form, by any means, 
    including by a public posting through the Internet, or through a 
    personal home page posted on a website or online service; a pen pal 
    service; an electronic mail service; a message board; or a chat room.
        Federal agency means an agency, as that term is defined in Section 
    551(1) of title 5, United States Code.
        Internet means collectively the myriad of computer and 
    telecommunications facilities, including equipment and operating 
    software, which comprise the interconnected world-wide network of 
    networks that employ the Transmission Control Protocol/Internet 
    Protocol, or any predecessor or successor protocols to such protocol, 
    to communicate information of all kinds by wire, radio, or other 
    methods of transmission.
        Online contact information means an e-mail address or any other 
    substantially similar identifier that permits direct contact with a 
    person online.
        Operator means any person who operates a website located on the 
    Internet or an online service and who collects or maintains personal 
    information from or about the users of or visitors to such website or 
    online service, or on whose behalf such information is collected or 
    maintained, where such website or online service is operated for 
    commercial purposes, including any person offering products or services 
    for sale through that website or online service, involving commerce:
        (a) Among the several States or with 1 or more foreign nations;
        (b) In any territory of the United States or in the District of 
    Columbia, or between any such territory and
        (1) Another such territory, or
        (2) Any State or foreign nation; or
        (c) Between the District of Columbia and any State, territory, or 
    foreign nation. This definition does not include any nonprofit entity 
    that would otherwise be exempt from coverage under Section 5 of the 
    Federal Trade Commission Act (15 U.S.C. 45).
        Parent includes a legal guardian.
        Person means any individual, partnership, corporation, trust, 
    estate, cooperative, association, or other entity.
        Personal information means individually identifiable information 
    about an individual collected online, including:
        (a) A first and last name;
        (b) A home or other physical address including street name and name 
    of a city or town;
        (c) An e-mail address or other online contact information, 
    including but not limited to an instant messaging user identifier, or a 
    screen name that reveals an individual's e-mail address;
        (d) A telephone number;
        (e) A Social Security number;
        (f) A persistent identifier, such as a customer number held in a 
    cookie or a processor serial number, where such identifier is 
    associated with individually identifiable information; or a combination 
    of a last name or photograph of the individual with other information 
    such that the combination permits physical or online contacting; or
        (g) Information concerning the child or the parents of that child 
    that the operator collects online from the child and combines with an 
    identifier described in this definition.
        Third party means any person who is not:
        (a) An operator with respect to the collection or maintenance of 
    personal information on the website or online service; or
        (b) A person who provides support for the internal operations of 
    the website or online service and who does not use or disclose 
    information protected under this part for any other purpose.
        Obtaining verifiable consent means making any reasonable effort 
    (taking into consideration available technology) to ensure that before 
    personal information is collected from a child, a parent of the child:
        (a) Receives notice of the operator's personal information 
    collection, use, and disclosure practices; and
        (b) Authorizes any collection, use, and/or disclosure of the 
    personal information.
        Website or online service directed to children means a commercial 
    website or online service, or portion thereof, that is targeted to 
    children. Provided, however, that a commercial website or online 
    service, or a portion thereof, shall not be deemed directed to children 
    solely because it refers or links to a commercial website or online 
    service directed to children by using information location tools, 
    including a directory, index, reference, pointer, or hypertext link. In 
    determining whether a commercial website or online service, or a 
    portion thereof, is targeted to children, the Commission will consider 
    its subject matter, visual or audio content, age of models, language or 
    other characteristics of the website or
    
    [[Page 59913]]
    
    online service, as well as whether advertising promoting or appearing 
    on the website or online service is directed to children. The 
    Commission will also consider competent and reliable empirical evidence 
    regarding audience composition; evidence regarding the intended 
    audience; and whether a site uses animated characters and/or child-
    oriented activities and incentives.
    
    
    Sec. 312.3  Regulation of unfair or deceptive acts or practices in 
    connection with the collection, use, and/or disclosure of personal 
    information from and about children on the Internet.
    
        General requirements. It shall be unlawful for any operator of a 
    website or online service directed to children, or any operator that 
    has actual knowledge that it is collecting or maintaining personal 
    information from a child, to collect personal information from a child 
    in a manner that violates the regulations prescribed under this part. 
    Generally, under this part, an operator must:
        (a) Provide notice on the website or online service of what 
    information it collects from children, how it uses such information, 
    and its disclosure practices for such information (Sec. 312.4(b));
        (b) Obtain verifiable parental consent prior to any collection, 
    use, and/or disclosure of personal information from children 
    (Sec. 312.5);
        (c) Provide a reasonable means for a parent to review the personal 
    information collected from a child and to refuse to permit its further 
    use or maintenance (Sec. 312.6);
        (d) Not condition a child's participation in a game, the offering 
    of a prize, or another activity on the child disclosing more personal 
    information than is reasonably necessary to participate in such 
    activity (Sec. 312.7); and
        (e) Establish and maintain reasonable procedures to protect the 
    confidentiality, security, and integrity of personal information 
    collected from children (Sec. 312.8).
    
    
    Sec. 312.4  Notice.
    
        (a) General principles of notice. All notices under Secs. 312.3(a) 
    and 312.5 must be clearly and understandably written, be complete, and 
    must contain no unrelated, confusing, or contradictory materials.
        (b) Notice on the website or online service. Under Sec. 312.3(a), 
    an operator of a website or online service directed to children must 
    post a link to a notice of its information practices with regard to 
    children on the home page of its website or online service and at each 
    area on the website or online service where personal information is 
    collected from children. An operator of a general audience website or 
    online service that has a separate children's area or site must post a 
    link to a notice of its information practices with regard to children 
    on the home page of the children's area.
        (1) Placement of the notice. (i) The link to the notice must be 
    clearly labeled as a notice of the website or online service's 
    information practices with regard to children;
        (ii) The link to the notice must be placed in a clear and prominent 
    place and manner on the home page of the website or online service; and
        (iii) The link to the notice must be placed in a clear and 
    prominent place and manner at each area on the website or online 
    service where children directly provide, or are asked to provide, 
    personal information, and in close proximity to the requests for 
    information in each such area.
        (2) Content of the notice. To be complete, the notice of the 
    website or online service's information practices must state the 
    following:
        (i) The name, address, telephone number, and e-mail address of all 
    operators collecting or maintaining personal information from children 
    through the website or online service. Provided that: the operators of 
    a website or online service may list the name, address, phone number, 
    and e-mail address of one operator who will respond to all inquiries 
    from parents concerning the operators' privacy policies and use of 
    children's information, as long as the names of all the operators 
    collecting or maintaining personal information from children through 
    the website or online service are also listed in the notice;
        (ii) The types of personal information collected from children and 
    whether the personal information is collected directly or passively;
        (iii) How such personal information is or may be used by the 
    operator(s), including but not limited to fulfillment of a requested 
    transaction, recordkeeping, marketing back to the child, or making it 
    publicly available through a chat room or by other means;
        (iv) Whether personal information is disclosed to third parties, 
    and if so, the types of business in which such third parties are 
    engaged, and the general purposes for which such information is used; 
    whether those third parties have agreed to maintain the 
    confidentiality, security, and integrity of the personal information 
    they obtain from the operator; and that the parent has the option to 
    consent to the collection and use of their child's personal information 
    without consenting to the disclosure of that information to third 
    parties;
        (v) That the operator is prohibited from conditioning a child's 
    participation in an activity on the child's disclosing more personal 
    information than is reasonably necessary to participate in such 
    activity; and
        (vi) That the parent can review and have deleted the child's 
    personal information, and refuse to permit further collection or use of 
    the child's information, and state the procedures for doing so.
        (c) Notice to a parent. Under Sec. 312.5, an operator must make 
    reasonable efforts, taking into account available technology, to ensure 
    that a parent of a child receives notice of the operator's practices 
    with regard to the collection, use, and/or disclosure of the child's 
    personal information, including notice of any material change in the 
    collection, use, and/or disclosure practices to which the parent has 
    previously consented.
        (1) Content of the notice to the parent. (i) All notices must state 
    the following:
        (A) That the operator wishes to collect personal information from 
    the child;
        (B) The information set forth in paragraph (b) of this section.
        (ii) In the case of a notice to obtain verifiable parental consent 
    under Sec. 312.5(a), the notice must also state that the parent's 
    consent is required for the collection, use, and/or disclosure of such 
    information, and state the means by which the parent can provide 
    verifiable consent to the collection of information.
        (iii) In the case of a notice under the exception in 
    Sec. 312.5(c)(3), the notice must also state the following:
        (A) That the operator has collected the child's e-mail address or 
    other online contact information to respond to the child's request for 
    information and that the requested information will require more than 
    one contact with the child;
        (B) That the parent may refuse to permit further contact with the 
    child and require the deletion of the information, and how the parent 
    can do so; and
        (C) That if the parent fails to respond to the notice, the operator 
    may use the information for the purpose(s) stated in the notice.
        (iv) In the case of a notice under the exception in 
    Sec. 312.5(c)(4), the notice must also state the following:
        (A) That the operator has collected the child's name and e-mail 
    address or other online contact information to protect the safety of 
    the child participating on the website or online service;
    
    [[Page 59914]]
    
        (B) That the parent may refuse to permit the use of the information 
    and require the deletion of the information, and how the parent can do 
    so; and
        (C) That if the parent fails to respond to the notice, the operator 
    may use the information for the purpose stated in the notice.
    
    
    Sec. 312.5  Parental consent.
    
        (a) General requirements. (1) An operator is required to obtain 
    verifiable parental consent before any collection, use, and/or 
    disclosure of personal information from children, including consent to 
    any material change in the collection, use, and/or disclosure practices 
    to which the parent has previously consented.
        (2) An operator must give the parent the option to consent to the 
    collection and use of the child's personal information without 
    consenting to disclosure of his or her personal information to third 
    parties.
        (b) Mechanisms for verifiable parental consent. (1) An operator 
    must make reasonable efforts to obtain verifiable parental consent, 
    taking into consideration available technology. Any method to obtain 
    verifiable parental consent must be reasonably calculated, in light of 
    available technology, to ensure that the person providing consent is 
    the child's parent.
        (2) Methods to obtain verifiable parental consent that satisfy the 
    requirements of this paragraph include: providing a consent form to be 
    signed by the parent and returned to the operator by postal mail or 
    facsimile; requiring a parent to use a credit card in connection with a 
    transaction; having a parent call a toll-free telephone number staffed 
    by trained personnel; using a digital certificate that uses public key 
    technology; and using e-mail accompanied by a PIN or password obtained 
    through one of the verification methods listed in this paragraph. 
    Provided that: For the period until April 21, 2002, methods to obtain 
    verifiable parental consent for uses of information other than the 
    ``disclosures'' defined by Sec. 312.2 may also include use of e-mail 
    coupled with additional steps to provide assurances that the person 
    providing the consent is the parent. Such additional steps include: 
    sending a confirmatory e-mail to the parent following receipt of 
    consent; or obtaining a postal address or telephone number from the 
    parent and confirming the parent's consent by letter or telephone call. 
    Operators who use such methods must provide notice that the parent can 
    revoke any consent given in response to the earlier e-mail.
        (c) Exceptions to prior parental consent. Verifiable parental 
    consent is required prior to any collection, use and/or disclosure of 
    personal information from a child except as set forth in this 
    paragraph. The exceptions to prior parental consent are as follows:
        (1) Where the operator collects the name or online contact 
    information of a parent or child to be used for the sole purpose of 
    obtaining parental consent or providing notice under Sec. 312.4. If the 
    operator has not obtained parental consent after a reasonable time from 
    the date of the information collection, the operator must delete such 
    information from its records;
        (2) Where the operator collects online contact information from a 
    child for the sole purpose of responding directly on a one-time basis 
    to a specific request from the child, and where such information is not 
    used to recontact the child and is deleted by the operator from its 
    records;
        (3) Where the operator collects online contact information from a 
    child to be used to respond directly more than once to a specific 
    request from the child, and where such information is not used for any 
    other purpose. In such cases, the operator must make reasonable 
    efforts, taking into consideration available technology, to ensure that 
    a parent receives notice and has the opportunity to request that the 
    operator make no further use of the information, as described in 
    Sec. 312.4(c), immediately after the initial response and before making 
    any additional response to the child. Mechanisms to provide such notice 
    include, but are not limited to, sending the notice by postal mail or 
    sending the notice to the parent's e-mail address, but do not include 
    asking a child to print a notice form or sending an e-mail to the 
    child;
        (4) Where the operator collects a child's name and online contact 
    information to the extent reasonably necessary to protect the safety of 
    a child participant on the website or online service, and the operator 
    usesd reasonable efforts to provide a parent notice as described in 
    Sec. 312.4(c), where such information is:
        (i) Used for the sole purpose of protecting the child's safety;
        (ii) Not used to recontact the child or for any other purpose;
        (iii) Not disclosed on the website or online service; and
        (5) Where the operator collects a child's name and online contact 
    information and such information is not used for any other purpose, to 
    the extent reasonably necessary:
        (i) To protect the security or integrity of its website or online 
    service;
        (ii) To take precautions against liability;
        (iii) To respond to judicial process; or
        (iv) To the extent permitted under other provisions of law, to 
    provide information to law enforcement agencies or for an investigation 
    on a matter related to public safety.
    
    
    Sec. 312.6  Right of parent to review personal information provided by 
    a child.
    
        (a) Upon request of a parent whose child has provided personal 
    information to a website or online service, the operator of that 
    website or online service is required to provide to that parent the 
    following:
        (1) A description of the specific types or categories of personal 
    information collected from children by the operator, such as name, 
    address, telephone number, e-mail address, hobbies, and extracurricular 
    activities;
        (2) The opportunity at any time to refuse to permit the operator's 
    further use or future online collection of personal information from 
    that child, and to direct the operator to delete the child's personal 
    information; and
        (3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a means of 
    reviewing any personal information collected from the child. The means 
    employed by the operator to carry out this provision must:
        (i) Ensure that the requestor is a parent of that child, taking 
    into account available technology; and
        (ii) Not be unduly burdensome to the parent.
        (b) Neither an operator nor the operator's agent shall be held 
    liable under any Federal or State law for any disclosure made in good 
    faith and following reasonable procedures in responding to a request 
    for disclosure of personal information under this section.
        (c) Subject to the limitations set forth in Sec. 312.7, an operator 
    may terminate any service provided to a child whose parent has refused, 
    under paragraph (a)(2) of this section, to permit the operator's 
    further use or collection of personal information from his or her child 
    or has directed the operator to delete the child's personal 
    information.
    
    
    Sec. 312.7  Prohibition against conditioning a child's participation on 
    collection of personal information.
    
        An operator is prohibited from conditioning a child's participation 
    in a game, the offering of a prize, or another activity on the child's 
    disclosing more personal information than is reasonably necessary to 
    participate in such activity.
    
    [[Page 59915]]
    
    Sec. 312.8  Confidentiality, security, and integrity of personal 
    information collected from children.
    
        The operator must establish and maintain reasonable procedures to 
    protect the confidentiality, security, and integrity of personal 
    information collected from children.
    
    
    Sec. 312.9  Enforcement.
    
        Subject to sections 6503 and 6505 of the Children's Online Privacy 
    Protection Act of 1998, a violation of a regulation prescribed under 
    section 6502 (a) of this Act shall be treated as a violation of a rule 
    defining an unfair or deceptive act or practice prescribed under 
    section 18(a)(1)(B) of the Federal Trade Commission Act (15 U.S.C. 
    57a(a)(1)(B)).
    
    
    Sec. 312.10  Safe harbors.
    
        (a) In general. An operator will be deemed to be in compliance with 
    the requirements of this part if that operator complies with self-
    regulatory guidelines, issued by representatives of the marketing or 
    online industries, or by other persons, that, after notice and comment, 
    are approved by the Commission.
        (b) Criteria for approval of self-regulatory guidelines. To be 
    approved by the Commission, guidelines must include the following:
        (1) A requirement that operators subject to the guidelines 
    (``subject operators'') implement substantially similar requirements 
    that provide the same or greater protections for children as those 
    contained in Secs. 312.2 through 312.9;
        (2) An effective, mandatory mechanism for the independent 
    assessment of subject operators' compliance with the guidelines. This 
    performance standard may be satisfied by:
        (i) Periodic reviews of subject operators' information practices 
    conducted on a random basis either by the industry group promulgating 
    the guidelines or by an independent entity;
        (ii) Periodic reviews of all subject operators' information 
    practices, conducted either by the industry group promulgating the 
    guidelines or by an independent entity;
        (iii) Seeding of subject operators' databases, if accompanied by 
    either paragraphs (b)(2)(i) or (b)(2)(ii) of this section; or
        (iv) Any other equally effective independent assessment mechanism; 
    and
        (3) Effective incentives for subject operators' compliance with the 
    guidelines. This performance standard may be satisfied by:
        (i) Mandatory, public reporting of disciplinary action taken 
    against subject operators by the industry group promulgating the 
    guidelines;
        (ii) Consumer redress;
        (iii) Voluntary payments to the United States Treasury in 
    connection with an industry-directed program for violators of the 
    guidelines;
        (iv) Referral to the Commission of operators who engage in a 
    pattern or practice of violating the guidelines; or
        (v) Any other equally effective incentive.
        (4) The assessment mechanism required under paragraph (b)(2) of 
    this section can be provided by an independent enforcement program, 
    such as a seal program. In considering whether to initiate an 
    investigation or to bring an enforcement action for violations of this 
    part, and in considering appropriate remedies for such violations, the 
    Commission will take into account whether an operator has been subject 
    to self-regulatory guidelines approved under this section and whether 
    the operator has taken remedial action pursuant to such guidelines, 
    including but not limited to actions set forth in paragraphs (b)(3)(i) 
    through (iii) of this section.
        (c) Request for Commission approval of self-regulatory guidelines.
        (1) To obtain Commission approval of self-regulatory guidelines, 
    industry groups or other persons must file a request for such approval. 
    A request shall be accompanied by the following:
        (i) A copy of the full text of the guidelines for which approval is 
    sought and any accompanying commentary;
        (ii) A comparison of each provision of Secs. 312.3 through 312.8 
    with the corresponding provisions of the guidelines; and
        (iii) A statement explaining:
        (A) How the guidelines, including the applicable assessment 
    mechanism, meet the requirements of this part; and
        (B) How the assessment mechanism and compliance incentives required 
    under paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this section provide effective 
    enforcement of the requirements of this part.
        (2) The Commission shall act upon a request under this section 
    within 180 days of the filing of such request and shall set forth its 
    conclusions in writing.
        (3) Industry groups or other persons whose guidelines have been 
    approved by the Commission must submit proposed changes in those 
    guidelines for review and approval by the Commission in the manner 
    required for initial approval of guidelines under paragraph (c)(1). The 
    statement required under paragraph (c)(1)(iii) must describe how the 
    proposed changes affect existing provisions of the guidelines.
        (d) Records. Industry groups or other persons who seek safe harbor 
    treatment by compliance with guidelines that have been approved under 
    this part shall maintain for a period not less than three years and 
    upon request make available to the Commission for inspection and 
    copying:
        (1) Consumer complaints alleging violations of the guidelines by 
    subject operators;
        (2) Records of disciplinary actions taken against subject 
    operators; and
        (3) Results of the independent assessments of subject operators' 
    compliance required under paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
        (e) Revocation of approval. The Commission reserves the right to 
    revoke any approval granted under this section if at any time it 
    determines that the approved self-regulatory guidelines and their 
    implementation do not, in fact, meet the requirements of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 312.11  Rulemaking review.
    
        No later than April 21, 2005, the Commission shall initiate a 
    rulemaking review proceeding to evaluate the implementation of this 
    part, including the effect of the implementation of this part on 
    practices relating to the collection and disclosure of information 
    relating to children, children's ability to obtain access to 
    information of their choice online, and on the availability of websites 
    directed to children; and report to Congress on the results of this 
    review.
    
    
    Sec. 312.12  Severability.
    
        The provisions of this part are separate and severable from one 
    another. If any provision is stayed or determined to be invalid, it is 
    the Commission's intention that the remaining provisions shall continue 
    in effect.
    
        By direction of the Commission.
    Donald S. Clark,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 99-27740 Filed 11-2-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6750-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/21/2000
Published:
11/03/1999
Department:
Federal Trade Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
99-27740
Dates:
The rule will become effective on April 21, 2000.
Pages:
59888-59915 (28 pages)
RINs:
3084-AA84: Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule Pursuant to the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/3084-AA84/children-s-online-privacy-protection-rule-pursuant-to-the-children-s-online-privacy-protection-act-o
PDF File:
99-27740.pdf
CFR: (17)
16 CFR 312.6(a)(3)
16 CFR 312.6(a)(1)
16 CFR 312.5(c)(3)
16 CFR 312.5(c)(4)
16 CFR 312.4(c)
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