ftc

ftc-suggests-new-rules-to-shift-parents’-burden-of-protecting-kids-to-websites

FTC suggests new rules to shift parents’ burden of protecting kids to websites

Ending the endless tracking of kids —

FTC seeking public comments on new rules to expand children’s privacy law.

FTC suggests new rules to shift parents’ burden of protecting kids to websites

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is currently seeking comments on new rules that would further restrict platforms’ efforts to monetize children’s data.

Through the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), the FTC initially sought to give parents more control over what kinds of information that various websites and apps can collect from their kids. Now, the FTC wants to update COPPA and “shift the burden from parents to providers to ensure that digital services are safe and secure for children,” the FTC’s press release said.

“By requiring firms to better safeguard kids’ data, our proposal places affirmative obligations on service providers and prohibits them from outsourcing their responsibilities to parents,” FTC chair Lina Khan said.

Among proposed rules, the FTC would require websites to turn off targeted advertising by default and prohibit sending push notifications to encourage kids to use services more than they want to. Surveillance in schools would be further restricted, so that data is only collected for educational purposes. And data security would be strengthened by mandating that websites and apps “establish, implement, and maintain a written children’s personal information security program that contains safeguards that are appropriate to the sensitivity of the personal information collected from children.”

Perhaps most significantly, COPPA would also be updated to stop companies from retaining children’s data forever, explicitly stating that “operators cannot retain the information indefinitely.” In a statement, commissioner Alvaro Bedoya called this a “critical protection” at a time when “new, machine learning-fueled systems require ever larger amounts of training data.”

These proposed changes were designed to address “the evolving ways personal information is being collected, used, and disclosed, including to monetize children’s data,” the FTC said.

Keeping up with advancing technology, the FTC said, also requires expanding COPPA’s definition of “personal information” to include biometric identifiers. That change was likely inspired by charges brought against Amazon earlier this year, when the FTC accused Amazon of violating COPPA by retaining tens of thousands of children’s Alexa voice recordings forever.

Once the notice of proposed rulemaking is published to the Federal Register, the public will have 60 days to submit comments. The FTC likely anticipates thousands of parents and stakeholders to weigh in, noting that the last time COPPA was updated in 2019, more than 175,000 comments were submitted.

Endless tracking of kids not a “victimless crime”

Bedoya said that updating the already-expansive children’s privacy law would prevent known harms. He also expressed concern that increasingly these harms are being overlooked, citing a federal judge in California who preliminarily enjoined California’s Age-Appropriate Design Code” in September. That judge had suggested that California’s law was “actually likely to exacerbate” online harm to kids, but Bedoya challenged that decision as reinforcing a “critique that has quietly proliferated around children’s privacy: the idea that many privacy invasions do not actually hurt children.”

For decades, COPPA has protected against the unauthorized or unnecessary collection, use, retention, and disclosure of children’s information, which Bedoya said “endangers children’s safety,” “exposes children and families to hacks and data breaches,” and “allows third-party companies to develop commercial relationships with children that prey on their trust and vulnerability.”

“I think each of these harms, particularly the latter, undermines the idea that the pervasive tracking of children online is [a] ‘victimless crime,'” Bedoya said, adding that “the harms that COPPA sought to prevent remain real, and COPPA remains relevant and profoundly important.”

According to Bedoya, COPPA is more vital than ever, as “we are only at the beginning of an era of biometric fraud.”

Khan characterized the proposed changes as “much-needed” in an “era where online tools are essential for navigating daily life—and where firms are deploying increasingly sophisticated digital tools to surveil children.”

“Kids must be able to play and learn online without being endlessly tracked by companies looking to hoard and monetize their personal data,” Khan said.

FTC suggests new rules to shift parents’ burden of protecting kids to websites Read More »

report:-meta-wins-bid-to-acquire-vr-fitness-studio-behind-‘supernatural’,-awaiting-ftc-appeal

Report: Meta Wins Bid to Acquire VR Fitness Studio Behind ‘Supernatural’, Awaiting FTC Appeal

In 2021 Meta announced it was set to acquire Within, the studio behind popular VR fitness app Supernatural, however the reportedly $400 million deal became subject to investigations by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in respect to Meta’s supposed monopolization of the VR fitness space. Now, according to a Bloomberg report, it appears the FTC has lost an important suit to block Meta’s acquisition of Within.

Unreleased documents from the closed court proceedings appear to vindicate Meta’s acquisition of Within, Bloomberg reports, citing people familiar with the ruling. The sealed decision was made Wednesday morning by US District Judge Edward Davila in San Jose, California, which effectively denies the FTC’s request for a preliminary injunction to block the acquisition.

The final outcome of the trial isn’t entirely official just yet though. It’s said Judge Davila also issued a temporary restraining order with the aim of pausing Meta from closing the transaction for a further week, allowing time for the FTC to make an appeal. Provided the reports are accurate, the chances of the FTC potentially clawing back from the loss seem fairly slim at this point.

Last July, the FTC under sitting Chair Lina Khan revealed it had filed a motion aimed at blocking the deal with a federal court in a 3–2 decision, which aimed at reigning in Meta’s ability to “buy market position instead of earning it on the merits,” FTC Bureau of Competition Deputy Director John Newman said at the time.

Neither Meta nor the FTC has commented on the report regarding Meta’s win. In a statement to the New York Times about the matter in July, Meta called the FTC’s position “based on ideology and speculation, not evidence. The idea that this acquisition would lead to anticompetitive outcomes in a dynamic space with as much entry and growth as online and connected fitness is simply not credible.” Adding that the lawsuit would send “a chilling message to anyone who wishes to innovate in VR.”

Over the past four years, Meta has gone unchallenged in several VR studio acquisitions, including Beat Games (Beat Saber), Sanzaru Games (Asgard’s Wrath), Ready at Dawn (Lone Echo & Echo Arena), Downpour Interactive (Onward), BigBox VR (Population: One), Camouflaj (Marvel’s Iron Man VR), Twisted Pixel (Wilson’s Heart, Path of the Warrior), and Armature Studio (Resident Evil 4 VR port for Quest 2).

In particular, the FTC used Meta’s acquisition of Beat Saber as evidence that the company already had engineers with the skill set to both expand Beat Saber into fitness and to build a VR dedicated fitness app from scratch, an FTC court filing stated, maintaining that buying Within “was not the only way Meta could have developed the production capabilities and expertise needed to create a premium VR fitness experience.”

Report: Meta Wins Bid to Acquire VR Fitness Studio Behind ‘Supernatural’, Awaiting FTC Appeal Read More »

‘batman-vr’-app-allegedly-in-the-works-for-quest,-ftc-filing-claims

‘Batman VR’ App Allegedly in the Works for Quest, FTC Filing Claims

Among documents released by the United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC) earlier this week is a claim that Meta’s VR studio Camouflaj, the developers behind Marvel’s Ironman VR, have also planned a Batman VR app for release on Quest.

The apparent leak was found by Janko Roettgers, formerly of Protocol and Variety. The document in whole can be viewed here.

“In September 2022, Meta acquired Camouflaj, which currently developing Ironman and Batman VR apps for Quest.”

The information comes as a part of wider antitrust investigation into Meta’s acquisition of Within, the studio behind the VR fitness app. You can read more about that here.

Last we heard from Camouflaj before the acquisition by Meta, the studio said it had “exciting things on the horizon,” maintaining it was still “all-in on VR.”

As early as May 2022, the studio was hiring for a host of positions to work on its “next exciting AAA project.”

A few months later the studio then released Iron Man VR on Quest 2, releasing it from its two-year exclusivity on PSVR.

Camouflaj hasn’t announced any new projects at this point either. We’ve reached out to Meta for comment and will update when/if we hear back.

‘Batman VR’ App Allegedly in the Works for Quest, FTC Filing Claims Read More »