COALITION TELLS THE FTC: TIME IS UP FOR TIKTOK
The Parent Coalition for Student Privacy is one of twenty advocacy, consumer, and privacy groups that filed a May 14, 2020 complaint with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), asking them to investigate and sanction TikTok, formerly Musical.ly, for continuing to violate COPPA, the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act. The complaint argues that TikTok continues to store and collect children’s personal information without notice to and consent of parents, in violation of its 2019 order by the FTC.
If you are not familiar with TikTok, it is a very popular social media app, with 800 million worldwide users, many of them children. TikTok allows users to record and upload videos of themselves dancing and singing and the app has more downloads than Facebook. As this Manchester Evening News piece points out, the recommended ages are for 12 plus, but “online safety experts say it has been designed with the young user in mind and has a very addictive appeal.”
Why this complaint is important
Because TikTok is a popular platform for children, parents worry that TikTok is not safe and that it puts kids at risk of sexual predation. For example, this father warned other parents after his 7 year old daughter was asked to send nude pictures of herself on TikTok. In another instance, a 35 year old Los Angeles man was allegedly targeting girls by posing as a 13 year old boy on TikTok and engaging in “sexual and vulgar conversations with at least 21 girls, some were as young as 9”. This February 2020 piece in Parents CONTINUE READING: Coalition tells the FTC: Time is up for TiKTok | Parent Coalition for Student Privacy