star4.gif (15357 bytes)

Sheriff

Office of the Sheriff
Camden County, New Jersey

Missing Persons Unit

Protecting Your Family's Privacy
by Lawrence J. Magid

Privacy and safety go hand in hand and many of the same rules that help keep kids safe in cyberspace can also help to protect their privacy.

Privacy doesn’t just mean keeping your kids names, addresses and phone numbers out of the hands of criminals. As a parent (or as a child or teen) you also have the right to protect your child’s privacy from anyone including companies that might want to sell them something.

It’s real problem. A study by the Federal Trade Commission revealed that "only 14 percent of the sample (674) reflecting all U.S. commercial web sites provide any notice of their information collection practices. Only  two percent -- provide a comprehensive privacy policy.

The survey found that "Eighty-nine percent of the 212 children's sites surveyed collect personally identifiable information directly from children; only 54 percent of the children's sites disclose their information collection practices." Finally, the FTC found that "fewer than 10 percent of the sites directed to children provide for some form of parental control over the collection of information from their kids."

The good news is that many of the major players in the industry do have privacy policies and a growing number of web sites have responded to the FTC’s report by adopting privacy policies of their own.

When you or your children visit a site look for the privacy policy and do not provide any personally identifiable information until you read it.

The FTC makes the following recommendations:

 Privacy Links

Online Privacy Alliance Home Page-
    Section on Kids' Privacy

Truste

FTC's Savvy Traveler Guide to Internet Privacy

Larry's World Privacy Resource Page

Keeping Secrets About You... On the Internet!: A kid's guide to internet privacy

Larry's World "Spam" (unsolicted e-mail) page


These tips are excerpted from Child Safety on the Information Highway by Lawrence J. Magid. They are reprinted with permission of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC). Copyright NCMEC 1994 and 1998 . All rights reserved.

Copyright © 1994 and 1998 by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. All rights reserved.

National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
Suite 550, 2101 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, Virginia 22201-3077
1-800-THE-LOST (1-800-843-5678)

safekids.gif (14610 bytes)

stlogosmall.gif (5435 bytes)


If any questions please e-mail me at.. webmaster

arrow1.gif (1097 bytes)  Return to homepage                           Return to Missing Persons Page  arrow3.gif (1193 bytes)