Facebook to enforce age policies after caught 'training' to ignore

Cal Jeffrey

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Bottom line: Facebook has announced that if you are using its platform and you are suspected of being under the age of 13, you may find your account locked until you can provide proof otherwise. The announcement comes on the heels of an undercover report that trainers tell new moderators to turn their heads on underage users.

Kids who were originally affected by the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) are now in their 20s or entering their 30s. The law which was passed in 1998 and enacted in 2000 was created to protect children under the age of 13 from the collection of personal information. However, since age verification for adolescents is so tricky, COPPA is one of those laws that is practically unenforceable.

Most websites, social media platforms, and online games rely on the honor system hoping that underage users don’t lie about their age when creating an account, and when they do falsify their age, moderators are often told to ignore it unless it is explicitly admitted to or pointed out by another.

According to Channel 4 in the United Kingdom, a Facebook trainer told an undercover reporter, “We have to have an admission that the person is underage. If not, we just pretend that we are blind and that we don't know what underage looks like.”

"We do not allow people under 13 to have a Facebook account. If someone is is reported to us as being under 13, the reviewer will look at the content on their profile (text and photos) to try to ascertain their age."

This report seems to have triggered the social media giant to announce that it would be making a more significant effort to reduce its number of underage users. Facebook will stop short of requiring verifiable identification for account creation but said that it would be cracking down on existing accounts. Previously, moderators would only investigate those that had been explicitly pointed out as being owned by underage users. Now it will be taking a closer look at any account that is flagged for whatever reason.

“Since the [Channel 4] program, we have been working to update the guidance for reviewers to put a hold on any account they encounter if they have a strong indication it is underage, even if the report was for something else,” Facebook said in a statement.

If it suspects a user to be under 13-years-old, it will lock the account. Busted Facebookers will only be able to unlock their profiles by providing a valid form of ID that proves they are over 13.

This policy is not new, but the social media titan is just committing itself to enforcing existing rules. It may turn out to be a hassle for users who somehow end up falsely accused of being underage, but barring a better solution, it might have to be tolerated. Requiring some form of age verification such as authorizing a credit card is likely to be rejected by users both young and old.

Now if MMOs could just figure out how to get rid of the tweens, we’d all be more grateful (and yes, online games are subject to COPPA rules too).

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"Do no good" should be Facebook's motto.

I'm still waiting for zuck to explain how he went from wanting to leaving something positive to the world to what Facebook currently is. If he sold his soul for money he should just come right out and say it.
 
The parents don't care if their young kids are on social media or anywhere else on the web. Its honestly just that simple. I don't know a single parent under 36 who cares what their kids see and hear online or elsewhere, and little wonder - the parents are too busy screwing around on Facebook to actually raise their children.
 
It's quite certain he did so. Facebook was a DARPA/CIA project before it launched, codenamed "LifeLog". Go youtube CorbettReport, he has a great video on this. I mean...who would have thought right? The US Government, creating a program/website designed to have people willingly give up their information for mass data/surveillance. That's how uninformed most sheeps are.

That doesn't make much sense, given that Facebook allowed Russian operatives to pose as news outlets and to stir up division.
 
And how are they to prove their age without a violation of privacy rights? I'm not saying the concept is good but the application is going to really take some work .....
 
"Do no good" should be Facebook's motto.

I'm still waiting for zuck to explain how he went from wanting to leaving something positive to the world to what Facebook currently is. If he sold his soul for money he should just come right out and say it.
The only problem with szuk admitting that he sold his soul for money is that the economic systems of the world make selling your soul for money a good thing, and thus it is unlikely that he recognizes that he sold his soul for money. IMO, he, and many others at the top of the riches chain, would have to become truly enlightened souls to realize exactly the path that they are on. Somehow, I do not see that happening.
That doesn't make much sense, given that Facebook allowed Russian operatives to pose as news outlets and to stir up division.
I don't know the details, but if the Russian operatives were bouncing through successive hops, it may have been difficult to detect that they were Russian operatives.

I highly doubt that szuk was thinking about the pits of the platform and how to prevent users from falling into them. From many of the other stories about fakebook, it is clear the fakebook execs did not care who they hit as long as they made a profit on it. To me, that implies that fakebook execs want the platform's users to fall into those pits.
 
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Wow, under 13 eh. I know parents that created new accounts for their unborn children, posting photos of ultrasounds and onwards. I guess that'd be a giveaway if the profile photo was inside a womb.
 
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