The FTC Is Closing In on Runaway AI

WIRED 

Teenagers deserve to grow, develop, and experiment, says Caitriona Fitzgerald, deputy director at the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a nonprofit advocacy group. They should be able to test or abandon ideas "while being free from the chilling effects of being watched or having information from their youth used against them later when they apply to college or apply for a job." She called for the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to make rules to protect the digital privacy of teens. Hye Jung Han, the author of a Human Rights Watch report about education companies selling personal information to data brokers, wants a ban on personal data-fueled advertising to children. "Commercial interests and surveillance should never override a child's best interests or their fundamental rights, because children are priceless, not products," she said.

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