Alan_Brown wrote:It's certainly good to be aware of privacy laws. But I don't see how you can make a blanket statement about this site violating those laws. That site does not make the information public to anyone except those who are authorized within the ward or stake. Also, that information is not necessarily any more than a name, or initials -- it depends on how the leaders use it.
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Just a thought question -- how does ymyw.org differ from the local unit web sites? With LUWS, the names, addresses, and phone numbers of hundreds of minors per stake are listed on a web site. Thousands of people (all the stake members, but not the general public, of course) can see this information. Although any member can opt out of his/her information being listed, by default it is listed. We only have the security of the site protecting the entire world from seeing all that private information. Now I know who the Church is, and I know they are working very hard to have a secure site. But ymwy.org would have even less private information. From a legal standpoint, what's the real difference?
The violation is taking information without consent and using it. Accessibility and security of the data is important but has nothing to do with violating the law in this regard. The church is allowed to have this kind of information on their websites because we are members of the church.
RussellHtn had asked if this was covered by COPPA. Not entirely. You see COPPA covers children 13 years and younger. This law is geared to making children safe from preditors. It does add specific requirements to web administrators which ymyw.org does not advertise as having in place. If those requirements are not there then ymyw.org has violated COPPA. What I had referred to earlier is public record laws. There are federal laws and then specific ammendments that will vary from state to state. These laws determine what can be used with consent and how. These are the laws the leaders using ymyw.org have violated.
My local congressman is on some of the key committees that involve protecting children. I learned a lot by writing to his office. So again my recommendation is that leaders using and/or planning to use ymyw.org contact the church's legal department about instructions to protect the church from inadvertant legal transgressions.