NEW YORK: Tech firms have been urged to stop advertising to under-18s in an open letter signed by MPs, academics and children’s-rights advocates, foreign media reported.
Behavioural advertising not only undermines privacy but puts “susceptible” youngsters under unfair marketing pressure, the letter says.
It is addressed to Google, Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Microsoft. In a separate move Google-owned YouTube is accused of unlawfully mining data from five million under-13s in the UK.
European data protection laws forbid the mining of data of young children.
“The fact that ad-tech companies hold 72 million data points on a child by the time they turn 13 shows the extent of disregard for these laws, and the extraordinary surveillance to which children are subjected,” the letter reads.
“There is no justification for targeting teenagers with personalised ads any more than there is for targeting 12-year-olds.“You, the most powerful companies on the internet, have a responsibility to protect your users.”
Among the 23 signatories are MP Caroline Lucas and clinical psychologist Dr Elly Hanson. Friends of the Earth is also named on the letter.
It was co-ordinated by Global Action Plan, which argues that online advertising accelerates consumerism, and adds unnecessary pressure to the planet.
Moreover, 69 calling attention notices and four motions under Rule 259 were discussed in the House
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