Practical_connection_assignment

Colin Horn
Ch5.pptx

ISOL 633 Legal, Regulations, Investigations, and Compliance

UNIVERSITY OF THE CUMBERLANDS

School of Computer and Information Sciences

Housekeeping

Lecture Roadmap:

Chapter Four: Security and Privacy of Consumer Financial Information

Chapter Five: Security and Privacy of Information Belonging to Children and Educational Records

Chapter Six: Security and Privacy of Health Information

List some of the challenges with protecting children on the Internet.

Identified the purpose and scope of CIPA and COPPA, and can describe its main requirements and oversight.

Identify the purpose and scope of FERPA, and can describe its main requirements and oversight.

Chapter Five Objectives

Chapter Five: Security and Privacy of Information Belonging to Children and Educational Records

Challenges in Protecting Children On the Internet

COPPA

CIPA

FERPA

Chapter Five: Security and Privacy of Information Belonging to Children and Educational Records

Challenges in Protecting Children On the Internet:

Identification of Children

First Amendment & Censorship

Defining Objectionable Content

Chapter Five: Security and Privacy of Information Belonging to Children and Educational Records

Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA)

Notice Practices Posted

Clear and Understandable

Verifiable Parental Notice

Under 13

Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA)

Deploy Technology Protection Measures—e.g., Proxy Servers

Filter Harmful Imagery

Develop Monitoring Policies

Under 17

Applications of Both COPPA and CIPA

websites online services educational institutions libraries

Chapter Five: Security and Privacy of Information Belonging to Children and Educational Records

Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA)

Rights:

Inspect, review, correct student records.

Exceptions:

Transfers; Legitimate Educational Interest; Student Aid; Court Orders; Emergencies; Federal Taxes

COPPA protects the information of children. It prohibits web sites from collecting information about children without a parent’s consent. COPPA defines a child as anyone under the age of 13.

CIPA requires schools and libraries to filter web site traffic. CIPA ensures that children don’t view objectionable material from these publicly funded locations. CIPA defines a child as anyone under the age of 17.

FERPA requires schools to protect educational records. Schools need written consent prior to releasing educational records. The student or parent has the right to review these records. FERPA grants these rights to the parent until the child reaches the age of 18. At that point, the right passes to the student.

Chapter Five Summary

Homework Assignments