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nessietwihard02 · 1 year
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✨✨✨𝐓𝐎𝐔𝐑 𝐒𝐓𝐎𝐏+𝐈𝐍𝐓’𝐋 𝐆𝐈𝐕𝐄𝐀𝐖𝐀𝐘!✨✨✨⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣ ⁣ Hello, bookish friends!⁣ ⁣ 𝐐𝐎𝐓𝐃: Let’s have a predictive text game today! Type in: “𝘐𝘵 𝘸𝘢𝘴 𝘰𝘯𝘦 𝘫𝘰𝘣 𝘢𝘱𝘱𝘭𝘪𝘤𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯...𝘵𝘩𝘢𝘵 (𝘭𝘦𝘵 𝘺𝘰𝘶𝘳 𝘬𝘦𝘺𝘣𝘰𝘢𝘳𝘥 𝘵𝘢𝘬𝘦 𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘳 𝘧𝘳𝘰𝘮 𝘩𝘦𝘳𝘦!)”.⁣ ⁣ 𝐀𝐎𝐓𝐃: It was one job application… that I was able to work for the past year 🤣⁣ ⁣ So thrilled to be a host for the first time with 𝐎𝐧𝐜𝐞 𝐔𝐩𝐨𝐧 𝐚 𝐓𝐢𝐦𝐞 𝐓𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐬🤩 Today, we’re helping out 𝐄𝐯𝐢𝐞 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐞𝐚𝐮 to celebrate the new release of her book, 𝐖𝐢𝐥𝐝𝐞 𝐂𝐢𝐭𝐲! This is Book 1 of the 𝐅𝐚𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐌𝐚𝐧𝐡𝐚𝐭𝐭𝐚𝐧, a paranormal romance. Check out the synopsis below in the comment section and the link in my bio and stories😉⁣ ⁣ 𝐆𝐈𝐕𝐄𝐀𝐖𝐀𝐘⁣ -Three US winners will receive a physical copy of Wilde City⁣ -One INTL winner will receive a $50 Amazon gift card⁣ ⁣ 𝐓𝐎 𝐄𝐍𝐓𝐄𝐑⁣ -Like, save, and tag a friend⁣ -Follow me (@nessietwihard02), @eviemarceaubooks, and @onceuponatimetours⁣ ⁣ 𝐄𝐗𝐓𝐑𝐀 𝐄𝐍𝐓𝐑𝐈𝐄𝐒⁣ -Share the giveaway to your stories for 24hrs and tag @eviemarceaubooks and @onceuponatimetours⁣ -Tag a friend in separate comments unlimited times⁣ -Visit #WildeCityOUATTour and enter on other hosts' posts⁣ ⁣ 𝐑𝐔𝐋𝐄𝐒⁣ INTL Giveaway will end February 2nd at 11:59PM EST. Not affiliated with Instagram, must be 18 or have parent's permission, and must be a public account to verify entries. Winners announced on @onceuponatimetours account ONLY.⁣ ⁣ #TheBookwormPrincess👸🏻⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣ #WildeCity #EvieMarceau #OnceUponATimeTours⁣ #NewReleaseTour #NewRelease #FaeOfManhattan #FaeBooks #Magic #KindleVella #NAFantasy #Fae #NewAdult #BillionaireRomance⁣ #bibliophile #bookstagram #books #readersofig #igreads #booklover #bookaholic #mybookfeatures #bookstagramcommunity #booklovers #PageTurnersPH #bookstagramfeaturesonly #booksbooksbooks⁣ #bookish #bookworm⁣ https://www.instagram.com/p/CoCp3aTLgfv/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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manumeoniz · 5 months
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autoretrato 20 21
#SelfPortrait #Portrait #Wildecity #2021
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lindortech · 5 years
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Apple and Google Play remove three dating apps after FTC warning about underage users The Federal vend Commission said today that Google and Apple have removed three dating apps from their app stores because they could potentially be used by sexual predators to find children.
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kylehatfield · 4 years
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@nicholaskclark​ @arnaud2807​ @dhani-yoga​ @love-2-bottom​ @araldodante​ @mkultra-777​ @hellishpussy​ @guy0164​ @huxbear​ @aleks-romaz​ @oceanoflemonade-blog-blog​ @meashmarie​ @alittleperuvian-blog​ @huntertgraham​ @kenjdogg-blog​ @meghanyount-blog​ @jennasoawesome​ @eddiemeows-blog​ @roguejinx​ @peace--love--dinosaurs-blog​ @collinduwe​ @nathanrwise​ @adz42-blog​ @cwxvfbtq2442-blog​ @pyo28ill-blog​ @btcdhptv3332-blog​ @vereduvl-blog​ @ghclothes​ @wildecity-blog​ @lizzyrichardson-blog​ @iwillchangethisworld-blog-blog​ @afraijo-blog​ @khaydendotcom-blog-blog​ @jensantillan-blog​ @tiandremcgee-blog​ @joshualevi-blog​ @lifeofthedevinesir​ @papajorgio​
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sunnydaleherald · 5 years
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The Sunnydale Herald Newsletter, Thursday, January 31
MINION: My master has the Slayer's sister hostage at the Bronze because she summoned him and at midnight he's going to take her to the underworld to be his queen. GILES: What does he want? MINION: (indicates Buffy) Her. SPIKE: (scoffs) If that's all you've got to say, then- Spike tries to grab the minion but he breaks free and runs off. SPIKE: (surprised) Strong. Someday he'll be a real boy.
~~Once More, with Feeling~~
[Drabbles & Short Fiction]
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primordium (crossover with Assassin's Creed, Council of Watchers, Gen) by madimpossibledreamer
Three-sentence fic: To kill a demon is to devour it (Spike and Buffy, not rated - worksafe) by thewiggins
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Self care for the fallen Buffy (Spike/Buffy, G) by Lostiesgirl
[Chaptered Fiction]
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Almost Home Chapter 14 (Spike/Buffy, NC-17) by slaymesoftly
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Almost Home (Part 3 of IWSHLY verse) Chapter 14 (Spike/Buffy, M) by Slaymesoftly
Forward Without Seeing Chapter 150 (Spike/Buffy, other canon ships, Cordelia/Riley, Anya/Riley, M) by queen_insane
Imperfections Chapter 57 (Jenny/Giles, Jenny&Faith, Faith/Buffy, T) by The_Eclectic_Bookworm
Never Over Chapter 4 (Angel/Buffy, M) by GraceNM
The Sanford Slayer Chapter 1-2 (crossover with Hot Fuzz, Faith/Nicholas Angel, T) by Wildecate. COMPLETE!
Super Slayin' Spidey Chapter 14 (crossover with Supernatural, The Avengers, and Spider-Man: Homecoming, Faith/Dean, T) by Authoressinhiding. COMPLETE!
Tales From a New Body Chapter 30 (Spike/Buffy, E) by OffYourBird
Tau-Vana Chapter 9 (crossover with Supernatural, Faith/OC, Angel/Buffy, T) by Kaoz
UnProphecy Girl Chapter 15 (Spike/Buffy, Sam Lawson/Faith, other ships, E) by Micrindle
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The Kalderash Promise Chapter 1 (Angel/Buffy, T) by PurleLullaby
Girls That Glitter Love The Dark Chapter 3 (Buffy/Angelus, T) by butimbroken
Commander In Chief - Book One: Sunnydale Chapter 1-7 (Xander, ensemble, T) by DarthTenebrus
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Living With Immortality Chapter 4 (Spike/Buffy, R) by DeathTheKat
[Reviews & Recaps]
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Seeing Red, Part Four by American Aurora
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What are People's 10 greatest Angel episodes? by GAT4u
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PODCAST: Angel 3x09&10: Lullaby/Dad by Unspoiled
PODCAST: Still Pretty #64. Becoming, Pts 1 & 2 (S2.21- 22) by Lani Diane Rich, Noelle LaCroix, Kelly Jones
PUBLICATION: The Big Damn Buffy Rewatch: S04E06, “Wild At Heart” by Jenny Trout
[Recs]
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More Links Than A Bag Of Sausages by petzipellepingo
Chapter Fourteen of Almost Home by slaymesoftly recced by petzipellepingo
[Community Announcements]
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Half a Moon, a multifandom challenge celebrating female characters, runs February 1 - February 14 on Dreamwidth, LiveJournal, and AO3
Current icon challenges on LJ (multifandom) listed by seraphina_snape
Buffy Rewatch episode discussion will be hosted by electric-heart
[Fandom Discussions]
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So the idea of Slayer!Xander is really interesting to me by madimpossibledreamer
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How much of a home does it have to be to block vampires? [and other questions of vampire lore] by hypnictwitch, spikesjojo, dingoes8myrp
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Riley's dorm room hosted by pizzaslayer
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Where is the Wishverse Mayor? by TobiasMasonPark
Spikes fighting ability decrease in Buffy S2 hosted by GAT4u
[Articles, Interviews, and Other News]
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Giles variant covers for Buffy the Vampire Slayer #2 (Boom! Studios) by Miguel Mercado
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uphindia-world · 5 years
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Apple and Google pull three dating apps from their online stores
Apple and Google pull three dating apps from their online stores
Both Apple and Google have removed several dating apps from their platforms after the warnings from the FTC. The dating apps allowed children of 12 years to take part, as per the letter sent by the FTC to Ukraine-based Wildec LLC, which owns FastMeet, Meet24 and Meet4U.
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In some cases, Wildec’s dating apps were used by potential predators to find victims.
The FTC issued a parental warning in…
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livioacerbo · 5 years
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Apple and Google Play remove three dating apps after FTC warning about underage users
Apple and Google Play remove three dating apps after FTC warning about underage users
The Federal Trade Commission said today that Google and Apple have removed three dating apps from their app stores because they could potentially be used by sexual predators to find children. In a parental advisory, FTC attorney Lisa Weintraub Schifferle wrote that FastMeet, Meet24 and Meet4U, all made by Ukrainian company Wildec, appeared to violate …
Continue reading “Apple and Google Play…
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xanjero · 5 years
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Google and Apple Stores Drop Dating Apps After the FTC Issues Warnings about Underage Use
#Google and #Apple Stores Drop #DatingApps After the #FTC Issues Warnings about Underage Use -- #Xanjero
Both Google and Apple have removed three dating apps from their digital stores after the FTC warns of use by underage individuals…
It would certainly seem prudent for app devs to prevent children from signing up for dating apps. But, that’s apparently not always the case. Apple and Google have both taken down three Wildec dating apps — FastMeet, Meet24, and Meet4U — after the FTC warned of…
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marzart · 3 years
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@thenakedlunchable @glammaaqilah @angelicdys @collapsewavefunction @lilbilliedesign-blog @rumseyamelia-blog @doctor-doodle @ninja-apan @helloarizonairene-blog @iaranavy @endlingmusic @observantandafraid @headcurses @wildecity-blog @giantsquids @pizza-thief @pancakesandtiddlywinks-blog @baileykeogh-blog @cootiesonly @donut-ting @buzzinc-productions-blog @charleyrach @pinktando @practicallydeformed @takemeto-oblivion @translucentimagining @6kays-blog @alicealicealicealicealice42 @labergereinfidele @trasvorder 
Ray-Ban Sunglasses
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valentinopo · 4 years
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Amid a Spate of Activity, COPPA Remains an FTC Enforcement Priority
Earlier this month, the FTC sent a letter to Wildec, LLC, the Ukraine-based maker of several mobile dating apps, alleging that the apps were collecting the personal information and location data of users under the age of 13 without first obtaining verifiable parental consent or otherwise complying with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). from cybrtx https://ift.tt/2R5zk2C via IFTTT
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cassidygallagherg · 4 years
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Amid a Spate of Activity, COPPA Remains an FTC Enforcement Priority
Earlier this month, the FTC sent a letter to Wildec, LLC, the Ukraine-based maker of several mobile dating apps, alleging that the apps were collecting the personal information and location data of users under the age of 13 without first obtaining verifiable parental consent or otherwise complying with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). from cybrtx https://ift.tt/2R5zk2C via IFTTT
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FTC Warns Ukraine Company: You Can’t Let Kids Use Your Dating Apps
With more and more children becoming technologically savvy, parents are having to rely more heavily on laws such as the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (“COPPA”) to shield their children’s information. The FTC recently issued a warning letter to a Ukraine-based company, Wildec LLC (“Wildec”), for allowing children under the age of thirteen to access its dating apps—alleging a potential violation of COPPA and the FTC Act.
A little background on COPPA: the FTC’s COPPA Rule prohibits companies from collecting, using, or sharing personal information from a child, which is defined as an individual under the age of thirteen, without the parent’s verifiable consent. In addition, companies must also provide a notice on its website stating what information is collected as well as any disclosure practices for such information.
Wildec’s dating apps collected an array of information from its users, such as email addresses, photographs, dates of birth, as well as a user’s real-time location data. Although the app’s privacy policy prohibited users under the age of thirteen, the FTC staff found that users who indicated they were under thirteen were not prevented from accessing and using the apps, and staff were able to locate individuals that indicated they were as young as twelve. In addition, the FTC noted in its warning letter that “facilitating other users’—including adults’—ability to identify and communicate with children—even those 13 or over—poses a significant risk to children’s health and safety.” Following the allegations, the apps were swiftly removed from Google Play and Apple’s App Store.
The FTC’s warning letter urged Wildec to ensure that all of their apps are compliant with the requirements of COPPA and/or the FTC Act. This would involve immediately removing children’s personal information from its service and collecting the necessary parental consent before allowing minors to access products.
In conjunction with the warning letter, the FTC issued a parental advisory for dating apps. The advisory warns parents of the dangers of dating apps, and notifies parents of their ability to prohibit app downloads without parental approval. The FTC noted that a new version of Wildec’s apps may appear in the future, but only for adults.
The warning letter highlights the hurdles a company must go through in order to legally collect personal information, which includes a name, address, email address, telephone number, from a child. However, failure to comply with the rules could result in steep legal action as a violation of COPPA is considered an unfair or deceptive practice under Section 57a of the FTC Act. It is unclear whether Wildec’s apps will reappear, but the FTC has stated it will be reviewing its apps again in the coming months. What is clear, however, is that it is imperative to implement clear procedures and guidelines when a company collects any information about an individual under the age of thirteen.
FTC Warns Ukraine Company: You Can’t Let Kids Use Your Dating Apps published first on http://simonconsultancypage.tumblr.com/
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kylehatfield · 4 years
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@nicholaskclark​ @arnaud2807​ @dhani-yoga​ @love-2-bottom​ @araldodante​ @mkultra-777​ @hellishpussy​ @guy0164​ @huxbear​ @aleks-romaz​ @oceanoflemonade-blog-blog​ @meashmarie​ @alittleperuvian-blog​ @huntertgraham​ @kenjdogg-blog​ @meghanyount-blog​ @jennasoawesome​ @eddiemeows-blog​ @roguejinx​ @peace--love--dinosaurs-blog​ @collinduwe​ @nathanrwise​ @adz42-blog​ @cwxvfbtq2442-blog​ @pyo28ill-blog​ @btcdhptv3332-blog​ @vereduvl-blog​ @ghclothes​ @wildecity-blog​ @lizzyrichardson-blog​ @iwillchangethisworld-blog-blog​ @afraijo-blog​ @khaydendotcom-blog-blog​ @jensantillan-blog​ @tiandremcgee-blog​ @joshualevi-blog​ @lifeofthedevinesir​ @papajorgio​
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golicit · 5 years
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FTC Warns Ukraine Company: You Can’t Let Kids Use Your Dating Apps
With more and more children becoming technologically savvy, parents are having to rely more heavily on laws such as the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (“COPPA”) to shield their children’s information. The FTC recently issued a warning letter to a Ukraine-based company, Wildec LLC (“Wildec”), for allowing children under the age of thirteen to access its dating apps—alleging a potential violation of COPPA and the FTC Act.
A little background on COPPA: the FTC’s COPPA Rule prohibits companies from collecting, using, or sharing personal information from a child, which is defined as an individual under the age of thirteen, without the parent’s verifiable consent. In addition, companies must also provide a notice on its website stating what information is collected as well as any disclosure practices for such information.
Wildec’s dating apps collected an array of information from its users, such as email addresses, photographs, dates of birth, as well as a user’s real-time location data. Although the app’s privacy policy prohibited users under the age of thirteen, the FTC staff found that users who indicated they were under thirteen were not prevented from accessing and using the apps, and staff were able to locate individuals that indicated they were as young as twelve. In addition, the FTC noted in its warning letter that “facilitating other users’—including adults’—ability to identify and communicate with children—even those 13 or over—poses a significant risk to children’s health and safety.” Following the allegations, the apps were swiftly removed from Google Play and Apple’s App Store.
The FTC’s warning letter urged Wildec to ensure that all of their apps are compliant with the requirements of COPPA and/or the FTC Act. This would involve immediately removing children’s personal information from its service and collecting the necessary parental consent before allowing minors to access products.
In conjunction with the warning letter, the FTC issued a parental advisory for dating apps. The advisory warns parents of the dangers of dating apps, and notifies parents of their ability to prohibit app downloads without parental approval. The FTC noted that a new version of Wildec’s apps may appear in the future, but only for adults.
The warning letter highlights the hurdles a company must go through in order to legally collect personal information, which includes a name, address, email address, telephone number, from a child. However, failure to comply with the rules could result in steep legal action as a violation of COPPA is considered an unfair or deceptive practice under Section 57a of the FTC Act. It is unclear whether Wildec’s apps will reappear, but the FTC has stated it will be reviewing its apps again in the coming months. What is clear, however, is that it is imperative to implement clear procedures and guidelines when a company collects any information about an individual under the age of thirteen.
FTC Warns Ukraine Company: You Can’t Let Kids Use Your Dating Apps published first on
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lawfultruth · 5 years
Text
FTC Warns Ukraine Company: You Can’t Let Kids Use Your Dating Apps
With more and more children becoming technologically savvy, parents are having to rely more heavily on laws such as the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (“COPPA”) to shield their children’s information. The FTC recently issued a warning letter to a Ukraine-based company, Wildec LLC (“Wildec”), for allowing children under the age of thirteen to access its dating apps—alleging a potential violation of COPPA and the FTC Act.
A little background on COPPA: the FTC’s COPPA Rule prohibits companies from collecting, using, or sharing personal information from a child, which is defined as an individual under the age of thirteen, without the parent’s verifiable consent. In addition, companies must also provide a notice on its website stating what information is collected as well as any disclosure practices for such information.
Wildec’s dating apps collected an array of information from its users, such as email addresses, photographs, dates of birth, as well as a user’s real-time location data. Although the app’s privacy policy prohibited users under the age of thirteen, the FTC staff found that users who indicated they were under thirteen were not prevented from accessing and using the apps, and staff were able to locate individuals that indicated they were as young as twelve. In addition, the FTC noted in its warning letter that “facilitating other users’—including adults’—ability to identify and communicate with children—even those 13 or over—poses a significant risk to children’s health and safety.” Following the allegations, the apps were swiftly removed from Google Play and Apple’s App Store.
The FTC’s warning letter urged Wildec to ensure that all of their apps are compliant with the requirements of COPPA and/or the FTC Act. This would involve immediately removing children’s personal information from its service and collecting the necessary parental consent before allowing minors to access products.
In conjunction with the warning letter, the FTC issued a parental advisory for dating apps. The advisory warns parents of the dangers of dating apps, and notifies parents of their ability to prohibit app downloads without parental approval. The FTC noted that a new version of Wildec’s apps may appear in the future, but only for adults.
The warning letter highlights the hurdles a company must go through in order to legally collect personal information, which includes a name, address, email address, telephone number, from a child. However, failure to comply with the rules could result in steep legal action as a violation of COPPA is considered an unfair or deceptive practice under Section 57a of the FTC Act. It is unclear whether Wildec’s apps will reappear, but the FTC has stated it will be reviewing its apps again in the coming months. What is clear, however, is that it is imperative to implement clear procedures and guidelines when a company collects any information about an individual under the age of thirteen.
FTC Warns Ukraine Company: You Can’t Let Kids Use Your Dating Apps syndicated from https://ronenkurzfeldweb.wordpress.com/
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theknowie-blog · 5 years
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Apple and Google Play remove three dating apps after FTC warning about underage users
Apple and Google Play remove three dating apps after FTC warning about underage users
The Federal Trade Commission said today that Google and Apple have removed three dating apps from their app stores because they could potentially be used by sexual predators to find children. In a parental advisory, FTC attorney Lisa Weintraub Schifferle wrote that FastMeet, Meet24 and Meet4U, all made by Ukrainian company Wildec, appeared to violate the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act…
View On WordPress
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