COPPA is controversial and has been criticized as ineffective and potentially unconstitutional by legal experts and mass media since it was drafted. Complaints leveled against the legislation include website owners banning users 12 and under—which only "encourages age fraud and allows websites to bypass the burden of obtaining parental consent" due to necessity of registering accounts to do so. Delays in obtaining parental consent often result in children moving on to other activities that are less appropriate for their age or pose bigger privacy risks. In addition, age restrictions and the "parental consent" process are easy for children to circumvent, and parents generally help them to lie about their age. An Internet Safety Technical Task Force composed of experts from academia and commercial companies found in 2012 that mandatory age verification is not only a poor solution for privacy but also constitutes a violation of privacy. The law has also many safety flaws. For example, it does not protect kids from predatory advertising, it does not prevent kids from accessing
pornography or lying about their age, Similarly, it has been pointed out that the COPPA Rule was not necessarily about privacy protection but more about "enforcing the laws." By contrast, the FTC has been criticized, including by COPPA author
Ed Markey, and FTC commissioner
Rohit Chopra, for not fining major and
big tech companies harshly enough for their COPPA violations, especially in comparison to their revenue. In contrast, violators of the
European Union's
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) may be fined up to 4% of their annual global revenue. With the rise of virtual education, COPPA may inadequately represent the role of administrators, teachers, and the school in protecting student privacy under the assumption of
loco parentis.
Mark Zuckerberg, co-founder and CEO of
Facebook, expressed opposition to COPPA in 2011 and stated "That will be a fight we take on at some point. My philosophy is that for education you need to start at a really, really young age." The next year,
Jim Steyer, the CEO of
Common Sense Media, called for updates to COPPA, calling the time of the act's creation "the stone age of digital media" and pointing out the lack of platforms such as Google, YouTube, Facebook and Twitter at the time. In 2019, the
Government of the State of New York sued
YouTube for violating COPPA by illegally retaining information related to children under 13 years of age. YouTube responded by dividing its content strictly into "for kids" and "not for kids". This has met with extremely harsh criticism from the YouTube community, especially from gamers, with many alleging that the
FTC of the United States intends to fine
content creators $42,530 for "each mislabeled video", possibly putting all users at risk. However, some have expressed skepticism over this, feeling that the fines may actually be in reference to civil penalties, possibly intended for the site's operators and/or warranted by more serious of COPPA violations or specific cases of "mislabeling videos". As of December 2022, no YouTuber has been fined. Several bills have been proposed to amend COPPA. Markey and
Josh Hawley introduced multiple bills (in the House in 2018 as the "Do Not Track Kids Act", and in 2019 as a Senate measure) proposing that COPPA ban the use of
targeted advertising to users under 13, require personal consent before the collection of personal information from users ages 13–15, require connected devices and toys directed towards children to meet security standards and include a privacy policy disclosure on their packaging, and require services to offer an "eraser button" to "permit users to eliminate publicly available personal information content submitted by the child, when technologically feasible". In January 2020,
Bobby Rush and
Tim Walberg introduced a similar house bill known as the Preventing Real Online Threats Endangering Children Today (PROTECT Kids) Act, which would extend all existing COPPA consent requirements to users under the age of 16, and explicitly add
mobile apps, "precise geolocation", and biometric data to its remit. == Effects in the mobile app and ad-tech ecosystem ==