Breaking the rules for Facebook

Parents help preteens access accounts earlier than allowed

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High school senior Kelly Kovacs works on her math homework in her bedroom while texting on her phone, posting to Facebook, monitoring her email and listening to the Beatles. (MCT News Service)
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Nancy Gerstein is a savvy marketing executive who knows a lot about Facebook. She supervises corporate Facebook pages for her company’s clients.

So Gerstein had no qualms when her 11-year-old daughter recently told her that she had created an account on the social media site while she was at a sleepover with a friend. She even helped her daughter finish establishing the Facebook page.

“Compared to some of the other things out there, it’s fairly innocent. The adult stuff is supposedly blocked,” she said. “I know the importance of Facebook.”

Gerstein is one of many parents across the nation who are helping their preteen children get on Facebook despite the company’s requirement that users must be at least 13 years old. These parents say Facebook, the world’s biggest social networking site, is useful and so popular among their children that it’s nearly impossible to stop them from joining.

“It’s very difficult to stop something like this when all of her friends are on it,” Gerstein said, noting that her daughter and her daughter’s friends all have computers. “There’s only so much you can do.”

Kira Kurka’s 9-year-old daughter joined Facebook during a sleepover with friends, and Kurka, who lives with her family in Chicago, helped her 11-year-old son become a member.

“I want him to embrace technology, and I think social media is very powerful,” Kurka said.

A recent study published in an academic journal last month found that 36 percent of all parents surveyed knew that their child joined Facebook before age 13 and that 68 percent of these parents helped their child create their account.

The study, titled “Why Parents Help Their Children Lie to Facebook About Age: Unintended Consequences of the ‘Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act,’” also found that 55 percent of parents of 12-year-olds report that their child has a Facebook account.

The overwhelming majority of those parents, about 82 percent, knew when their underage child signed up, and 76 percent helped in creating the account, according to the study, which was published in the Internet journal First Monday, firstmonday.org.

Nicole Jackson Colaco, a public policy manager at Facebook, said the study “makes important points, particularly in relation to parents who actively assist their children under 13 in joining Facebook even though they know it violates our policy.

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