Children's Advocates Ask Congress to Investigate Marketing of Mobile Phones to Kids
Privacy, consumer and childrens advocates sent letters today to
key Members of Congress, asking them to investigate the marketing and
sale of mobile phones to children, and their effects on childrens
privacy, education, safety and health.The letters were written and
organized by Commercial Alert, and sent to all members of the commerce
committees of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. The letter
follows.
Dear _________:
On July 6th, the Walt Disney Internet Group and Sprint announced
their intention to offer wireless telephone service to children 8-12
years of age.
This was just the latest in what is emerging as an industry trend.
Earlier this year, Firefly Mobile enlisted 100,000 children for their
mobile phone service. Enfora has announced plans to offer mobile phone
service targeting children as young as six years of age. This fall,
Wherify is planning to offer a Wherifone for children with built-in
Global Positioning System (GPS) location tracking. In August, Mattel is
expected to market Barbie-branded mobile phones. Hasbro is preparing
its own mobile phone for children, too, called Chat Now.
The targeting of young children as the next growth market for the
telecom industry is one of the worst ideas to appear in the American
economy in a long time. Does anyone really believe that kids today lack
sufficient distractions from their school work, that there are
insufficient disruptions in the home, and that child predators and
advertisers lack sufficient means of access to kids?
If the Disney Corporation and the others just wanted to give
children a way to contact parents in emergencies, that would be one
thing. The telecommunications companiesto parents at leastare playing
up this angle. Telecommunications lobbyists in Washington will harp on
it as well.
But despite the industrys rhetoric, Disney and the
telecommunications companies really want to use children as conduits to
their parents wallets. And marketers want another way to bypass parents
and speak directly to the nations children.
Already, marketers are leaping to send advertisements via mobile
phones. For example, Advertising Age reported on July 11th that many
corporations, including McDonalds, Coca-Cola and Timex, are moving from
small [mobile phone advertising] tests to all-out campaign[s]. Children
already are bombarded with too much advertising. They dont need more
advertising through their mobile phones, whether it is telemarketing,
text message marketing, adver-games, or any other type of commercial
messages.
Before the telecommunications industry declares open season upon
the children of this country, we urge you to investigate and make
absolutely certain that the industry has answers to the following
questions.
Child Predators. Will adults other than parents
be able to contact children through these phones, without the
permission of parents? What about sexual predators, convicted
criminals, etc.?
Disclosure of Childrens Whereabouts. For mobile
phones to work, telecommunications companies must know where their
customers? phones are. Will anyone other than the childs parents, law
enforcement officials and telecommunications companies be able to track
the physical location of the childs mobile phone?
Interruptions in School and Church. Will the
mobile phones cause disruptions and distractions in church and school,
or will they be designed not to function in such locations? The
potential for disruption here affects not just the individual child,
but every child in the group in question.
Runaway Billing. Will parents have absolute
control over billing and charges, so that no charges can be incurred
without the parents specific prior consent? This includes charges for
regular and special services, 888 numbers, and the rest.
Childrens Health. Children are vulnerable in ways
that adults are not, physically as well as emotionally. In January, the
British National Radiological Protection Board (NRPB) issued a report,
titled Mobile Phones and Health, which warned about the possibility
that mobile phones could cause benign tumors of the ear and brain. The
NRPB recommended that parents not give mobile phones to children under
eight years of age, that older children should limit their use of
mobile phones, and that the mobile phone industry should refrain from
promoting the use of mobile phones by children. Upon release of the
report, NRPB Chairman Sir William Stewart said, I dont think we can put
our hands on our hearts and say mobile phones are safe. He also said
that If there are risks, and we think there may be risks, then the
people who are going to be most affected are children, and the younger
the child, the greater the danger. How has the U.S. mobile phone
industry factored this warning into its service plans? Can it guarantee
that children will suffer no adverse health effects from the use of
mobile phones? If not, then why is it offering mobile phones to
children? Is the industry willing to take full responsibility for the
effects of its phones upon childrens health?
The move to put mobile phones into the hands of children as young
as six years old is not a decision to take lightly. It opens up a
plethora of problems, not just for the children with the phones but for
schools, churches, families and classmates as well.
Now is the time to pause, investigate and consider. Once the
phones are in classrooms, playrooms, and in childrens bedrooms, it will
be too late. Already we read with grim regularity of children molested
by predators who contacted them over the Internet. We read of children
who cannot focus their own attention even for short times. We hope we
will not now read about children abducted by adults who seduced them
through mobile phones, and of school rooms that cannot function because
of mobile phones that ring constantly, just because Congress did not
stand up and act.
Sincerely,
Joan Almon, Coordinator, Alliance for Childhood
Michael Brody, MD, Chair, Television and Media Committee, American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Brita Butler-Wall, PhD. Executive Director, Citizens Campaign for Commercial-Free Schools
Angela Campbell, Professor, Georgetown University Law Center
Raffi Cavoukian, D.Mus., D.Litt., founder of Child Honoring, singer, author, ecology advocate
Nathan Dungan, author, Prodigal Sons and Material Girls: How Not to Be Your Childs ATM
Leon Eisenberg, MD, Professor of Social Medicine Emeritus, Harvard Medical School
Henry A. Giroux, PhD, Waterbury Chair Professor in Secondary Education,
College of Education, Pennsylvania State University; author, Stealing Innocence: Corporate Cultures War on Children
Susan Grant, Vice President, Public Policy, National Consumers League
Nicholas Johnson, Former Commissioner, Federal Communications Commission
Carden Johnston, MD, FAAP, FRCP, Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics, University of Alabama School of Medicine
Tim Kasser, PhD, Associate Professor of Psychology. Knox College; author, The High Price of Materialism
Jean Kilbourne, author, Cant Buy My Love: How Advertising Changes the Way We Think and Feel
Diane Levin, PhD, Professor of Education, Wheelock College; author, Remote Control Childhood?: Combating the Hazards of Media Culture
Susan Linn, EdD, Instructor in Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School;
Co-founder, Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood; author, Consuming Kids: The Hostile Takeover of Childhood
Robert W. McChesney, PhD, Research Professor, Institute of
Communications Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign;
Founder and President, Free Press; author, The Problem of the Media
Bob McCannon, Founder and Executive Director, New Mexico Media Literacy
Project; Vice President & Co-founder, Action Coalition for Media
Education
Ken McEldowney, Executive Director, Consumer Action
Jim Metrock, President, Obligation, Inc.
Ed Mierzwinski, Consumer Program Director, U.S. Public Interest Research Group (USPIRG)
Mark Crispin Miller, PhD, Professor of Media Ecology, New York University
Diane M. Morrison, PhD, Professor & Associate Dean for Research, University of Washington School of Social Work
Peggy OMara, Editor and Publisher, Mothering Magazine
Alvin F. Poussaint, MD, Professor of Psychiatry and Faculty Associate Dean for Student Affairs, Harvard Medical School
Privacy Rights Clearinghouse
Hugh Rank, University Professor Emeritus, Governors State University; author, Persuasion Analysis and The Pitch
Gary Ruskin, Executive Director, Commercial Alert
Phyllis Schlafly, President, Eagle Forum
Juliet Schor, PhD, Professor of Sociology, Boston College; author, Born to Buy: The Commercialized Child and the New Consumer Culture
Remar Sutton, Founder, The Privacy Rights Now Coalition
Victor Strasburger, MD, Professor of Pediatrics, Chief, Division of
Adolescent Medicine, University of New Mexico School of Medicine;
co-author, Children, Adolescents, & the Media
<------------letter ends here----------------->
For more information about the marketing of mobile phones, see our web page on
mobile phones.
Commercial Alert is a nonprofit organization based in Portland,
Oregon. Our mission is to keep the commercial culture within its proper
sphere, and to prevent it from exploiting children and subverting the
higher values of family, community, environmental integrity and
democracy. For more information, see our website at:
http://www.commercialalert.org.