Norway’s data protection authority, Datatilsynet, issued guidance around the sharing and processing of children’s personal data and consent, noting the rules “are slightly different than for adults.” The authority discusses the potential for informed and voluntary consent by a minor under age 18 — such as in cases related to social media, health care and education — and areas where parental consent is necessary. “The greater the privacy consequences the processing of information may have, the higher the threshold should be for the child to consent himself, without parents,” the DPA wrote.
28 April 2022
Norwegian DPA issues guidance on minors’ consent
Related stories
10 tips to prepare for the EU Cyber Resilience Act
A view from Brussels: State of the (European) Union
US senator aims to advance US AI leadership with sandbox, federal regulatory exemptions
Notes from the Asia-Pacific region: India's AI ecosystem, digital competition and more
Ninth Circuit takes cautious approach to privacy and data security standing