The proposed Social Networking Privacy Act will give parents the legal right to take down their child’s page altogether, and companies can get fined up to $10,000 if they fail to comply within 48 hours – guess whoever is in the position of handling such enquiries will better be at their most efficient at work, as paying off such a hefty fine from your own pocket hurts.
This might also translate to users requiring to set privacy settings the moment they join, instead of doing so at a later date. To some, it might not make sense since users would then be required to make detailed decisions about a service before they’d even used it for the first time. Facebook, Google, Twitter and Match.com have already submitted a formal letter of opposition to the plans, so it remains to be seen how everything else will pan out in the end.