Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request; Extension, 35689-35690 [E8-14148]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 122 / Tuesday, June 24, 2008 / Notices
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED:
Discussion Agenda:
1. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
Implementing the Basel II Standardized
Approach in the United States.
Note: 1. The staff memo to the Board
will be made available to the public in
paper and the background material will
be made available on a computer disc in
Word format. If you require a paper
copy of the document, please call
Penelope Beattie on 202–452–3982.
2. This meeting will be recorded for
the benefit of those unable to attend.
Computer discs (CDs) will then be
available for listening in the Board’s
Freedom of Information Office, and
copies can be ordered for $4 per disc by
calling 202–452–3684 or by writing to:
Freedom of Information Office, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, Washington, DC 20551.
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:
Michelle Smith, Director, or Dave
Skidmore, Assistant to the Board, Office
of Board Members at 202–452–2955.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: You may
call 202–452–3206 for a recorded
announcement of this meeting; or you
may contact the Board’s Web site at
https://www.federalreserve.gov for an
electronic announcement. (The Web site
also includes procedural and other
information about the open meeting.)
Dated: June 19, 2008.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 08–1382 Filed 6–20–08; 9:24 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request; Extension
Federal Trade Commission
(‘‘Commission’’ or ‘‘FTC’’).
ACTION: Notice.
ebenthall on PRODPC60 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The FTC is seeking public
comments on its proposal to extend
through July 31, 2011, the current
Paperwork Reduction Act (‘‘PRA’’)
clearance for information collection
requirements contained in the
Children’s Online Privacy Protection
Act Rule (‘‘COPPA Rule’’), which will
expire on July 31, 2008. The information
collection requirements described below
will be submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) for
review, as required by the PRA.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before July 24, 2008.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
12:39 Jun 23, 2008
Interested parties are
invited to submit written comments.
Comments should refer to ‘‘FTC COPPA
PRA Comment: FTC File No. P084511’’
to facilitate the organization of
comments. A comment filed in paper
form should include this reference both
in the text and on the envelope and
should be mailed or delivered to the
following address: Federal Trade
Commission, Room H-135 (Annex J),
600 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20580. Because paper
mail in the Washington area and at the
Commission is subject to delay, please
consider submitting your comments in
electronic form, as prescribed below. If,
however, the comment contains any
material for which confidential
treatment is requested, it must be filed
in paper form, and the first page of the
document must be clearly labeled
‘‘Confidential.’’1
Comments filed in electronic form
should be submitted by following the
instructions on the web-based form at
(https://secure.commentworks.com/ftcCOPPARule). To ensure that the
Commission considers an electronic
comment, you must file it on the webbased form at the (https://
secure.commentworks.com/ftcCOPPARule) weblink. If this notice
appears at (www.regulations.gov), you
may also file an electronic comment
through that website. The Commission
will consider all comments that
www.regulations.gov forwards to it.
All comments should additionally be
submitted to: Office of Management and
Budget, Attention: Desk Officer for the
Federal Trade Commission. Comments
should be submitted via facsimile to
(202) 395-6974 because U.S. Postal Mail
is subject to lengthy delays due to
heightened security precautions.
The FTC Act and other laws the
Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. All timely and responsive
public comments will be considered by
the Commission and will be available to
the public on the FTC website, to the
extent practicable, at www.ftc.gov. As a
matter of discretion, the FTC makes
every effort to remove home contact
information for individuals from the
public comments it receives before
placing those comments on the FTC
ADDRESSES:
Jkt 214001
1 Commission Rule 4.2(d), 16 CFR 4.2(d). The
comment must be accompanied by an explicit
request for confidential treatment, including the
factual and legal basis for the request, and must
identify the specific portions of the comment to be
withheld from the public record. The request will
be granted or denied by the Commission’s General
Counsel, consistent with applicable law and the
public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR
4.9(c).
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
35689
website. More information, including
routine uses permitted by the Privacy
Act, may be found in the FTC’s privacy
policy at (https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/
privacy.htm).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information
regarding this proceeding should be
addressed to Mamie Kresses, (202) 3262070, Federal Trade Commission,
Bureau of Consumer Protection,
Division of Advertising Practices, 600
Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Mail Drop NJ3212, Washington, D.C. 20580.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On March
26, 2008, the FTC sought comment on
the information collection requirements
associated with the COPPA Rule, 16
CFR Part 312 (OMB Control Number
3084-0117). 73 FR 16015. No comments
were received. Pursuant to the OMB
regulations, 5 CFR Part 1320, that
implement the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 35013521, the FTC is providing this second
opportunity for public comment while
seeking OMB approval to extend the
existing paperwork clearance for the
Rule. All comments should be filed as
prescribed in the ADDRESSES section
above, and must be received on or
before July 24, 2008.
Estimated annual hours burden:
1,900 hours
(a) Disclosure Requirements: 1,800
hours
The COPPA Rule contains certain
statutorily-required notice requirements,
which constitute a ‘‘collection of
information’’ under the PRA:
(1) the Rule requires each website and
online service directed to children,2 and
any website or online service with
actual knowledge that it is collecting
personal information from children, to
provide notice of how it collects, uses,
and discloses such information and,
with exceptions, to obtain the prior
consent of the child’s parent in order to
engage in such collection, use, and
disclosure;
(2) the Rule requires the operator to
provide the parent with notice of the
specific types of personal information
being collected from the child, to give
the parent the opportunity to forbid the
operator at any time from collecting,
using, or maintaining such information,
and to provide reasonable means for the
parent to review the information;
(3) the Rule requires operators to
obtain ‘‘verifiable parental consent’’
prior to collecting, using, or disclosing
children’s personal information;
(4) the Rule requires website and
online service operators to establish
2 ‘‘Child’’ is defined under the statute and
implementing Rule as an individual under thirteen
years of age. 15 U.S.C. 6501(2); 16 CFR 312.2.
E:\FR\FM\24JNN1.SGM
24JNN1
35690
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 122 / Tuesday, June 24, 2008 / Notices
ebenthall on PRODPC60 with NOTICES
procedures that protect the
confidentiality, security, and integrity of
personal information collected from
children; and
(5) the Rule requires operators to
provide reasonable means for the parent
to review the information.
The FTC staff retains its estimate that
roughly 30 new web entrants each year
will fall within the Rule’s coverage and
that, on average, new entrants will
spend approximately 60 hours crafting a
privacy policy, designing mechanisms
to provide the required online privacy
notice and, where applicable, the direct
notice to parents.3 Accordingly, staff
estimates that complying with the
Rule’s disclosure requirements will
require approximately 1,800 hours (30
new web entrants x 60 hours per
entrant). Consistent with prior
estimates, FTC staff estimates that the
time spent on compliance would be
apportioned five to one between legal
(lawyers or similar professionals) and
technical (computer programmers)
personnel. Staff therefore estimates that
lawyers or similar professionals who
craft privacy policies will account for
1,500 of the 1,800 hours required.
Computer programmers responsible for
posting privacy policies and
implementing direct notices and
parental consent mechanisms will
account for the remaining 300 hours.
Website operators that have
previously created or adjusted their sites
to comply with the Rule will incur no
further burden associated with the Rule,
unless they opt to change their policies
and information collection in ways that
will further invoke the Rule’s
provisions. Moreover, staff believes that
existing COPPA-compliant operators
who introduce additional sites beyond
those they already have created will
incur minimal, if any, incremental PRA
burden. This is because such operators
already have been through the start-up
phase and can carry over the results of
that to the new sites they create.
(b) Reporting Requirements for Safe
Harbor Applicants: 100 hours
Operators can comply with the Rule
by meeting the terms of industry selfregulatory guidelines that the
Commission approves after notice and
3 Although staff cannot determine with any
degree of certainty the number of new entrants
potentially subject to the Rule, it believes its
estimate is reasonable. The Commission received no
comments challenging staff’s prior PRA analyses in
its prior requests for renewed clearance for the Rule
or when it most recently sought comment on the
Rule itself (70 FR 21107, 21109, April 22, 2005).
Accordingly, staff retains those estimates for the
instant PRA analysis. For the same reasons, staff
retains its prior estimate of 60 hours per new
entrant.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
12:39 Jun 23, 2008
Jkt 214001
comment.4 While the submission of
industry self-regulatory guidelines to
the agency is voluntary, the Rule
includes specific reporting requirements
that all safe harbor applicants must
provide to receive Commission
approval. Staff retains its estimate that
it would require, on average, 265 hours
per new safe harbor program applicant
to prepare and submit its safe harbor
proposal in accordance with Section
312.10(c) of the Rule. Industry sources
have confirmed that this estimate is
reasonable and advised that all of this
time would be attributable to the efforts
of lawyers. Given that several safe
harbor programs are already available to
website operators, FTC staff believes
that it is unlikely that more than one
additional safe harbor applicant will
submit a request within the next three
years of PRA clearance sought. Thus,
annualized burden attributable to this
requirement would be approximately 85
hours per year (265 hours ÷ 3 years) or,
roughly, 100 hours. Staff believes that
most of the records submitted with a
safe harbor request would be those that
these entities have kept in the ordinary
course of business, and that any
incremental effort associated with
maintaining the results of independent
assessments or other records under
Section 312.10(d)(3) also would be in
the normal course of business. In
accordance with the regulations
implementing the PRA, the burden
estimate excludes effort expended for
these activities. 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2).
Accordingly, FTC staff estimates that
total burden per year for disclosure
requirements affecting new web entrants
and reporting requirements for safe
harbor applications would be
approximately 2,000 hours, rounded to
the nearest thousand.
Labor costs: Labor costs are derived
by applying appropriate hourly cost
figures to the burden hours described
above. Staff conservatively assumes
hourly rates of $150 and $35,
respectively, for lawyers or similar
professionals and computer
programmers.5 Based on these inputs,
4 See Section 312.10(c). Approved self-regulatory
guidelines can be found on the FTC’s website at
(https://www.ftc.gov/privacy/privacyinitiatives/
childrens_shp.html.)
5 FTC staff estimates average legal costs at $150
per hour, which is roughly midway between Bureau
of Labor Statistics (BLS) mean hourly wages shown
for attorneys (approximately $55) in the most recent
whole-year data available online (2006) and what
staff believes may more generally reflect hourly
attorney costs ($250) associated with Commission
information collection activities. The $35 estimate
for computer programmers is also conservatively
based on the most recent whole-year data available
online from the BLS (2006 National Compensation
Survey and 2006 Occupational Employment and
Wage Statistics).
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
staff further estimates that associated
annual labor costs for new entrants
would be $235,000 [(1,500 hours x $150
per hour for legal) + (300 hours x $35
per hour for computer programmers)]
and $15,000 for safe harbor applicants
(100 hours per year x $150 per hour), for
a total labor cost of $250,000.
Non-labor costs: Because websites
will already be equipped with the
computer equipment and software
necessary to comply with the Rule’s
notice requirements, the sole costs
incurred by the websites are the
aforementioned estimated labor costs.
Similarly, industry members should
already have in place the means to
retain and store the records that must be
kept under the Rule’s safe harbor
recordkeeping provisions, because they
are likely to have been keeping these
records independent of the Rule.
David C. Shonka,
Acting General Counsel.
[FR Doc. E8–14148 Filed 6–23–08: 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–S
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
Privacy Act of 1974; Notice of Updated
Systems of Records
General Services
Administration.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: GSA reviewed its Privacy Act
systems to ensure that they are relevant,
necessary, accurate, up-to-date, covered
by the appropriate legal or regulatory
authority, and compliant with OMB M–
07–16. This notice is an updated
Privacy Act system of records notice.
DATES: Effective July 24, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Call
or e-mail the GSA Privacy Act Officer:
telephone 202–208–1317; e-mail
gsa.privacyact@gsa.gov.
GSA Privacy Act Officer
(CIB), General Services Administration,
1800 F Street, NW., Washington, DC
20405.
ADDRESSES:
GSA
undertook and completed an agencywide review of its Privacy Act systems
of records. As a result of the review,
GSA is publishing an updated Privacy
Act system of records notice. The
revised system notice clarifies the
authorities and practices regarding the
collection and maintenance of
information, but does not change
individuals’ rights to access or amend
their records in the system of records.
The updated system notice also
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
E:\FR\FM\24JNN1.SGM
24JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 122 (Tuesday, June 24, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 35689-35690]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-14148]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request; Extension
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission (``Commission'' or ``FTC'').
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The FTC is seeking public comments on its proposal to extend
through July 31, 2011, the current Paperwork Reduction Act (``PRA'')
clearance for information collection requirements contained in the
Children's Online Privacy Protection Act Rule (``COPPA Rule''), which
will expire on July 31, 2008. The information collection requirements
described below will be submitted to the Office of Management and
Budget (``OMB'') for review, as required by the PRA.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before July 24, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments.
Comments should refer to ``FTC COPPA PRA Comment: FTC File No.
P084511'' to facilitate the organization of comments. A comment filed
in paper form should include this reference both in the text and on the
envelope and should be mailed or delivered to the following address:
Federal Trade Commission, Room H-135 (Annex J), 600 Pennsylvania Ave.,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580. Because paper mail in the Washington area
and at the Commission is subject to delay, please consider submitting
your comments in electronic form, as prescribed below. If, however, the
comment contains any material for which confidential treatment is
requested, it must be filed in paper form, and the first page of the
document must be clearly labeled ``Confidential.''\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Commission Rule 4.2(d), 16 CFR 4.2(d). The comment must be
accompanied by an explicit request for confidential treatment,
including the factual and legal basis for the request, and must
identify the specific portions of the comment to be withheld from
the public record. The request will be granted or denied by the
Commission's General Counsel, consistent with applicable law and the
public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comments filed in electronic form should be submitted by following
the instructions on the web-based form at (https://
secure.commentworks.com/ftc-COPPARule). To ensure that the Commission
considers an electronic comment, you must file it on the web-based form
at the (https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-COPPARule) weblink. If this
notice appears at (www.regulations.gov), you may also file an
electronic comment through that website. The Commission will consider
all comments that www.regulations.gov forwards to it.
All comments should additionally be submitted to: Office of
Management and Budget, Attention: Desk Officer for the Federal Trade
Commission. Comments should be submitted via facsimile to (202) 395-
6974 because U.S. Postal Mail is subject to lengthy delays due to
heightened security precautions.
The FTC Act and other laws the Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. All timely and responsive public comments will be
considered by the Commission and will be available to the public on the
FTC website, to the extent practicable, at www.ftc.gov. As a matter of
discretion, the FTC makes every effort to remove home contact
information for individuals from the public comments it receives before
placing those comments on the FTC website. More information, including
routine uses permitted by the Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC's
privacy policy at (https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.htm).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information
regarding this proceeding should be addressed to Mamie Kresses, (202)
326-2070, Federal Trade Commission, Bureau of Consumer Protection,
Division of Advertising Practices, 600 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Mail
Drop NJ-3212, Washington, D.C. 20580.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On March 26, 2008, the FTC sought comment on
the information collection requirements associated with the COPPA Rule,
16 CFR Part 312 (OMB Control Number 3084-0117). 73 FR 16015. No
comments were received. Pursuant to the OMB regulations, 5 CFR Part
1320, that implement the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521, the FTC is providing
this second opportunity for public comment while seeking OMB approval
to extend the existing paperwork clearance for the Rule. All comments
should be filed as prescribed in the ADDRESSES section above, and must
be received on or before July 24, 2008.
Estimated annual hours burden: 1,900 hours
(a) Disclosure Requirements: 1,800 hours
The COPPA Rule contains certain statutorily-required notice
requirements, which constitute a ``collection of information'' under
the PRA:
(1) the Rule requires each website and online service directed to
children,\2\ and any website or online service with actual knowledge
that it is collecting personal information from children, to provide
notice of how it collects, uses, and discloses such information and,
with exceptions, to obtain the prior consent of the child's parent in
order to engage in such collection, use, and disclosure;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ ``Child'' is defined under the statute and implementing Rule
as an individual under thirteen years of age. 15 U.S.C. 6501(2); 16
CFR 312.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) the Rule requires the operator to provide the parent with
notice of the specific types of personal information being collected
from the child, to give the parent the opportunity to forbid the
operator at any time from collecting, using, or maintaining such
information, and to provide reasonable means for the parent to review
the information;
(3) the Rule requires operators to obtain ``verifiable parental
consent'' prior to collecting, using, or disclosing children's personal
information;
(4) the Rule requires website and online service operators to
establish
[[Page 35690]]
procedures that protect the confidentiality, security, and integrity of
personal information collected from children; and
(5) the Rule requires operators to provide reasonable means for the
parent to review the information.
The FTC staff retains its estimate that roughly 30 new web entrants
each year will fall within the Rule's coverage and that, on average,
new entrants will spend approximately 60 hours crafting a privacy
policy, designing mechanisms to provide the required online privacy
notice and, where applicable, the direct notice to parents.\3\
Accordingly, staff estimates that complying with the Rule's disclosure
requirements will require approximately 1,800 hours (30 new web
entrants x 60 hours per entrant). Consistent with prior estimates, FTC
staff estimates that the time spent on compliance would be apportioned
five to one between legal (lawyers or similar professionals) and
technical (computer programmers) personnel. Staff therefore estimates
that lawyers or similar professionals who craft privacy policies will
account for 1,500 of the 1,800 hours required. Computer programmers
responsible for posting privacy policies and implementing direct
notices and parental consent mechanisms will account for the remaining
300 hours.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Although staff cannot determine with any degree of certainty
the number of new entrants potentially subject to the Rule, it
believes its estimate is reasonable. The Commission received no
comments challenging staff's prior PRA analyses in its prior
requests for renewed clearance for the Rule or when it most recently
sought comment on the Rule itself (70 FR 21107, 21109, April 22,
2005). Accordingly, staff retains those estimates for the instant
PRA analysis. For the same reasons, staff retains its prior estimate
of 60 hours per new entrant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Website operators that have previously created or adjusted their
sites to comply with the Rule will incur no further burden associated
with the Rule, unless they opt to change their policies and information
collection in ways that will further invoke the Rule's provisions.
Moreover, staff believes that existing COPPA-compliant operators who
introduce additional sites beyond those they already have created will
incur minimal, if any, incremental PRA burden. This is because such
operators already have been through the start-up phase and can carry
over the results of that to the new sites they create.
(b) Reporting Requirements for Safe Harbor Applicants: 100 hours
Operators can comply with the Rule by meeting the terms of industry
self-regulatory guidelines that the Commission approves after notice
and comment.\4\ While the submission of industry self-regulatory
guidelines to the agency is voluntary, the Rule includes specific
reporting requirements that all safe harbor applicants must provide to
receive Commission approval. Staff retains its estimate that it would
require, on average, 265 hours per new safe harbor program applicant to
prepare and submit its safe harbor proposal in accordance with Section
312.10(c) of the Rule. Industry sources have confirmed that this
estimate is reasonable and advised that all of this time would be
attributable to the efforts of lawyers. Given that several safe harbor
programs are already available to website operators, FTC staff believes
that it is unlikely that more than one additional safe harbor applicant
will submit a request within the next three years of PRA clearance
sought. Thus, annualized burden attributable to this requirement would
be approximately 85 hours per year (265 hours / 3 years) or, roughly,
100 hours. Staff believes that most of the records submitted with a
safe harbor request would be those that these entities have kept in the
ordinary course of business, and that any incremental effort associated
with maintaining the results of independent assessments or other
records under Section 312.10(d)(3) also would be in the normal course
of business. In accordance with the regulations implementing the PRA,
the burden estimate excludes effort expended for these activities. 5
CFR 1320.3(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See Section 312.10(c). Approved self-regulatory guidelines
can be found on the FTC's website at (https://www.ftc.gov/privacy/
privacyinitiatives/childrens_shp.html.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, FTC staff estimates that total burden per year for
disclosure requirements affecting new web entrants and reporting
requirements for safe harbor applications would be approximately 2,000
hours, rounded to the nearest thousand.
Labor costs: Labor costs are derived by applying appropriate hourly
cost figures to the burden hours described above. Staff conservatively
assumes hourly rates of $150 and $35, respectively, for lawyers or
similar professionals and computer programmers.\5\ Based on these
inputs, staff further estimates that associated annual labor costs for
new entrants would be $235,000 [(1,500 hours x $150 per hour for legal)
+ (300 hours x $35 per hour for computer programmers)] and $15,000 for
safe harbor applicants (100 hours per year x $150 per hour), for a
total labor cost of $250,000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ FTC staff estimates average legal costs at $150 per hour,
which is roughly midway between Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
mean hourly wages shown for attorneys (approximately $55) in the
most recent whole-year data available online (2006) and what staff
believes may more generally reflect hourly attorney costs ($250)
associated with Commission information collection activities. The
$35 estimate for computer programmers is also conservatively based
on the most recent whole-year data available online from the BLS
(2006 National Compensation Survey and 2006 Occupational Employment
and Wage Statistics).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-labor costs: Because websites will already be equipped with the
computer equipment and software necessary to comply with the Rule's
notice requirements, the sole costs incurred by the websites are the
aforementioned estimated labor costs. Similarly, industry members
should already have in place the means to retain and store the records
that must be kept under the Rule's safe harbor recordkeeping
provisions, because they are likely to have been keeping these records
independent of the Rule.
David C. Shonka,
Acting General Counsel.
[FR Doc. E8-14148 Filed 6-23-08: 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750-01-S