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Hey parents: You won’t believe the contracts your kids have been roped into.

Like a fine print virus spreading quickly around the globe, under-aged teenagers are suddenly being shrink-wrapped into contracts of dubious enforceability all around the web. The situation highlights a conundrum for companies targeting the 13-17 crowd: How to set rules with minors who generally can’t actually consent to contract terms, and almost certainly don’t get their parents’ permission to do so.

Snapchat changed its terms of service recently, attracting a lot of attention. While most of it was focused on the company giving itself virtual ownership over content posted on the service, something else in the terms caught my eye.

“By using the Services, you state that: You can form a binding contract with Snapchat — meaning that if you’re between 13 and 17, your parent or legal guardian has reviewed and agreed to these Terms.”

Well, really it caught privacy lawyer Joel Winston’s eye. He called it to my attention.

Let me take a guess and estimate that of Snapchat’s roughly 100 million users, most of them minors, perhaps 43 or so have shown those terms to their agreeable parents.  In other words, if your kid uses Snapchat, he or she has almost certainly lied about you to the company, all in the name of forming a contract — of sorts.

Winston had a different problem with the language.

“A minor cannot declare herself competent to sign a binding contract that would otherwise require consent from an adult,” he said.  There are some exceptions to that, which we’ll get to. But the headline point remains. Generally speaking, contracts with minors aren’t really contracts.

So what’s this language doing in Snapchat’s terms of service?  It’s not just Snapchat. That very language appears in lots of kid-focused services, like Skout (a flirting tool), THQ (a game site), and even  PETAkids.com (an animal rights site.)  Similar terms appears across the web.

Snapchat certainly is a leader in the 13-17 space, however. I asked the firm to comment about its terms. It declined.

When I ran Snapchat’s terms by Ira Reinhgold, executive director at the National Association of Consumer Advocates, he was aghast.

“Why did they do this, to frighten people into not suing them?” he said, rhetorically.  “I cannot imagine any court would find this binding.  No lawyer worth his salt would think this would think this is going to stick…a youngster cannot consent.”

Maybe…and maybe not. Last year, a California court actually did rule that, in some circumstances, terms of service are enforceable against minors. That case involved Facebook’s use of member photos in “Sponsored Stories.” Facebook’s terms at the time provided for what amounted to a publicity rights release, and the plaintiffs in the case argued that release was unenforceable. A judge sided with Facebook.

To put a fine point on it, minors can agree to certain kind of contract terms (that allow them to work, for example), but such contracts have a unique status and can be voided at any time by the minor. Because the plaintiffs in the case continued to use Facebook, they had not voided their contract, and therefore Facebook was protected by the agreement.

Photo via Snapchat/Bob Sullivan
Photo via Snapchat/Bob Sullivan

“This is a big win for all online services, not only Facebook,” wrote Eric Goldman in a blog post about the case.

The situation highlights the unique problem of dealing with children over 13 but under 18 Goldman, said to me.

“Snapchat may have legally enforceable contracts with minors. Contracts with minors are usually ‘voidable,’ meaning that the minor can tear up the contract whenever he/she wants. However, until the minor disaffirms, the contract is valid. And in the case of social networking services, the courts have indicated that minors can disaffirm the contract only by terminating their accounts, meaning that the contract remains legally binding for the entire period of time the minor has the account,” he said. “As a contracts scholar, I can understand the formalist logic behind this conclusion, but it conflicts with the conceptual principle that minors aren’t well-positioned to protect their own interests in contract negotiations.”

On the other hand, the solution might be worse than the problem itself.

“The counter-story is that most online services don’t have any reliable way to determine the age of their users, and an adhesion contract that works unpredictably on only some classes of users isn’t really useful. And I don’t think anyone would favor web-wide ‘age-gating’ as the solution to that problem,” he said.

Of course, the problem isn’t just the existence of a contract, but what the terms of that contract might be, and whether a minor is capable of understanding and consenting to its terms.  Winston is concerned with what comes after the “parental promise” section in Snapchat’s contract: a binding arbitration agreement and class action waiver. (That’s the kind of waiver the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is about to ban.)

“All claims and disputes arising out of, relating to, or in connection with the Terms or the use the Services that cannot be resolved informally or in small claims court will be resolved by binding arbitration,” the terms say. “ALL CLAIMS AND DISPUTES WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THIS ARBITRATION AGREEMENT MUST BE ARBITRATED OR LITIGATED ON AN INDIVIDUAL BASIS AND NOT ON A CLASS BASIS.” (Snapchat’s CAPS, not mine)

As Winston sees it, not only is Snapchat requiring a minors to agree to a contract, it’s requiring them to surrender their rights to have their day in court.

“I would certainly be very interested to read any legal ruling that enables a 13 year old to agree that she will ‘waive any constitutional and statutory rights to go to court and have a trial in front of a judge or jury,’ “ he said, echoing the terms.  “I am not currently aware of any case law that enforces a mandatory binding arbitration clause against an adult parent based on the purported ‘consent’ of her minor child.”

Were those terms to survive a court challenge, and if Snapchat tried something like Sponsored Stories, Snapchat’s minor users would have waived their rights to join a class action against the firm.

In the end, you might be wondering why parents – or kids – might want to argue with Snapchat anyway? Winston leaps at a chance to answer that.

“The Snapchat TOS contract is relevant because the company is actively collecting personal data from millions of children. That includes device phonebook, camera and photos, user location information (from) GPS, wireless networks, cell towers, Wi-Fi access points, and other sensors, such as gyroscopes, accelerometers, and compasses,” he said. “It’s also relevant because Snapchat is sharing user data from millions of children with third-parties and business partners for the purpose of advertising and monetization.”

I’m not one to give parents more homework, and I hesitate to advise you to try to read all the terms of service agreements to every app on your child’s phone. But it might be a good learning moment to ask your kids what they’ve told tech companies about you — and find out what you’ve agreed to.

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