I think that could be challenging in terms of who we're defining as children. The users of social media, as you pointed out at the outset, are very wide-ranging. You have younger children and then you have teens who spend a great deal of time on social media. I'm not sure how some of those users, or their parents for that matter, would react to organizations arbitrarily removing information that has been posted by those individuals.
I have to say that I'm not familiar with the law or code you're referring to, so I'm just opining in a general sense. I think when you're talking about children under the age of 13, it's more challenging. I think that's the reason why social media networks have age limits and that type of thing. As I was saying earlier, our own code requires parental express consent, and even for children between the ages of 13 and 16 the consent of both parent and teen. Then it goes up in terms of gradients. I think it would be challenging to implement something along the lines of what you've described if it's across the board in terms of children and teenagers.
David, I don't know if you're familiar with that.