Tuesday, December 24, 2002

P3P Components, Deployment, Policy Creation - Part 1 of Chapter 5 from Web Privacy with P3P (6/6) - WebReference.com
P3P doesn't cover web site security practices, but most privacy policies include a statement about the site's commitment to security. In addition, web sites with content aimed at children often describe their policy with respect to children's data. When drafting a privacy policy, it's also useful to refer back to the fair information practice principles, introduced in Chapter 2.

Some online resources that may be helpful as you draft your privacy policy include:

The Direct Marketing Association's guide to creating privacy policies (http://www.the-dma.org/library/privacy/creating.shtml)

The Online Privacy Alliance Guidelines for Online Privacy Policies (http://www.privacyalliance.org/resources/ppguidelines.shtml)

The Better Business Bureau's sample privacy notice (http://www.bbbonline.com/privacy/sample_privacy.asp)

The TRUSTe Privacy Resource Guide (http://www.truste.org/bus/pub_resourceguide.html)

The Privacy Leadership Initiative's Privacy Manager's Resource Center (http://understandingprivacy.org/content/pmrc/)

The Privacy Diagnostic Tool (PDT) Workbook from the Information and Privacy Commission/Ontario(http://www.ipc.on.ca/english/resources/resources.htm)

http://www.webreference.com/authoring/p3p/chap5/1/6.html

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