Child Online Commerce Safety
Child online commerce safety is the operating boundary for minors using digital tools to sell, fundraise, or interact with customers. In What do Girl Scouts get out of selling cookies online?, Wendy Liu says online safety is non-negotiable for [[GirlScoutsOfTheUSA|Girl Scouts of the USA]] cookie sales: girls watch safety videos, review guidelines with caregivers, and use local delivery only when a parent knows and approves the recipient.
The concept matters because Digital Commerce Literacy and Youth Entrepreneurship cannot be evaluated only by sales conversion. For children, the workflow must define who can be contacted, what information is shared, when adults are involved, and how online ordering connects back to safe offline delivery.
Key Claims
- Digital sales involving minors need explicit safety education before outreach begins.
- Caregiver review can preserve youth learning while reducing exposure to unknown customers or unsafe delivery situations.
- Local delivery is a safety-sensitive bridge between online order and offline interaction.
- Safety design should be built into the workflow, not added after growth or conversion goals.
- Child-facing commerce should keep the participant’s agency visible while preventing the channel from becoming an unmanaged public storefront.
Connections
- [[GirlScoutsOfTheUSA|Girl Scouts of the USA]] and Wendy Liu - source case.
- Digital Commerce Literacy - skill layer constrained by safety.
- Youth Entrepreneurship - broader learning frame.
- AI Governance And Compliance - adjacent governance concept, though this source is about child safety rather than AI.
- Trust As Business Asset - adjacent trust frame for customer-facing systems.