Fightingkidscom Legal
Draft post — FightingKids.com legal
FightingKids.com is a website that discusses youth combat sports, training, events, and related topics. This post addresses the legal considerations and responsibilities for the site, its contributors, parents, coaches, and athletes. It’s written to inform readers, reduce risk, and promote safe, lawful participation.
State & National Bans
- Medical Contraindications: Many pediatric associations (AAP, British Medical Association) call for bans on youth striking (boxing/kickboxing) due to CTE risks.
- The Legal Gray Area: In the US, no federal law bans youth MMA, but states like New York have attempted to ban it for under-12s. In Europe, countries like Norway and Sweden have effectively banned competitive youth striking.
- Grappling vs. Striking: Wrestling and BJJ face fewer legal hurdles than boxing because the risk of TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury) is lower. FightingKidsCom must clearly label which disciplines are offered.
Right to Erasure: Parents generally have the right to request the removal of content featuring their children from third-party platforms. 3. Platform Liability and Content Moderation fightingkidscom legal
If you’d like, I can convert this into: a Terms of Use draft, a Privacy Policy outline, a liability waiver template, or a short legal page formatted for your website—tell me which one. Draft post — FightingKids
The Department of Justice (DOJ) built a case around child exploitation and the distribution of child abuse material [1, 3]. Right to Erasure: Parents generally have the right
Domain Seizure: Federal authorities officially seized the FightingKids.com domain name, replacing the site with a law enforcement banner [1, 3].