Regina Leader-Post

Mobile apps targeting children for data mining

- ANNE FLAHERTY

“THERE ARE STILL COMPANIES OUT THERE ... MORE CONCERNED ABOUT GENERATING REVENUE THAN PROTECTING THE PRIVACY OF KIDS.”

JEFF CHESTER

WASHINGTON — More than a year after federal regulators issued new privacy rules for kids’ mobile apps, online stores are flooded with cute and silly software programs that quietly collect vast amounts of data on the youngest consumers, including a person’s location and even recordings of their voice, according to privacy researcher­s and consumer advocates.

Whether they pass that informatio­n on to retailers or seek parental consent first — as required by law — isn’t entirely clear. But if you don’t want your family tracked online by fast-food chains, toy stores or other retailers, your choices are limited: Stick the phone in “airplane mode” to shut off the wireless connection and risk losing functional­ity or wade through a developer’s privacy policy to make sure you’re OK with how it works.

“Kids are such a lucrative market, especially for apps,” said Jeff Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy. “Unfortunat­ely, there are still companies out there that are more concerned about generating revenue than protecting the privacy of kids.”

Americans have traded vast amounts of personal data in exchange for the ease and functional­ity of fun mobile applicatio­ns on their phones. But how is industry using that informatio­n? Chester and other consumer advocates allege fast-food chains are increasing­ly focusing advertisin­g dollars on digital media targeting blacks and Hispanics. They also warn that data from phones can be combined with off-line informatio­n like home prices, race or income in ways that could violate fair lending laws. And a new site, PrivacyGra­de.org, found that many popular kids’ apps like Talking Tom and Fruit Ninja collect informatio­n in ways parents wouldn’t necessaril­y expect.

Concerned in particular about industries’ focus on kids online, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission in July 2013 expanded the Child Online Privacy Protection Act, or COPPA, to require app developers to get parental consent before collecting personal data on anyone younger than 13. That includes informatio­n like the unique identifyin­g device on a phone, a person’s phone number or a device’s location.

“It’s upped the ante for companies deciding whether they are going to market to kids,” said Michelle De Mooy of the Center for Democracy and Technology. “And that’s a good thing.”

But with the number of smartphone­s expected to reach 3.5 billion in the next five years, according to Forrester Research, the mobile app and advertisin­g industry has exploded. Regulators don’t have an easy, automated way of analyzing the hundreds of mobile apps popping up each day, forcing them to focus efforts on the most egregious privacy offenders.

Since the updated regulation went into effect, the FTC has brought about only two enforcemen­t actions against mobile apps. Last September, the commission announced that Yelp Inc. agreed to pay $450,000 and TinyCo. $300,000 to settle separate charges that their companies knowingly collected informatio­n on young children through their mobile apps.

“Our ultimate goal is compliance,” said Kandi Parsons, an attorney in the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. But “that doesn’t undermine our desire to bring cases against companies that violate COPPA ... where we find violations, we will bring cases against mobile apps.”

According to PrivacyGra­de.org, which is run by computer scientists at Carnegie Mellon University, scores of apps that collect informatio­n are still aimed at kids.

For example, Fruit Ninja collects a phone’s location, which could be passed on to advertiser­s. And Talking Tom, where kids can talk to and “tickle” an alley cat using the touch screen, collects a child’s audio recordings along with other informatio­n that can uniquely identify a phone.

Whether these apps would violate COPPA would depend on a number of factors, including whether and how they seek parental consent. But because these apps collect informatio­n in surprising ways, PrivacyGra­de.org gave them both D grades.

Outfit 7, the developer behind Talking Tom, said in a statement that personal informatio­n and recordings are never shared with advertiser­s. The developer says its app also complies with COPPA by providing “appropriat­e gate protection­s ... to distinguis­h adults from minors and restrict sharing on social media,” according to the statement.

Halfbrick Studios, which developed Fruit Ninja, said in a statement that it planned to release updates to Fruit Ninja and other apps to increase privacy protection­s.

“Creating a safe and secure app is no longer enough to answer consumers’ needs for assurance,” said company CEO Shainiel Deo. “Developers must also ensure that permission­s are clearly explained and easy to access at every applicable point in a game.”

Jason Hong, who runs PrivacyGra­de.org, says it’s hard to know exactly what developers are doing with the informatio­n they collect. And it’s possible, he said, that some developers are building apps using popular, pre-fabricated libraries of code that automatica­lly collect informatio­n that the developer never uses or passes on to advertiser­s.

Hong said he believes the government should devote more resources to evaluating popular apps and working with developers to promote basic privacy standards.

“It’s part of a long conversati­on about what is privacy and what we should be doing every day,” he said.

 ?? JULIE JACOBSON/The Associated Press files ?? More than a year after regulators issued new rules for kids’ mobile apps, online stores remain flooded with software programs quietly collecting vast amounts of data on young consumers.
JULIE JACOBSON/The Associated Press files More than a year after regulators issued new rules for kids’ mobile apps, online stores remain flooded with software programs quietly collecting vast amounts of data on young consumers.

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