The Star Malaysia - Star2

Kids at risk

A study shows that children are being swamped by ads on Youtube, some of which are not age appropriat­e.

- By MARK BERGEN

YOUNG children are watching a wide range of videos on Youtube that are chock full of advertisem­ents, sometimes have violent footage and offer little educationa­l value, according to a report from academics and Common Sense Media, an advocacy group.

Youtube is a juggernaut in kids’ media, and viewership has shot up during the pandemic. But the company has struggled to police the videos that kids watch, even after investing deeply in ways to better moderate children’s content once it became a political problem.

The new report argues that Youtube hasn’t done enough. Researcher­s collected more than 1,600 videos from 191 parents that their children, all younger than eight, watched on Youtube’s main site this year. Among the findings: Ads were present on 95% of the videos in the study.

A fifth of the ads were categorise­d as age inappropri­ate – a bourbon commercial on a nail painting video for girls; another ad, during a video game clip, that asked, “should the US deport illegal immigrants?”.

The report may spur a renewed focus from lawmakers on Alphabet’s Google, Youtube’s owner, a year after the company paid a record fine for breaking children’s privacy laws.

“In today’s online ecosystem, families deserve a set of enforceabl­e rules that protect children when they’re on the Internet,” US Senator Ed Markey, a Democrat from Massachuse­tts, said in a statement about the report’s findings.

“Unfortunat­ely, we can’t count on these immensely popular platforms to do the right thing and prioritise kids’ interests over their own profits.”

Markey introduced a bill earlier this year aimed at banning certain material and marketing in online video aimed at children younger than 16.

In September 2019, Google reached a Us$170mil (Rm697mil) settlement with the US Federal Trade Commission for serving ads based on personal data to kids on Youtube.

Before the case, Youtube asserted that children under 13 years old didn’t use its site unsupervis­ed.

After the settlement, Youtube agreed to remove targeted ads from channels “directed” at children and began pointing younger viewers to Youtube Kids, a separate app for children.

The company also said it was investing in “quality” educationa­l videos.

Youtube also let its creators mark their videos as “made for kids” or not, and argued that it was difficult to designate clips as “child-directed”. Advocacy groups criticised this approach.

“Protecting kids and families is a top priority for us,” a Youtube spokeswoma­n claimed in a statement responding to the report.

“Because Youtube is not for children, we’ve invested significan­tly in the creation of the Youtube Kids app, a destinatio­n made specifical­ly for kids to explore their imaginatio­n and curiosity.

“We were encouraged by the report’s findings that 63% of parents supervise their kids’ experience on Youtube, but continue to recommend parents use Youtube Kids if they plan to allow kids under 13 to watch independen­tly.”

The study provides one of the more detailed snapshots of children’s viewing behaviour on Youtube, said its lead author, Jenny Radesky, a paediatric­ian at

Michigan Medicine CS Mott Children’s Hospital.

Children watched an average of 39 minutes of videos a day, double the amount from 2017, the researcher­s found.

About 5% of the videos in the study had “high educationa­l value”, which the researcher­s defined as teaching topics that went beyond simple concepts and were developmen­tally appropriat­e.

But some ads even interfered with educationa­l portions of videos. In one clip to teach kids colours, Blippi, a popular Youtuber, pointed below to the word “blue” that was blocked by a banner ad.

“We were surprised by the amount of long videos that appeared to be put together just to attract young viewers, even if they didn’t have substance,” Radesky said. “It really works to keep kids occupied. They don’t need to think.”

According to the study, 30% of the Youtube footage contained “mild physical violence” and only 24% showed a diverse representa­tion of race and gender.

The study relied on a rating system similar to what Common Sense uses to grade footage for parents. (The group’s non-profit unit worked on the research. Its for-profit arm is building a media service that will compete with Youtube.)

The research doesn’t accuse Youtube of serving targeted ads to children. And the study found that many children watched the Youtube videos that researcher­s classified as highly educationa­l.

Relative to other clips, however, Youtube’s recommenda­tion system rarely surfaced these.

“You’re going to need to seek out those hidden gems,” Radesky said. “They’re not being elevated by the algorithms as much.” – Bloomberg

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 ??  ?? Children watched an average of 39 minutes of videos a day, double the amount from 2017, the researcher­s found. — 123rf.com
Children watched an average of 39 minutes of videos a day, double the amount from 2017, the researcher­s found. — 123rf.com

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