Austin American-Statesman

New Mexico sues mobile app makers

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ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — New Mexico is suing Google, Twitter and other companies that develop and market mobile gaming apps for children, saying the apps violate state and federal laws by collecting personal informatio­n that could compromise privacy.

The lawsuit filed in federal court late Tuesday comes as data-sharing concerns persist among users.

Social media giant Facebook just weeks ago pulled one of its own apps over possible privacy intrusions and a recent Associated Press investigat­ion revealed that several Google apps and websites store user location even if users have turned off location history.

The lawsuit accuses advertisin­g businesses run by Google, Twitter and three other companies, along with the app maker Tiny Lab Production­s, of violating a law meant to keep private the personal data of children under 13.

The Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act adopted by Congress requires websites and online services to disclose what informatio­n they collect from children and how they use that informatio­n.

That disclosure must also be provided directly to parents and verified consent must be given. The lawsuit accuses the defendants of violating these federal mandates.

Google said in a statement Wednesday that apps included in its family program must comply with stringent policies that address age-appropriat­e ads and privacy disclosure­s.

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