The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

It’s time to protect kids from Google privacy predators

- Michelle Malkin She writes for Creators Syndicate.

The father of the World Wide Web is right: It’s time to take back “complete control of your data.”

Tim Berners-Lee, who conceived the first internet browser 30 years ago this week, warned of its increasing threats to “privacy, security and fundamenta­l rights.” To mark the anniversar­y, he argued that demanding transparen­cy is key to stopping the web’s “downward plunge to a dysfunctio­nal future.” So, where to start?

Berners-Lee specifical­ly cautioned against the dangers of internet browsers’ keeping “track of everything you buy.” The world’s top browser is Google Chrome. But spying on our purchases is the least we have to worry about with Google and its $800 billion parent company, Alphabet.

It’s bad enough the company’s executives match your offline credit card purchases to your online user profile without full disclosure, employ mobile tracking apps that collect location data even if users have turned off location tracking, hide and downplay massive security breaches (like the photo-sharing “bug” and hacker-friendly browser “flaws” revealed this past week), bow to Chinese communist censors and exhibit explicit bias against conservati­ves. No, it’s much worse. Google’s predation starts early, often with the most vulnerable members of society: our children.

The Silicon Valley giant has hooked legions of children and teachers into its data mining products through lucrative partnershi­ps with public schools across America. Learning no longer starts with A, B, C but with G, G, G:

G Suite, Gmail, Google Cloud, Google Drive, Google Docs, Google Sheets, Google Slides, Google Hangouts, Google Vault, Google Jamboard, Google Chromebook­s and Google Classroom.

Don’t forget: Google now has 80 million educators and students around the world using G Suite for Education, 40 million students and teachers in Google Classroom and 30 million more using Google Chromebook­s inside and outside the classroom.

Despite a report last fall from the U.S. Department of Education’s inspector general blasting the feds for failing to investigat­e a backlog of Family Educationa­l Rights and Privacy Act violations, the Trump White House has done nothing to repair the damage to FERPA done by the Obama administra­tion.

The Democrats’ techchummy bureaucrat­s busted open the door to third-party sharing of children’s personal data with government agencies, nonprofits and private vendors.

This is how Google has gotten away with unauthoriz­ed scanning and indexing of student email accounts and targeted online advertisin­g based on search engine activity, as well as auto-syncing of passwords, browsing history and other private data across devices and accounts.

While grandstand­ing opportunis­ts in Congress now talk tough to Silicon Valley donors (hello, Elizabeth Warren), K-12 children in tens of thousands of schools began the academic year by lining up at the library to create Gmail accounts and Google Classroom logins without parental notificati­on or permission. There’s no escape: No Google, no access.

Given the privacy breaches, public safety dangers, illegal data profiteeri­ng and child predation, there should be a nationwide clamor to deplatform Google completely from public schools. Until that revolt among parents and educators across party lines swells, it’s up to moms and dads to seize control.

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