The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

YouTube to pay $170M fine after violating kids’ privacy law

- By Rachel Lerman and Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON >> Google will pay $170 million to settle allegation­s its YouTube video service collected personal data on children without their parents’ consent.

The company agreed to work with video creators to label material aimed at kids and said it will limit data collection when users view such videos, regardless of their age.

Democrats and children’s advocacy groups, however, complained that the settlement terms aren’t strong enough to rein in a company whose parent, Alphabet, made a profit of $30.7 billion last year on revenue of $136.8 billion, mostly from targeted ads.

Google will pay $136 million to the Federal

Trade Commission and

$34 million to New York state, which had a simi- lar investigat­ion. The fine is the largest the FTC has leveled against Google, although it is tiny compared with the $5 billion fine imposed against Facebook this year for privacy violations.

The federal government has increased scrutiny of big tech companies in the past two years — especially questionin­g how the tech giants collect and use personal informatio­n from their billions of customers. Many of the huge Silicon Valley companies are also under antitrust investigat­ions aimed at determinin­g whether the companies have unlawfully stifled competitio­n.

Kids under 13 are protected by a 1998 federal law that requires parental consent before companies can collect and share their personal informatio­n.

Tech companies typically skirt that by banning kids under 13 entirely, though such bans are rarely enforced. In YouTube’s lengthy terms of service, those who are under 13 are simply asked, “please do not use the Service.”

But younger kids commonly watch videos on YouTube, and many popular YouTube channels feature cartoons or sing-a-longs made for children. According to the FTC, YouTube assigned ratings to its video channels and even had a “Y” category directed at kids ages 7 or under. Yet from an advertisin­g standpoint, YouTube targeted ads to those kids just as they would adults.

The FTC’s complaint details Google’s mixed messages about who the site is geared for and includes as evidence Google presentati­ons made to toy companies Mattel and Hasbro where YouTube is described as the “new Saturday Morning Cartoons” and the “#1 website regularly visited by kids.”

“YouTube touted its popularity with children to prospectiv­e corporate clients,” FTC Chairman Joe Simons said in a statement. Yet when it came to complying with the law, he said, “the company refused to acknowledg­e that portions of its platform were clearly directed to kids.”

According to the settlement, Google and YouTube will get “verifiable” consent from parents before they collect or use personal informatio­n from children. The company also agreed not to use personal informatio­n they collected from children before.

YouTube has its own service for children, YouTube Kids. The kids-focused service already requires parental consent and uses simple math problems to ensure that kids aren’t signing in on their own.

YouTube Kids does not target ads based on viewer interests the way the main YouTube service does. But the children’s version does track informatio­n about what kids are watching in order to recommend videos. It also collects personally identifyin­g device informatio­n.

On Wednesday, Google said that starting early next year, it will also limit targeting on its main service for videos meant for kids. Google is relying on video creators to label such items, though it will also employ artificial intelligen­ce to help.

YouTube won’t seek parental consent there, however, even on videos intended for children. The company is avoiding that precaution by instead turning off any personal tracking on those videos, saying it will collect only what is needed to make the service work. For such videos, YouTube also won’t offer features like comments and notificati­ons and won’t serve personaliz­ed ads.

The settlement now needs to be approved by a federal court in Washington.

As with the Facebook settlement, the FTC vote was 3-2, with both Democrats opposing.

YouTube “baited kids with nursery rhymes, cartoons, and more to feed its massively profitable behavioral advertisin­g business,” Democratic Commission­er Rohit Chopra said in a tweet. “It was lucrative, and it was illegal.”

He said in his dissent that the settlement offered no individual accountabi­lity, insufficie­nt remedies and a fine amount that “still allows the company to profit from its lawbreakin­g.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Federal Trade Commission Chairman Joe Simons departs after speaking at a news conference at the Federal Trade Commission in Washington, Wednesday to announce that Google’s video site YouTube has been fined $170 million to settle allegation­s it collected children’s personal data without their parents’ consent.
ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Federal Trade Commission Chairman Joe Simons departs after speaking at a news conference at the Federal Trade Commission in Washington, Wednesday to announce that Google’s video site YouTube has been fined $170 million to settle allegation­s it collected children’s personal data without their parents’ consent.

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