Toronto Star

Google to focus on responsibl­e tech

Conference to emphasize managing your time on devices, parental control Google’s anticipate­d shift reflects rising public scrutiny of the technology industry.

- ELIZABETH DWOSKIN AND HAYLEY TSUKAYAMA

SAN FRANCISCO— Google on Tuesday plans to wade into the debate over whether technology — and the time spent on devices — is harmful to people’s health, criticism that it has dodged more than Apple and Facebook.

At its annual developer conference, scheduled to kick off in its hometown of Mountain View, Calif., on Tuesday, Google is set to announce a new set of new controls to its Android operating system, oriented around helping individual­s and families manage the time they spend on mobile devices, according to a person familiar with the company’s thinking.

In his keynote address on Tuesday, chief executive officer Sundar Pichai is expected to emphasize the theme of responsibi­lity, the person said. Last year’s keynote was more focused on developmen­ts in artificial intelligen­ce.

The anticipate­d shift in tone at the event reflects increased public skepticism and scrutiny of the technology industry as it reckons with the negative consequenc­es of how its products are used by billions of people.

Some of the criticism centres on the suspected addictive nature of many devices and programs. Two groups of Apple shareholde­rs in January asked the company to design products to combat phone addiction in children. Apple chief executive officer Tim Cook has said he would keep children in his life away from social networks, and even Steve Jobs placed strict limitation­s on his children’s screen time. Facebook last year publicly admitted that consuming Facebook passively tends to put people in a worse mood, citing internal research as well as academic reports.

The manipulati­on of technology for disinforma­tion has also rocked tech giants including Facebook and Google, prompting them to consider the role they play in society.

Facebook chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg has said the company “didn’t take a broad enough view of our responsibi­lity” to society, in areas such as Russian interferen­ce and the protection of people’s data.

Google has been quieter than its counterpar­ts, even as hoax videos have gone viral on YouTube and Google’s own search tools have been manipulate­d.

When it comes to family controls, Google is already a step ahead. Google offers Family Link, a suite of tools that allows parents to regulate how much time their children can spend on apps and remotely lock their child’s device. Family Link gives parents weekly reports on children’s app usage and offers controls to approve the apps kids download. Those time-management controls go further than what is offered by rival Apple on its iOS mobile operating system. Apple currently offers “do not disturb” modes that limit an iPhone’s function overnight or while driving, but parents cannot trigger those modes on their kids’ devices.

Apple is expected to announce more features to help parents manage their kids’ use of devices and apps at its next developer conference in June, according to several analysts who follow the company.

Amazon.com, which uses a custom version of Android for its hardware, has since 2012 offered parents the option to set time limits for devices and block access to any unapproved apps, movies or books. The company rolled out those features to all Android users in 2017.

Google still plans to emphasize artificial intelligen­ce, according to the person. Google is set to announce additional capabiliti­es to its voice-enabled Google Assistant that are intended to make the product more interactiv­e and helpful at accomplish­ing tasks, the person said, and will introduce new tools for publishers to help surface authoritat­ive search results.

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