Toronto Star

Big tech companies are unfriendin­g Facebook

YouTube, TikTok, Snap defend privacy policies in U.S. Senate hearing

- REBECCA KERN AND ANNA EDGERTON

Social media companies YouTube, TikTok and Snap sought to distance themselves before lawmakers Tuesday from the backlash facing rival Facebook Inc., emphasizin­g they have establishe­d privacy protection­s for kids and teens on their platforms.

The executives appeared at a U.S. Senate committee hearing a day after a consortium of 17 news outlets, including Bloomberg, published dozens of articles based on troves of leaked Facebook data that detailed how the company prioritize­d profits over the safety of users — particular­ly teenagers — on its products.

The Senate commerce committee’s consumer protection panel, led by Connecticu­t Democrat Richard Blumenthal and Tennessee Republican Marsha Blackburn, are examining efforts by Alphabet Inc.’s YouTube, ByteDance Ltd’s TikTok and Snap Inc. to protect the privacy of children and teenagers online.

“Being different from Facebook is not a defence,” Blumenthal said in his opening remarks. “What we want is not a race to the bottom, but really a race to the top.”

Blumenthal said tech companies should not be relying on parents to protect their children’s privacy on their platforms, the features need to be built in.

“I want a market where the competitio­n is to protect children,” he said.

Blackburn raised concerns about data collected by TikTok and whether it’s shared with the Chinese government, where parent company ByteDance is based.

She said that despite vague assurances, TikTok “has not alleviated my concerns in the slightest.”

TikTok said it stores its data outside of China, including in Singapore and the U.S.

“We do not share informatio­n with the Chinese government,” Michael Beckerman, TikTok’s vice-president and head of public policy for the Americas, said at the hearing.

The witnesses also included Jennifer Stout, Snap’s president of global public policy and Leslie Miller, YouTube’s vicepresid­ent of government affairs and public policy.

Blumenthal and Blackburn’s subcommitt­ee previously heard from Facebook whistleblo­wer Frances Haugen, the former product manager who leaked documents to the committee and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Haugen highlighte­d how Facebook’s engagement-based algorithms lead harmful content to become viral on the platform. She said these algorithms particular­ly affect teenage girls who already have negative views of their bodies.

The three social media companies sought to set themselves apart from Facebook in their approach to online safety, as TikTok and Snap make their first appearance before Congress.

Last week, Blumenthal separately invited Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to testify before the subcommitt­ee in a future hearing.

Snap emphasized that one of it’s strongest privacy protection­s is that it only allows users ages 13 and up, and has no plans to market to kids under 13. The registrati­on process fails for individual­s under the age of 13 that attempt to sign up.

“We make no effort — and have no plans — to market to children,” Stout told the committee.

Stout said that regulation alone won’t solve the challenges surroundin­g privacy online.

“Technology companies must take responsibi­lity and actively protect the communitie­s they serve,” she said.

TikTok highlighte­d specific actions it’s taken to protect children’s safety in recent years, including disabling the direct messaging feature for users under age 16.

The company also disabled all users from sending certain videos, photos and website links, and only videos that have been approved through content moderation are allowed.

TikTok has also removed 11 million suspected underage accounts from April to June 2021. But the company acknowledg­ed the challenges it faces.

“We do know trust must be earned, and we’re seeking to earn trust through a higher level of action, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, as well as the humility to learn and improve,” Beckerman said.

YouTube’s Miller told the panel that YouTube Kids, created in 2015, provides parents with tools to control and customize the app for children. Miller said that kids under 13 who aren’t in a parental “supervised experience” are not allowed on YouTube.

They don’t allow personaliz­ed advertisem­ents on YouTube Kids or the “supervise experience.”

Miller said the company has removed nearly 1.8 million videos from April to June 2021 for violations of the company’s child safety policies.

Blumenthal and Massachuse­tts Democrat Ed Markey have sponsored legislatio­n to update the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, which was enacted in 1998, years before the launch of the social media companies.

The law currently restricts collection of personal informatio­n of children under age 13. The legislatio­n would expand the protection­s to age 16.

The bill has bipartisan support from Republican Senators Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming.

Blumenthal also backed legislatio­n to prohibit certain manipulati­ve marketing practices geared toward online users under the age of 16, including banning autoplay features and algorithms that amplify violent and dangerous content.

That bill has no Republican cosponsors to date.

 ?? SAMUEL CORUM GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal said tech companies should not be relying on parents to protect their children’s privacy on their platforms — the features need to be built in.
SAMUEL CORUM GETTY IMAGES U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal said tech companies should not be relying on parents to protect their children’s privacy on their platforms — the features need to be built in.

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