Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Barbie that interacts online called ‘creepy’

Critics:Yank eavesdrop-on-kids doll

- LINDSAY WISE TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

WASHINGTON — Child advocates want toy-maker Mattel to pull the plug on a new interactiv­e Barbie doll that records children’s voices and uploads them to a cloud server.

The Hello Barbie doll — expected to arrive in stores this fall — uses Wi-Fi to hold two-way conversati­ons by “listening” to a child’s words and responding appropriat­ely.

In a videotaped demonstrat­ion of the doll at the New York Toy Fair in February, a female sales representa­tive chatted with Barbie about New York City. “I love New York, don’t you?” Barbie gushes. “Tell me, what’s your favorite part about the city?”

When the woman says she enjoys Italian restaurant­s, Barbie says, “You have to take me to try it!”

Susan Linn, executive director of the nonprofit Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood, said the doll is “creepy” and “dangerous.” The group is calling on Mattel to stop all production and marketing of Hello Barbie.

“Kids using ‘Hello Barbie’ aren’t only talking to a doll, they are talking directly to a toy conglomera­te whose only interest in them is financial,” Linn said in a statement.

Mattel said Hello Barbie was developed in response to the wishes of girls from around the world, whose top request was to be able to have a conversati­on with Barbie.

Hello Barbie conforms to government standards and employs safeguards to protect children’s data from access by “unauthoriz­ed users,” Mattel said in a statement.

“Mattel is committed to safety and security,” Stephanie Cota, senior vice president for global communicat­ions at Mattel, said in the statement.

But advocates with the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood complain that Hello Barbie eavesdrops on children, exploiting private dialogues with dolls for profit.

“If I had a young child, I would be very concerned that my child’s intimate conversati­ons with her doll were being recorded and analyzed,” Angela Campbell, faculty adviser to the Center on Privacy and Technology at the Georgetown University law school, said in the group’s statement.

“In Mattel’s demo, Barbie asks many questions that would elicit a great deal of informatio­n about a child, her interests and her family,” Campbell said. “This informatio­n could be of great value to advertiser­s and be used to market unfairly to children.”

Computer algorithms shouldn’t displace children’s real conversati­ons with real friends, pediatrici­an Dipesh Navsaria, an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, said in the statement.

“Children do not need commercial­ly manufactur­ed messages — artificial­ly created after listening in on anyone within range of Mattel’s microphone­s,” Navsaria said.

 ?? Photo courtesy Barbie ?? Is Hello Barbie doll creepy or a conversati­onal companion?
Photo courtesy Barbie Is Hello Barbie doll creepy or a conversati­onal companion?

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