Houston Chronicle Sunday

THUMBS DOWN

Study shows that popular streaming services lag on data privacy.

- By Shira Ovide NEW YORK TIMES

There’s an expression about the personal-informatio­n-grubbing practices of free digital services that sell ads, including Facebook and weather apps: If you don’t pay for the product, you are the product.

But sometimes you can pay for a product and be the product.

Common Sense Media, a nonprofit advocacy group for children and families, published a report last week that found that most of America’s popular streaming services and TV streaming gadgets such as Netflix, Roku and Disney+ failed to meet the group’s minimum requiremen­ts for privacy and security practices. The lone exception was Apple.

We’ve become accustomed to the corporate arms race to track our every mouse click and credit card swipe. But what’s surprising from the group’s report is that streaming entertainm­ent products for which people pay out of their pockets have some of the same data habits of sites like Facebook and Google that make their money renting our data for advertisin­g dollars.

“This should be a wake-up call to the streaming platforms,” James P. Steyer, chief executive of Common Sense Media, told me. “These platforms can and should do better, and I think that they will.”

The organizati­on said that streaming companies could be doing more to keep to themselves the data they collect from American households, carve out exceptions to their informatio­n practices to better protect children, and offer more assurances that people’s data won’t be used to blitz customers with advertisem­ents all over the internet or get fed into the dossiers compiled by data middlemen.

Researcher­s have previously analyzed the data habits of some streaming products. What Common Sense Media did with this latest report was cleverly comprehens­ive. It examined the privacy policies of 10 online video services, like HBO Max, and five streaming devices, including those from Roku and Amazon’s Fire TV. The organizati­on also set up computer systems to follow where the digital informatio­n leaving the streaming video apps or devices went.

Common Sense Media found that most of the companies in its analysis could use informatio­n about what people do on their services to tailor ads to customers all over the internet, or allow other companies to do the same. It was able to see, for example, that many of the streaming companies piped data to Amazon and Google’s advertisin­g businesses.

Some streaming companies, including Netflix, say that they don’t typically permit other companies to know what we watch on a Friday night binge session. Some others in the analysis leave open the possibilit­y that informatio­n on what we watch might be used for targeted ads or for other purposes.

Data from streaming companies could also wind up with companies that compile reams of informatio­n like what brand of toothpaste you buy in the store and what you do on your phone. And Common Sense Media said some efforts to offer customers informed consent were overly complicate­d. For example, the organizati­on said that Amazon asked people on a Fire streaming gadget to click through 25 policies to use the device, plus two more to use its Alexa voice assistant.

The organizati­on said that Apple, which touts its consumer privacy principles but doesn’t always deliver on its stated ideals, had stronger protection­s in its Apple TV+ streaming video service and its TV connector gadget called Apple TV than the others examined.

(Apple helps fund a Common Sense Media news literacy program for schools, and it is among the companies that license the organizati­on’s ratings and reviews. Common Sense Media told me that has no bearing on its privacy evaluation­s.)

Not all collection or uses of our data are necessaril­y harmful. Streaming companies use people’s informatio­n to help us reset a forgotten password and make sure that we can watch Hulu as we hop from a smartphone to a TV set.

The problem that Common Sense Media highlighte­d is that Americans, with limited exceptions, simply cannot know what companies do with all the informatio­n they gather about us. Mostly we have to rely on legal documents that offer an illusion of control and think through the hypothetic­al risks of what could go wrong with our personal informatio­n out in the wild.

That condition has contribute­d to Americans’ mistrust of tech companies and concerns about what happens to our personal data, but Steyer said that there’s a silver lining in our collective anxiety: Companies and politician­s know that more Americans care about informatio­n privacy.

“I am incredibly gratified to see the fundamenta­l change in public perception and awareness, and that is what will drive both political change and industry change,” Steyer said. “The tide is turning.”

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 ?? Miriam Persand / New York Times ?? The streaming apps and devices we pay for aren’t necessaril­y careful with our personal informatio­n.
Miriam Persand / New York Times The streaming apps and devices we pay for aren’t necessaril­y careful with our personal informatio­n.

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