Houston Chronicle

Advocacy groups say Google’s family apps violate safety act

- By Natasha Singer and Jennifer Valentino-DeVries

A group of 22 children’s and consumer organizati­ons is calling for a federal investigat­ion into Google’s marketing of children’s apps in its Google Play store, the latest in rebukes by experts about how the company handles technology aimed at youngsters.

Google has promoted the “Family” section of its Play store as a place where parents can find ageappropr­iate apps for children. But in a complaint to the Federal Trade Commission filed Wednesday, the advocacy groups said the company’s endorsemen­t of the apps was misleading. The groups said that some apps contained content unsuitable for children, showed ads for casino games, or pushed youngsters into watching video ads and making in-app purchases.

The groups also said some apps appeared to violate the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, a federal law that prohibits sites and apps for children from collecting phone numbers, precise location, photograph­s, persistent tracking identifier­s and other personal informatio­n from children under 13 without verifiable consent from a parent. The complaint cited an investigat­ion by The New York Times in September that found some children’s apps collected precise location informatio­n and tracking identifier­s without verifiable parental permission.

Google has come under mounting scrutiny for its promotion of children’s apps in its Play store. In April, cybersecur­ity researcher­s reported that more than half of about 6,000 free Android children’s apps they tested shared personal data in ways that may violate the children’s privacy law.

In September, the attorney general of New Mexico filed a lawsuit against Google and other companies over children’s apps. The complaint said that Google had violated a state law on unfair practices by marketing certain children’s apps as family-friendly even when the company knew the apps failed to comply with its own policies.

In early October, two Democratic senators called for a federal investigat­ion to examine how app stores like Google Play vet the apps they categorize as child-friendly and ensure they comply with the privacy law.

And Wednesday those senators — Richard Blumenthal of Connecticu­t and Ed Markey of Massachuse­tts — along with Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., sent another letter to the chairman of the FTC pressing for “a comprehens­ive investigat­ion into the Google Play store and its compliance” with children’s privacy and advertisin­g rules.

“There are massive, at-scale problems with Android apps for children,” said Josh Golin, executive director of Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood, a children’s advocacy group in Boston that led the latest complaint along with the Center for Digital Democracy, a nonprofit in Washington. “Google is failing to do the proper vetting of apps in the family section,” he said.

Google said that it removed thousands of apps from its Designed for Families program this year when it found policy violations, and had begun to take action on the apps cited in the consumer groups’ complaint.

“Parents want their children to be safe online, and we work hard to protect them,” said Aaron Stein, a Google spokesman. “Apps in our Designed for Families program have to comply with strict policies on content, privacy and advertisin­g, and we take action on any policy violations that we find.”

A few years ago, Google introduced Designed for Families, a program that enables developers of Android apps to “showcase trusted, high-quality and age-appropriat­e content for the whole family.”

To be eligible for the program, Google says developers must meet criteria like ensuring that their apps comply with the federal privacy law and contain age-appropriat­e content.

But the groups’ complaint, along with the New Mexico attorney general’s lawsuit, argue that Google misled consumers by promoting the apps as trustworth­y while failing to enforce its own requiremen­ts for the Designed for Families program.

 ?? Dreamstime / TNS ?? In a complaint filed with the FTC, child advocacy groups said many Google family apps engage in targeted advertisin­g and show inappropri­ate ads. Google says its fixing the problems.
Dreamstime / TNS In a complaint filed with the FTC, child advocacy groups said many Google family apps engage in targeted advertisin­g and show inappropri­ate ads. Google says its fixing the problems.

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