San Antonio Express-News

New tools for parents amid an online surge

- By Rachel Lerman

SAN FRANCISCO — It’s the era of coronaviru­s screen time, and some tech companies are rolling out new tools to help parents better monitor what their kids are watching and doing online.

TikTok, a social media video app heavily used by teens, last week introduced ways for parents to limit time on the app, while Google rolled out a new Play Store tab to highlight apps approved and rated by teachers. And recently, Netflix introduced a way to add a pin code to access content.

Any safety controls are helpful, experts say, and the new tools are a step in the right direction. But tech companies should be thinking through these issues and launching tools to better protect children with the advent of the app, not after.

“Unfortunat­ely, a lot of these things happen in retrospect, as a Band-Aid,” said Christine Elgersma, senior editor of social media and instructio­nal resources at Common Sense Media, an advocacy organizati­on for kids’ safe use of technology.

Parents have struggled with managing their kids and technology for decades, implementi­ng time limits on phones and trying to restrict what websites their children can see. But those issues have taken on an added urgency amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has resulted in the closure of schools and social distancing.

Kids are spending more time on iPads and other devices to complete schoolwork and entertain themselves, as entire families up their screen time at home. Comcast has said its peak network traffic is up as much as 60 percent in some regions, while Verizon says overall network traffic for video games is up 102 percent.

Courtney Ellis, an author and mother of three in Mission Viejo, Calif., says her kids have seen a big uptick in TV watching and other screen time while stuck at home. “There are no rules,” she said, a stark change from before. She carefully monitors their usage of technology, though, and plans to turn on parental controls and talk with them about safety online as they get older.

The need for tech companies to better protect children has been a hot-button issue for years — one that landed Google-owned YouTube with a $170 million fine last year to settle charges that it breached kids’ privacy and that saddled the app now known as TikTok with a $5.7 million charge for similar offenses.

“I think there’s a lot of pressure on the tech companies to provide better controls,” said Josh Golin, executive director of the Campaign for Commercial Free Childhood, an advocacy group. The best way, he noted, was for companies to turn on restrictio­ns by default, rather than making parents switch them on.

Google spokeswoma­n Kaori Miyake said the company moved up the launch of its new teacher-approved tab from its planned release later this year because kids are spending more time at home now. TikTok and Netflix pointed to company blog posts announcing the changes.

TikTok’s changes in particular were a leap forward for parents. The app features short-form videos, many of which are people performing choreograp­hed dances or lip syncing to famous movie and TV clips. The app has surged in popularity among younger users.

TikTok will now allow parents to decide how long their kids can stay on the app, restrict them from sending direct messages and hide some videos from their view. Parents must first pair their own app with their child’s to access the controls.

Netflix similarly expanded control for parents, adding a feature that allows adults’ accounts to be protected with a pin code. Parents can also remove specific movies or shows from their kids’ accounts. Previously, the company allowed parents to set up accounts for their children with limited content, but there was no way to prevent them from navigating back to an adult’s profile.

Google updated a program last year to put stricter requiremen­ts in place for app developers who indicate their app is made for kids. The company has also been expanding its YouTube Kids features.

 ?? Dreamstime / Tribune News Service ?? Kids are spending more time with online devices to complete schoolwork and entertain themselves during the pandemic.
Dreamstime / Tribune News Service Kids are spending more time with online devices to complete schoolwork and entertain themselves during the pandemic.

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