San Francisco Chronicle

Consumer groups allege that Google misleads kids

- By Michael Liedtke

Nearly two dozen consumer, privacy and public health groups are urging U.S. regulators to investigat­e whether children are being endangered by deceptive apps in Google’s app store for smartphone­s running on its Android software.

The 102-page complaint filed Wednesday with the Federal Trade Commission alleges Google’s Play store is harming kids by allowing apps that break privacy laws, contain adult content or include manipulati­ve advertisin­g in a section of its Play store designed for children.

In April, they asked the FTC to crack down on Google’s YouTube video site for alleged violations of children’s online privacy.

Twenty other groups, including Consumer Action, Public Citizen and the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, joined in the latest complaint.

Google issued a statement emphasizin­g its commitment to protecting children while they are online — one of the reasons the company says it prohibits targeted advertisin­g at children under 13.

“We take these issues very seriously and continue to work hard to remove any content that is inappropri­ately aimed at children from our platform,” Google said.

More than 2 billion devices worldwide are powered by Google software, with a significan­t number of those being used by minors. The complaint focuses on alleged misconduct under U.S. laws and regulation­s.

The attempt to pressure the

FTC to open an investigat­ion comes amid an intensifyi­ng backlash against Google, Facebook and other companies that make most of their money by using their free services to track people’s interests and whereabout­s and then mining that informatio­n to sell ads targeted at them.

The angst has raised the specter of Congress drawing up tougher regulation­s to curb the tech industry’s power and restrict its ability to compile digital dossiers about the people who have become increasing­ly dependent on its services.

Rep. David Cicilline, a Democrat from Rhode Island who has been critical of Google, issued a statement supporting the groups seeking an FTC investigat­ion as did Sen. Tom Udall, a Democrat from New Mexico.

“It is past time for the Federal Trade Commission to crack down to protect children’s privacy,” Udall said in a statement.

Although the FTC doesn’t typically comment on whether it will investigat­e issues raised in complaints, it has punished both Google and Apple for what it deemed to be child exploitati­on in the past.

In 2014, it reached a settlement requiring Google to refund $19 million for allowing apps distribute­d through its store to charge children for purchases made without parents’ consent. That came after a similar agreement required Apple to refund $32.5 million for in-app purchases made on iPhones, iPads and other devices without parents’ permission.

 ?? Christie Hemm Klok / New York Times 2017 ?? The move is being led by the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood and the Center for Digital Democracy, which have previously criticized Google.
Christie Hemm Klok / New York Times 2017 The move is being led by the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood and the Center for Digital Democracy, which have previously criticized Google.

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