
Google says it is ending its practice of emailing 13-year-olds step-by-step instructions on how to remove parental controls after backlash from parents and parental rights advocates.
The tech giant came under fire after screenshots of an email went viral on social media, with users describing the policy as âpredatoryâ and âgroomingâ behavior. Googleâs head of global privacy, safety and security, Kate Charlet, wrote in a LinkedIn post on Monday that the policy was being revised to allow parents to choose whether or not to remove parental controls.
âUnder our planned policy update, any supervised minor will have to get parental approval before they can turn off supervision. These changes better ensure protections stay in place until both the parent and teen feel ready for the next step,â Charlet said. âOur focus remains on empowering families with the tools they need to navigate the digital world safely.â
Google did not respond to the Daily Caller News Foundationâs request for comment.
Googleâs frequently asked questions page still lists the old policy that allows kids âto take charge of their accountâ without parental consent.
Several LinkedIn users expressed discontent with this policy update, saying that it shouldnât have been the protocol to allow children to remove controls in the first place.
âIf you wanted to empower families you wouldnât let kids bypass the parental controls the minute they turn 13,â one user stated.
âItâs upsetting it took viral posts and media coverage for you to even consider this update,â another said. âParents need assurance that Google will NOT exploit minors or undermine parental authority or controls the next time we turn around.â
Melissa McKay, president of the Digital Childhood Institute, who wrote the original post exposing the email, asserted that there were still âseveral serious legal questionsâ that âneed answers.â
âWhat legal authority, if any, supported Googleâs policy of mass emailing children to encourage them to disable parental controls without parental consent? If none existed, who approved this harmful practice?â she asked. âWhat other Apple and Google failures have become normalized, such as deceptive app age ratings that misrepresent safety claims that conflict with documented app risks?â
âPlease do not accept or normalize predatory tech company practices. Many of these practices can change overnight once the right questions are asked and accountability is demanded.â
Googleâs now-former policy clung to the Childrenâs Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) as rational, which gives parents authority over personal information collection of children 13 and younger to protect young kidsâ privacy. However, McKay questioned whether this law âactually allow children to agree to the complex terms of service contracts required by apps and app stores, including liability, data use, and paymentsâ and âIf COPPA does not turn minors into consenting adults, why are app stores treating 13-year-olds as legally capable contracting parties?â
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