Coming soon: Google for kids
When children use the internet they're supposed to play
games they read about on the backs of cereal boxes, not check their Gmail
accounts and write Facebook statuses.
The internet-at-large can be a scary place for kids,
after all, but Google might be aiming to start changing that.
The search company is working to overhaul its online
services so that children under the age of 13 can safely use them, according to
The Information.
Currently users of services like Google+ and Gmail must
be over 13-years-old to sign up or have permission from their parents, though
these restrictions are easy to get around.
Instead of pretending kids aren't using Google services,
the company apparently wants to enable parents to create a safe environment for
their offspring.
This means tools that will reportedly include a dashboard
parents can use to oversee their kids' online activity, a YouTube site just for
kids, and new rules requiring users who sign up for Google accounts on Android
devices to share their ages, as they already have to do on PCs.
The Verge compares these rumours to a Google video from
2011 called "Dear Sophie," in which a father creates a Gmail account
for his newborn daughter and emails her photos and other content as a sort of
web-housed, interactive scrapbook that she'll ostensibly read when she's old
enough to have her own Gmail account.
Google would be wise to turn something like that into an
actual product — and the company is likely greedily eyeing the data it will be
able to collect from users as they age on the internet.
We asked Google for comment on the report and were told
the company doesn't comment on "on rumour or speculation."
No comments:
Post a Comment