YouTube faces $3.2 billion lawsuit for breaching kids’ privacy

Imatge
Àmbits Temàtics

Google is accu­sed of harves­ting the data of chil­dren under the age of 13.

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YouTube is facing a £2.5 billion lawsuit for allo­wing adver­ti­sers to utilize data collec­ted from milli­ons of British kids. Unaut­ho­ri­zed collec­tion of data from chil­dren viola­tes both EU and UK data privacy laws.

Privacy campaig­ner Duncan McCann filed the lawsuit in July. If he wins, every child or family could receive £500 ($640) in dama­ges.

Confir­ming the filling of the lawsuit on Satur­day night, he said:

“We used to be worried about how chil­dren used the inter­net, the dangers of chil­dren being expo­sed to porno­graphy, or being groo­med.

“That is still a problem, but we should also be aware of how the inter­net is using chil­dren, which was not the case ten years ago. Are we comfor­ta­ble with chil­dren being products of the inter­net rather than products of their parents?” the Mail repor­ted.

McCann claims that YouTube, and by exten­sion, Google, viola­ted the EU’s Gene­ral Data Protec­tion Regu­la­ti­ons and the UK’s Data Protec­tion Act. He alle­ged that YouTube provi­des infor­ma­tion collec­ted from kids to compa­nies such as toy sellers, who then send targe­ted ads to kids.

“It cannot be right that Google can take chil­dren’s private data without expli­cit permis­sion and then sell it to adver­ti­sers to target chil­dren. I beli­eve it is only through legal action and dama­ges that these compa­nies will change their beha­vior, and it is only through a class action that we can fight these compa­nies on an equal basis, ” McCann explai­ned.

Howe­ver, YouTube will argue that the primary YouTube plat­form is not meant for kids under the age of 13. For that, they have YouTube Kids, which has more privacy protec­tion safe­guards.

“We don’t comment on pending liti­ga­tion. YouTube is not for chil­dren under the age of 13. We laun­ched the YouTube Kids app [in 2015] as a dedi­ca­ted desti­na­tion for kids and have made further chan­ges that allow us to better protect kids and fami­lies on YouTube, ” a YouTube rep said.

Addi­ti­o­nally, YouTube might direct the court to seve­ral chan­ges intro­du­ced in 2019 that improve privacy protec­tion. These chan­ges include noti­fi­ca­ti­ons to guar­di­ans, the ability to restrict perso­na­li­zed adverts, and the “limit data collec­tion” setting.

McCann’s case is spon­so­red by Haus­feld, a global law firm, and Foxglove, a digi­tal rights advo­cacy group.

“The cost of YouTu­be’s free servi­ces is kids addic­ted, influ­en­ced, and with no privacy. Google won’t clean up its act until it is forced to do so by the courts, ” said Cori Crider, the direc­tor of Foxglove.

“This is an incre­dibly impor­tant case. Tech titans such as Google cannot be above the law, ” Haus­feld’s Lesley Hannah said.