YouTube may move children's content to separate app [thehill.com]
YouTube Reportedly Considering Changes To Platform For Kids [sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com]
Senator wants Facebook, Google to face bias lawsuits [www.mercurynews.com]
FTC reportedly investigating YouTube for violations of children's privacy [www.axios.com]
YouTube under federal investigation over children's privacy: report [thehill.com]
YouTube faces FTC investigation into its kids practices, report says [www.cnet.com]
YouTube executives reportedly mulling over removing all children’s content [www.theverge.com]
YouTube facing investigation from federal government over inability to protect children [www.theverge.com]
This is desperately needed. We can’t leave our kids for more than 3 minutes unattended while watching @YouTube. https://t.co/ovDrtNWI38 pic.twitter.com/pWbhl4ZMXk
— Mike Dudas (@mdudas) June 19, 2019
NEW: YouTube is under investigation by the FTC, and the probe is in late stages, for its handling of kids and videos for them. This comes as company considers big changes to its platform. Me + @lizzadwoskin + @craigtimberg https://t.co/EW18vwQ21I
— Tony Romm (@TonyRomm) June 19, 2019
Good summation here of the serious practical challenges to moving all children's content to YouTube's Kids app, which are not really explored in the WSJ story (https://t.co/2X4CVic3vT). You can bet YouTube is thinking about this partly under pressure from the FTC and Congress https://t.co/T4JtpPcIgx
— Gady Epstein (@gadyepstein) June 19, 2019
Good that YouTube is heeding my calls to get rid of design features that harm kids. But changes need to be codified, internally at YouTube and in federal law with my Kids Internet Design and Safety (KIDS) Act.https://t.co/LO0WeZl8FB
— Ed Markey (@SenMarkey) June 19, 2019
My daughters to this day remember watching a Berenstain Bears video on YouTube into which someone had dubbed the most awful obscenities a few minutes in.
— Robert McMillan (@bobmcmillan) June 19, 2019
YouTube considering stand-alone app for kids. https://t.co/brxXhCMlBT Nice scoop from @realrobcopeland
“It’s not about free speech, it’s about free reach”; YouTube, under fire, considers sweeping changes.https://t.co/XPkO4HUOGk
— Rob Copeland (@realrobcopeland) June 19, 2019
one thing to remember: if the Commish does proceed with a COPPA complaint, it can actually seek penalties in that instance. that isn't the case with first-offense privacy violations under the FTC's deception authority. or, put differently, why the FTC wants privacy reforms https://t.co/f2mdugNbpK
— Tony Romm (@TonyRomm) June 19, 2019
Autoplay should be illegal for kids under 13 on any platform. https://t.co/K0UPploxM8
— Dave Morin (@davemorin) June 19, 2019
The FTC is in the late stages of an investigation into YouTube for its handling of children’s videos
— Hamza Shaban (@hshaban) June 19, 2019
- Probe stems from complaints of improper data collection and failing to protect kids
- YouTube execs considering changes to the recommendation algorithm https://t.co/VEaBWfz2mt
The FTC is in the late stages of a probe into YouTube's handling of children's content following multiple complaints from privacy advocateshttps://t.co/Dxa9e5VCzG
— Axios (@axios) June 19, 2019
Would be a huge undertaking, but worth it IMO -> YouTube considering far-reaching changes to protect kids, including moving all children's content to the YouTube Kids app and turning off autoplay https://t.co/ZMjx9aO6rU pic.twitter.com/AvukQiKRGw
— Glenn Gabe (@glenngabe) June 19, 2019
YouTube executives reportedly mulling over removing all children’s content from main site https://t.co/qDidI6LuAg pic.twitter.com/hHB29oaz1M
— The Verge (@verge) June 19, 2019
YouTube facing investigation from federal government over inability to protect children https://t.co/BJnbsFdzvL pic.twitter.com/y18JypgRu5
— The Verge (@verge) June 19, 2019
YouTube는 FTC의 어린이 사례의 조사에 직면 https://t.co/YJdMPf5ONU
— editoy (@editoy) June 20, 2019
YouTube executives reportedly mulling over removing all children’s content from main site https://t.co/qDidI6LuAg pic.twitter.com/q6Fyg4rVz6
— The Verge (@verge) June 20, 2019
"YouTube executives reportedly mulling removing all children’s content."
— Max Fisher (@Max_Fisher) June 19, 2019
"The reports ... have also prompted a federal investigation by the Federal Trade Commission ... that could result in Google receiving a fine over its inability to protect children." https://t.co/WkgtjtAxq2
If I have to go to YouTube Kids to watch classic cartoon clips and animation history/retrospectives instead of regular YouTube, I'm kicking someone's ass. https://t.co/beuoc3PxKJ
— Jeff Harris (@nemalki) June 19, 2019
It’s kids vs ads. Of course they’re gonna pick ads. https://t.co/vNQzlrSwbH
— Derek Powazek ? (@fraying) June 19, 2019
This could be a major move from Youtube.
— Lickd (@getlickd) June 19, 2019
What do you think?
Should kids content be moved to YouTube Kids and be removed from the main site?
https://t.co/1sb9CDhucx
YouTube facing investigation from federal government over inability to protect children https://t.co/BJnbsFdzvL pic.twitter.com/pe9kmOkFru
— The Verge (@verge) June 20, 2019
YouTube facing investigation from federal government over inability to protect children https://t.co/cKyUPIGaay via @Verge
— Tama Leaver (@tamaleaver) June 20, 2019
YouTube facing investigation from federal government over inability to protect children - The Verge https://t.co/Ia7UkPsSPf
— Keely Eyal-Blackburn ? (@FlaRhps) June 20, 2019
Long overdue...
— Sean Herman (@seanherms) June 19, 2019
YouTube facing investigation from federal government over inability to protect children https://t.co/JUMze2fTSQ via @Verge