Some parents worry Google Buzz is ‘danger zone’ for children

0

SAN FRANCISCO — Parents and privacy watchdogs are sounding the alarm that Google Inc.’s new social networking tool, called Buzz, may put children at risk.

The concern came home in a personal way for technology analyst Charlene Li.
On Sunday night she discovered that her 9-year-old daughter had
publicly shared a private conversation on Buzz without intending to. Li
grew even more troubled when she spotted her daughter’s fourth-grade
classmates chatting with strangers.

She turned off Buzz and alerted other parents and
her child’s school, which is in turn alerted other parents. Then Li, an
analyst who tracks Google as well as other Internet companies, took to the Internet to spread the word.

“These are 4th graders who have no clue,” Li wrote
in a blog post. “Imagine parents (and kids) checking out their Buzz
accounts to find that ‘iorgyinbathrooms’ is following them, which is
exactly what happened with my child’s account.”

Google had
already drawn sharp criticism from privacy watchdogs for the way it
rolled out Buzz in millions of Gmail accounts. Privacy expert Kathryn Montgomery, a professor at American University, urged the Federal Trade Commission to address the potential risks to kids.

“Google Buzz is a new danger zone for children,” Montgomery said.

Google said it had no specific plans to tweak Buzz in response to parents’ privacy concerns. In a statement, spokesman Scott Rubin said: “We designed Buzz to make it easy to have conversations with your
friends about the things that interest you. Keeping kids safe online is
very important to us.”

It can also be tricky. Privacy watchdogs have
successfully hounded social networks in the past for not taking
sufficient steps to protect kids from predators and other dangers. By
adding Buzz to its popular e-mail service, Google has brought new attention to how kids use Gmail and raised questions about how they may use it.

Google, like the
social networking site Facebook, does not permit kids younger than 13
open Gmail accounts. That complies with the Child Online Privacy
Protection Act, which requires Web sites that collect information from
children under age 13 get consent from a parent.

In addition, law enforcement officials have pushed social networking sites to confirm the identities and ages of young users.

University of Maryland law professor Danielle Citron said Google, itself, is not legally required to confirm the ages of Buzz users, but should.

Citron’s two kids, 9 and 11, became fascinated by
Buzz during the recent snowstorms. “It was utterly amazing how they had
no idea what they were sharing,” Citron said.

Like many other Internet savvy parents, Citron said
she is vigilant about keeping her kids off Facebook and MySpace, and
having frequent conversations with them about the risks of exposing too
much personal information online.

But Citron said she was unprepared a few weeks ago
when Buzz popped up in her children’s Gmail accounts. “This is foisted
on children and they love it,” Citron said. “And it’s really dangerous.”

Li said she also worries that even if parents
disable Buzz, kids can turn it back on. And they may not understand how
to manage the privacy settings to stay safe, given that adults have
been confused by the settings.

She wants Google
to add parental controls to Gmail. And she is urging parents to discuss
Buzz with their kids because she fears the predators are already
lurking there.

“I just want the kids to be safe,” she said.

Google said it
has the same goal. “We think it’s important to remember that there’s no
substitute for parental supervision to keep kids safe on the Internet,”
Rubin said.

(c) 2010, Los Angeles Times.

Visit the Los Angeles Times on the Internet at http://www.latimes.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.