Google built a new app so your kids can have a Google account, too
Google is making a play to capture the family market.
Today it announced its new Family Link app, which lets parents create a
Google account for their kids. This account is completely controlled by
parents, so that means they can manage the apps their kids use, monitor
how long they’re staring at their device, and set a designated “bedtime”
for the screen. They can remotely lock it, too.
To create this account, parents just have to get their
kids a device that runs Android Nougat, download Family Link, and then
create an account through the app. Family Link
is now available through an early-access program. Yes, you’ll have to
request an invite and your kids also have to be under 13 years old. It
isn’t clear how freely Google is giving out these invites.
The new app certainly seems like an obvious attempt to steal some of Amazon’s share of the tablet market. Amazon offers great kid controls
on the Kindle. The company even released a kids-only Fire tablet that
provides child-friendly content and lets parents implement both screen
time limits and educational goals. What’s nice about Google’s app
solution is that it applies to any updated Android device; you don’t
have to buy your kids a whole new tablet or phone. Just give them your
old Nexus. Meanwhile, Apple is completely nonexistent when it comes to
kid controls. It doesn’t allow for account separation, except in
educational settings.
While I’m all about giving parents more control over what
their kids consume online, I’m slightly wary of building a Google data
profile of a young child. That concern might be unwarranted, but I don’t
create accounts willy-nilly. Choice exists, though, and parents can
weigh the benefits for themselves.
The article was published on : theverge
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