Friday 20 February 2015

<p> <i> 20.48 pm </i>
 YouTube to Release New App for Kids
Already popular among teens, YouTube is releasing a new app for kids.
The new app from Google Inc. ’s online video service will run on smartphones and tablets and is expected to feature original episodes of popular television shows for preschoolers, including “Thomas the Tank Engine” and “Sesame Street,” as well as content from the many kid-safe channels already featured on YouTube, according to a person familiar with the matter.
A screenshot of the app released late Thursday night showed those two titles as well as “Reading Rainbow, “Mother Goose Club” and others.
The app, called YouTube Kids, is expected to be free and will be separate from the mainstream YouTube mobile app. It will feature kid-friendly design, with big, bulbous icons and minimal scrolling, the person said.
The app is said to include features for parents as well, such as a timer they can use to limit how much video children are able to watch.
One potential disappointment for parents and kids is that the app won’t be available, at least initially, for Apple Inc.’s iPad. At launch, it will be available only for devices running Google’s Android mobile operating system.
The company is planning to announce the new app on Monday, when YouTube executive Malik Ducard is scheduled to give the keynote address at Kidscreen Summit, a conference for the children’s entertainment industry.
A Google spokesman declined to comment on what he termed rumor and speculation.
In launching an app aimed at children, Google will have had to comply with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, which is overseen by the Federal Trade Commission. Among other COPPA rules, websites that cater to kids must notify parents if they collect personal information.
It is unclear whether or how the new app will generate money for YouTube. That means it is also unclear how content partners will make money, though YouTube is believed to be paying to produce original shows that are expected to be included, the person said.
The possibility of generating revenue by displaying ads in the app was said to be under discussion. In that case, Google likely would find plenty of advertisers looking to buy spots.
Darcy Bowe, vice president and media director at Starcom, an advertising agency, said her clients are often frustrated by lack of digital advertising venues geared for kids. Instead, they often pump money into TV ads. To date, YouTube has been off limits, as the site is geared for people age 13 and over, she said.
When asked about the idea of advertising on a kid-safe YouTube app, Ms. Bowe said “absolutely we’d be interested. Everyone would love that.”
YouTube’s plan for a child-friendly service was first reported last year by tech news service The Information.</p>

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