I see your point, but I don't read it the same way you do. This is referring to the age screen test (similar to Steam's on PG 13 or R games). But the poster above was spurned by Google support.
I think the real reason he was spurned is that Google support isn't that effective or responsive in a lot of cases, full stop.
Doubly not relevant for a paid g-suite organization. Itβs not like his daughter can just go sign up for an account and lie about her age, the admin has to add users.
The admin is not asked for a birthday. IIRC, it's largely optional - YouTube will require it to watch a violent/sexually suggestive video, at which point you may get locked out if you give a sub-13 one.
>you should take care to design your age screen in a manner that does not encourage children to falsify their ages to gain access to your site or service. Ask age information in a neutral manner at the point at which you invite visitors to provide personal information or to create a user ID
doesn't have anything to do with this. There's definitely no age screen for the kid to lie on, and it sounds like the admin doesn't even provide an age either
I think the real reason he was spurned is that Google support isn't that effective or responsive in a lot of cases, full stop.