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Amazon fined $25 mn for violating children's privacy law, deceiving parents
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IANS | 01 Jun, 2023
E-commerce giant Amazon will pay $25 million penalty to the US Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) over violating the children's privacy law by
keeping their Alexa voice recordings and deceiving parents and users of
the Alexa voice assistant service about its data deletion practices.
The FTC and the Department of Justice said in a statement
that they will require Amazon to "overhaul its deletion practices and
implement stringent privacy safeguards" as the company violated the
Children's Online Privacy Protection Act Rule (COPPA Rule).
According
to the complaint, Amazon prevented parents from exercising their
deletion rights under the COPPA Rule, kept sensitive voice and
geolocation data for years, and used it for its own purposes, while
putting data at risk of harm from unnecessary access.
"Amazon's
history of misleading parents, keeping children's recordings
indefinitely, and flouting parents' deletion requests violated COPPA and
sacrificed privacy for profits," said Samuel Levine, Director of the
FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection.
"COPPA does not allow companies to keep children's data forever for any reason, and certainly not to train their algorithms."
Amazon
will be required to delete inactive child accounts and certain voice
recordings and geolocation information and will be prohibited from using
such data to train its algorithms. The proposed order must be approved
by the federal court to go into effect.
According to the
complaint, the company "prominently and repeatedly" assured its users,
including parents, that they could delete voice recordings collected
from its Alexa voice assistant and geolocation information collected by
the Alexa app.
The company, however, failed to follow through on
these promises when it kept some of this information for years and used
the data it unlawfully retained to help improve its Alexa algorithm,
according to the complaint.
The company claims that its Alexa
service and Echo devices are "designed to protect your privacy" and that
parents and other users can delete geolocation data and voice
recordings.
Amazon retained children's recordings indefinitely --
unless a parent requested that this information be deleted, according
to the complaint.
And even when a parent sought to delete that
information, the FTC said, Amazon failed to delete transcripts of what
kids said from all its databases.
Amazon claimed it retained
children's voice recordings in order to help it respond to voice
commands, allow parents to review them, and to improve Alexa's speech
recognition and processing capabilities, according to the complaint.
The
FTC said the company failed to put in place an effective system to
ensure that it honoured users' data deletion requests and to give
parents meaningful notice about deletion.
Even when Amazon
discovered its failures to delete geolocation data, the FTC said that
Amazon repeatedly failed to fix the problems.
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