Bangkok Post

Microsoft to pay $20m to settle kids’ privacy charges

- KANISHKA SINGH

Microsoft will pay $20 million to settle US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) charges that the tech company illegally collected personal informatio­n from children without their parents’ consent, the FTC said on Monday.

The company had been charged with violating the US Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) by collecting personal informatio­n from children who signed up to its Xbox gaming system without notifying their parents or obtaining their parents’ consent, and by retaining children’s personal informatio­n, the FTC said in a statement.

The order requires Microsoft to take steps to improve privacy protection­s for child users of its Xbox system. It will extend COPPA protection­s to thirdparty gaming publishers with whom Microsoft shares children’s data, the FTC said.

A Microsoft spokespers­on said the company was committed to complying with the order. The spokespers­on added the account creation process will be updated and a data retention glitch found in the company’s system will be resolved.

“Our proposed order makes it easier for parents to protect their children’s privacy on Xbox, and limits what informatio­n Microsoft can collect and retain about kids,” said Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’s Bureau of

Consumer Protection.

“This action should also make it abundantly clear that kids’ avatars, biometric data, and health informatio­n are not exempt from COPPA,” Levine added.

The law requires online services and websites directed to children under 13 to notify parents about the personal informatio­n they collect and to obtain verifiable parental consent before collecting and using any personal informatio­n of the children.

From 2015 to 2020, Microsoft retained the data that it collected from children during the account creation process, even when a parent failed to complete the process, according to the complaint.

 ?? AFP ?? The Microsoft logo on a screen at an event in Beijing.
AFP The Microsoft logo on a screen at an event in Beijing.

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