Amazon to Pay $25 Million Over Alexa Privacy Violations

Amazon will have to fork out $25 million (£20 million) to settle allegations that its Alexa voice assistant violated children’s privay rights.

The company agreed to pay the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) after it was accused of failing to delete Alexa recordings when parents requested it

According to The BBC:.

It was found to have kept hold of sensitive data for years.

Amazon’s doorbell camera unit Ring will also pay out after giving employees unrestricted access to customers’ data.

Ring will pay $5.8 million (£4.6m) to authorities, according to a filing in federal court in the District of Columbia.

According to the FTC complaint regarding Alexa, Amazon “prominently and repeatedly assured its users, including parents, that they could delete voice recordings collected” by the system.

But the company did not do this, keeping data for years and using it unlawfully to help improve its Alexa algorithm, the complaint said.

In a statement, Samuel Levine, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, accused Amazon of “misleading parents, keeping children’s recordings indefinitely, and flouting parents’ deletion requests”.

The company “sacrificed privacy for profits”, he added.

Similarly, the FTC said Ring – which Amazon bought in 2018 – allowed “thousands of employees and contractors” to watch recordings of customers’ private spaces.

They were able to view and download customers’ sensitive video data for their own purposes, the body said.

Amazon told the BBC in a statement that “Ring promptly addressed the issues at hand on its own years ago, well before the FTC began its inquiry”.

But according to the complaint, one employee viewed thousands of video recordings belonging to female users of Ring cameras that “surveilled intimate spaces in their homes such as their bathrooms or bedrooms”.

The employee was only stopped once their actions were spotted by a colleague, it said.

“Ring’s disregard for privacy and security exposed consumers to spying and harassment,” Mr Levine said. “The FTC’s order makes clear that putting profit over privacy doesn’t pay.”

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