Ireland’s Data Protection Commission (DPC) announced a €345 million ($370 million) fine against TikTok on downloable erotice gamesSeptember 15, saying that the company had breached privacy laws regarding children’s personal data in the European Union, Reuters reported. The DPC said that TikTok users’ accounts were set as “public” by default, which allowed everyone to access their posts and thus brought various risks to users under 13 years old. Additionally, TikTok did not verify whether the user linked to a child’s account through the “family pairing” feature was actually the child’s parent or guardian, according to the DPC. In November 2020, TikTok implemented enhanced parental controls for family pairing, and by January 2021, the short video platform modified the default setting to “private” for all registered users under the age of 16, the report said. A TikTok spokesperson expressed the company’s disappointment with the ruling, particularly with the size of the penalty, saying many of the allegations raised were no longer applicable as TikTok had implemented measures before the DPC initiated its investigation in September 2021. The DPC has granted TikTok three months to rectify any compliance issues identified in their processes, according to Reuters. [Reuters]
Related Articles
2025-06-26 22:16
582 views
How an Australian VR gaming studio scored a gig with Boeing to train astronauts
For Australian game studio Opaque Space, you could say life has been imitating art recently.The Melb
Read More
2025-06-26 21:37
125 views
3Doodler Create+ review: A 3D
3D printing has spread to many fields since it first took off -- it's used by students as well as cr
Read More
2025-06-26 21:01
2002 views
New iOS 12 feature lets users report unwanted spam texts and calls
With the release of iOS 12, Apple is poised to add a feature that Android users already know well: S
Read More