Audio By Carbonatix
A major European tech regulator has ordered TikTok to pay a €345 million ($368 million) fine after ruling that the app failed to do enough to protect children.
The Irish Data Protection Commission, which oversees TikTok’s activities in the European Union, said Friday that the company had violated the bloc’s signature privacy law.
An investigation by the DPC found that in the latter half of 2020, TikTok’s default settings didn’t do enough to protect children’s accounts. For example, it said, newly-created children’s profiles were set to public by default, meaning anybody on the internet could view them.
TikTok didn’t sufficiently disclose these privacy risks to kids and also used so-called “dark patterns” to guide users toward giving up more of their personal information, the regulator noted.
In another violation of EU privacy law, a TikTok feature designed as a parental control and known as Family Pairing did not require that an adult overseeing a child’s account be verified as the child’s actual parent or guardian, the DPC said.
The lapse meant that theoretically, any adult could weaken a child’s privacy safeguards, the regulator said.
TikTok introduced Family Pairing in April 2020, allowing adults to link their accounts with child accounts to manage screen time, restrict unwanted content and limit direct messaging to children.
The DPC’s decision gives the company three months to rectify its violations and includes a formal reprimand.
TikTok didn’t immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.
‘No longer relevant’
But in a blog post Friday, the company said it “respectfully” disagreed with several aspects of the ruling.
“Most of the decision’s criticisms are no longer relevant as a result of measures we introduced at the start of 2021,” wrote TikTok’s European privacy chief Elaine Fox.
The changes TikTok made in early 2021 included making existing and new accounts private by default for users aged 13 to 15, Fox said. She added that later this month, “we will begin rolling out a redesigned account registration flow for new 16- and 17-year-old users” that will default to private settings.
TikTok did not say Family Pairing would now be verifying an adult’s relationship to the child. But the company said the feature had been strengthened over time with new options and tools. It added that none of the regulator’s findings concluded that TikTok’s age verification measures violated EU privacy law.
In April, TikTok was also fined in the United Kingdom for a number of breaches of data protection law, including misusing children’s personal data.
Latest Stories
-
Free Speech development in Ghana today and its implications for media development
16 minutes -
NACOC to commemorate International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit trafficking
17 minutes -
Dafeamekpor calls for AU early warning system against Xenophobic violence
31 minutes -
South Africa risks undermining its moral authority through Xenophobia – Dafeamekpor
35 minutes -
Dafeamekpor condemns Xenophobic attacks in South Africa, calls for continental action
38 minutes -
Ghana’s new investment law to reduce bureaucracy, strengthen investor confidence – GIPC CEO
42 minutes -
Let’s begin trial in absentia against Ofori-Atta if necessary – PAC Vice Chair
44 minutes -
Ghana to court global investors at FIFA World Cup 2026 through Invest Ghana Business Forums
45 minutes -
I didn’t need parliamentary approval to suspend KATH CEO—Health Minister
49 minutes -
Green Card does not guarantee immunity, but strengthens Ofori-Atta’s legal argument – Amanda Clinton
54 minutes -
Bond market: Turnover rises by 343% to GH¢7.16bn
59 minutes -
GBLA 2026 set to honour business excellence and leadership
1 hour -
Feed Ghana programme targets tomato self-sufficiency to stabilise prices
1 hour -
Intelligence is accumulated experience in motion
1 hour -
MoFA distributes 40k bags of fertilizer, drones to boost food production in Northern Ghana
1 hour