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Amazon Agrees To Pay Over $30M To Settle Alexa, Ring Spying Claims Despite Disagreement With FTC

 In a shocking revelation, the FTC unveiled a disturbing privacy scandal involving Amazon’s Ring doorbell camera unit. 

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) has agreed to pay $30.8 million in settlements with the Federal Trade Commission over allegations of spying on customers through Ring doorbell cameras and violating children’s privacy rights with Alexa recordings. 

 In a shocking revelation, the FTC unveiled a disturbing privacy scandal involving Amazon’s Ring doorbell camera unit. 

According to the commission’s court filings, a former employee of Ring spied on female customers for several months in 2017, surreptitiously placing cameras in their bedrooms and bathrooms, reported Reuters. 

As a result, the FTC announced a $5.8 million settlement with Amazon, holding the company accountable for privacy violations.  

Amazon’s device chief Dave Limp demonstrates a new feature where users can ask language assistant Alexa why she did something when they can’t understand the actions of the software.  Amazon has also faced an additional $25 million settlement over allegations of violating children’s privacy rights through its voice assistant, Alexa.  PHOTO BY ANDREJ SOKOLOW/GETTY IMAGES

Amazon also faced an additional $25 million settlement over allegations of violating children’s privacy rights through its voice assistant, Alexa. 

According to the federal court filing in Seattle that outlined a separate settlement, the e-commerce giant failed to delete Alexa recordings at parents’ request and retained them longer than necessary. 

“While we disagree with the FTC’s claims regarding both Alexa and Ring, and deny violating the law, these settlements put these matters behind us,” Amazon stated. 

Notably, the fines levied on Amazon — counting $30.8 million — amount to a fraction of the company’s impressive first-quarter profit of $3.2 billion.  

The recent FTC settlements reflect the agency’s ongoing endeavors to ensure accountability among big tech companies, as critics argue that their policies prioritize profits from data collection over safeguarding privacy, the report noted. 

Produced in association with Benzinga

Edited by Saba Fatima and Alberto Arellano

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