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posted by janrinok on Saturday January 14, @09:47PM   Printer-friendly
from the dark-patterns dept.

Massive fines highlight stricter enforcement standards for children in online games:

Epic Games will pay over half a billion dollars to settle two Federal Trade Commission complaints regarding the company's use of children's private information and its use of "dark patterns" to encourage accidental in-game purchases. The penalties—which the FTC says are some of the largest imposed in the organization's history—also come with imposed changes to the way Epic handles purchases and player interactions in its online games.
Copping to COPPA, bringing light to "dark patterns"

The FTC's first complaint alleged that Fortnite "failed to comply with the COPPA (Children's Online Privacy Protection Act) Rule's parental notice, consent, review, and deletion requirements." The alleged violations included turning voice and text chat features on by default for young players, as well as publicly broadcasting their account names in the game.

Epic has recently changed those policies, implementing default settings for players under 18 that limit chat, hide usernames, and allow joining of parties by "invite only." Epic also pointed to this month's rollout of "cabined accounts," which limits full access to online features for young children's accounts until they are verified by an adult.

In a separate complaint, the FTC said that Epic often charged Fortnite players for in-game items without their "express informed consent." The use of "design tricks known as 'dark patterns'" led to "millions of complaints" to Epic and disputes of unauthorized charges with credit card providers, according to the FTC.


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  • (Score: 1) by Runaway1956 on Saturday January 14, @10:13PM (1 child)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Saturday January 14, @10:13PM (#1286890) Homepage Journal

    That should make all of the tech world sit up and take notice. Stop harvesting data, and double damn sure stop harvesting the data of the most vulnerable members of society. Not just children, but the elderly, the mentally challenged, and anyone else who can be identified as vulnerable. I'd extend that to all males and all females if I could.

    --
    Abortion is the number one killed of children in the United States.
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 16, @01:51AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 16, @01:51AM (#1287016)
      I believe actual risk of prison time would discourage CxOs and their underlings more from bad behavior than fines to their companies.

      Heck as an underling if all that happens for following illegal orders is the company gets fined, I might just follow orders but document everything to cover my butt. And when stuff happens said company gets fined.

      But if they start throwing people into prison, I'd start providing all the documentation to show that I was forced to and who forced me; or actually refuse for stuff that I think could still land me in prison.
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