FTC-PR-240222-1

FTC-PR-240222-1 (Feb. 22, 2024)


FTC News Release - FTC-PR-240222-1

FTC-PR-240222-1

FTC Order Will Ban Avast from Selling Browsing Data for Advertising Purposes, Require It to Pay $16.5 Million Over Charges the Firm Sold Browsing Data After Claiming Its Products Would Block Online Tracking – FTC says despite its promises to protect consumers from online tracking, Avast sold consumers’ browsing data to third parties

The Federal Trade Commission will require software provider Avast to pay $16.5 million and prohibit the company from selling or licensing any web browsing data for advertising purposes to settle charges that the company and its subsidiaries sold such information to third parties after promising that its products would protect consumers from online tracking.

In its complaint, the FTC says that Avast Limited, based in the United Kingdom, through its Czech subsidiary, unfairly collected consumers’ browsing information through the company’s browser extensions and antivirus software, stored it indefinitely, and sold it without adequate notice and without consumer consent. The FTC also charges that Avast deceived users by claiming that the software would protect consumers’ privacy by blocking third party tracking, but failed to adequately inform consumers that it would sell their detailed, re-identifiable browsing data. The FTC alleged Avast sold that data to more than 100 third parties through its subsidiary, Jumpshot. 


Date: Feb. 22, 2024

Accessed: Sep. 6, 2024

Source URL: https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2024/02/ftc-order-will-ban-avast-selling-browsing-data-advertising-purposes-require-it-pay-165-million-over

Categories:

PDF Notes:

  • The PDF viewer below disables the links inside the PDF file.
  • The PDF file may be downloaded if you wish.
  • All links within the PDF Download are fully functional.

FTC-PR-240222-1