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Not child’s play: Germany bans internet-connected ‘spying’ doll Cayla

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The talking doll "My Friend Cayla" displayed at the a toy fair in central London. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

German regulators have banned an internet-connected doll called “My Friend Cayla” that can chat with children, warning on Friday that it was a de facto “spying device”.

The Cayla doll has been banned ... to protect the most vulnerable in our society
Federal Network Agency

Parents were urged to disable the interactive toy by the Federal Network Agency which enforces bans on surveillance devices. “Items that conceal cameras or microphones and that are capable of transmitting a signal, and therefore can transmit data without detection, compromise people’s privacy,” said the agency’s head, Jochen Homann.

“This applies in particular to children’s toys. The Cayla doll has been banned in Germany. This is also to protect the most vulnerable in our society.”

The doll works by sending a child’s audio question wirelessly to an app on a digital device, which translates it into text and searches the internet for an answer, then sends back a response that is voiced by the doll.

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The German regulators in a statement warned that anything a child says, or other people’s conversations, could be recorded and transmitted without parents’ knowledge.

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“A company could also use the toy to advertise directly to the child or the parents,” it said.

“Moreover, if the manufacturer has not adequately protected the wireless connection, the toy can be used by anyone in the vicinity to listen in on conversations undetected.”

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