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by: Anna Kutz
Posted: Jan 1, 2026 / 05:41 PM EST
Updated: Jan 1, 2026 / 06:18 PM EST
(NewsNation) — In a recent settlement, Disney has agreed to pay $10 million in response to claims that it breached federal child privacy regulations on YouTube, as revealed by the Department of Justice on Tuesday.
According to the DOJ, Disney Worldwide Services and Disney Entertainment Operations failed to mark certain YouTube content as “Made for Kids.” This oversight allowed the company to gather data on children without obtaining the necessary parental consent.
The order finalizes a settlement reached in September, which allowed Disney to avoid a trial for the alleged violations.
The $10 million agreement also requires Disney to create a program to “ensure it properly complies” with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Rule privacy law on YouTube.
That means Disney must properly label videos as children’s content, ask parents’ permission for data collection and notify guardians of what has been collected.
Disney’s YouTube channel is “extremely popular” and has garnered billions of views in just the U.S., according to the DOJ.
“The Justice Department is firmly devoted to ensuring parents have a say in how their children’s information is collected and used,” DOJ Assistant Attorney General Brett A. Shumate said in a statement.