Children’s Privacy under DPDPA: The Zero-Tracking Mandate

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Target Audience: EdTech, Gaming, Social Media, and Toy manufacturers. Focus: Protection of minors and technical hurdles.

Introduction: Section 9 of the DPDPA is perhaps the most stringent part of the Act. It treats anyone under 18 as a child and mandates “verifiable parental consent” before any data is processed.

The Three Pillars of Children’s Data Protection:

  1. Verifiable Parental Consent: The burden is on the business to prove that the person giving consent is indeed the parent or legal guardian.
  2. No Tracking or Profiling: Businesses are strictly prohibited from tracking or monitoring the behavior of children or targeting advertisements at them.
  3. No Harmful Processing: Any processing that is “likely to cause any detrimental effect on the well-being of a child” is strictly banned.

Technical Challenges: How do you verify a parent’s identity without collecting more sensitive data (like Aadhaar or Credit Card info)? This is the “Privacy Paradox” that Indian tech firms must solve.

The Mentor’s Take: If your primary users are minors, your monetization model cannot rely on behavioral advertising. You must pivot to subscription-based or contextual advertising models immediately.

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