VTech
VTech (an abbreviation of its full name Video Technology Limited) is a Hong Kong-based global supplier of electronic learning products from infancy to preschool[2][3][4] and the world's largest manufacturer of cordless phones.[2][3][4]
Type | Public |
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SEHK: 0303 | |
Industry | Electronics industry |
Founded | October 1976 (as Video Technology Limited) |
Headquarters | Tai Ping Industrial Centre Block 1, 23rd Floor; 57 Ting Kok Tai Po N.t. Rd., 23/f, , |
Area served | Worldwide |
Products |
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Revenue | US$1,898.9 million (FY2014) |
US$203.3 million (FY2014) | |
Number of employees | Around 30,000 |
Subsidiaries | |
Website | www.vtech.com |
VTech Holdings Ltd. | |||||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 偉易達集團 | ||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 伟易达集团 | ||||||||||||
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VTech | |||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 偉易達 | ||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 伟易达 | ||||||||||||
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Name and listing
The company was originally named "Video Technology Limited" in reference to the company's first product, a home video game console. In 1991, it was renamed "VTech Holdings Limited" to reflect a wider portfolio of products.[5]
The company was first listed in Hong Kong in June 1986 under the name "Video Technology International (Holdings) Limited". It was privatised and delisted from The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong Limited in 1990.[6]
VTech obtained a primary listing on the London Stock Exchange in 1991. In 1992, the company relisted on The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong Limited,[7] establishing a dual primary listing with London. In 1993, the company established its American depositary receipt programme.
VTech was delisted voluntarily from the London Stock Exchange on 7 October 2008.[8] It also terminated its American Depositary Receipt programme with effect from 21 January 2011.
History
VTech was founded in Hong Kong in October 1976 by two local entrepreneurs, Allan Wong (Chi-Yun)[9][10] and Stephen Leung.[5] When the first single-chip microprocessor, the Intel 4004, became available in the early 1970s, the company saw the potential it offered for portable consumer electronics products. Wong & Leung set up a small factory in To Kwa Wan, with a US$40,000 investment and a staff of 40 people. In the first year, turnover was less than $1 million.[5]
VTech initially focused on developing video games. In 1977, the company created its first home TV game console, a version of Pong. Since only consumers in North America and Europe could afford such items, the company targeted primarily these markets.
The United Kingdom was chosen as the first market for Pong, as Hong Kong and the UK used the same standard for television systems. In 1978, the founders introduced LED games they had developed to buyers from RadioShack in the US, which were sold under the RadioShack brand.
VTech then began to build its own brand. Starting in the early 1980s, a line of electronic games would be manufactured. VTech unveiled its first electronic learning product, called Lesson One, at the New York Toy Fair, in February 1980.[5] It taught children basic spelling and maths. An exclusive version under the name Computron was offered to Sears, with the product being prominently advertised by Sears, in its catalogue, which was a popular shopping guide.[11][12]
Next, VTech made the video game console CreatiVision. An electronic product with an external projector from French company Ludotronic was adapted by VTech and sold as the VTech ProScreen in 1984, following the release of VTech's Gamate and Variety handheld products the year prior.
VTech then branched out into personal computers, including a series of 8-bit TRS-80 competition computers named the Laser 200, 210, and 310, as well as a series of IBM compatible PCs both beginning in 1983, followed by Apple II compatible computers, beginning in 1985, including a model called Laser 128. After acquiring PC manufacturer Leading Technology of Oregon in 1992,[13] VTech exited the personal computer market in 1997 due to tight competition.[14]
In 1985, the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) allocated the frequency band 900 MHz to ISM (industrial, scientific, and medical) devices. Taking advantage of this, VTech began development on a cordless telephone, using the 900 MHz band, and in 1991 introduced the world's first fully digital 900 MHz cordless telephone.[15][16]
In 2000, to expand its cordless phone business, VTech acquired the consumer telephone business of Lucent Technologies. The acquisition also gave VTech the exclusive right for 10 years to use the AT&T brand in conjunction with the manufacture and sale of wireline telephones and accessories in the United States and Canada.[17] Although the acquisition increased sales of VTech's telecommunication products by 50%, it led to operating losses and write-offs. The company issued a profit warning in March 2001 and launched a broad restructuring plan.[18] By the financial year 2002, the company had turned around the business and returned to profitability.[19]
Today, VTech's core businesses remain cordless telephones and electronic learning products. Its contract manufacturing services – which manufactures various electronic products on behalf of medium-sized companies, have also become a major source of revenue. The company has diversified geographically, selling to North America, Europe, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and Africa.[20]
Core businesses
Electronic learning products (ELPs)
VTech was among the pioneers of the ELP industry, beginning in 1980 with a unit designed to teach children basic spelling and mathematics.[21]
Today VTech makes both individual standalone products and platform products that combine a variety of consoles with different software.[9]
Its V.Smile TV Learning System, which was launched in 2004, established what the company calls platform products as an important category within its ELPs.[22] Latest additions to the platform product range are MobiGo,[23] InnoTab Max,[24][25] Kidizoom Smart Watch[26] and InnoTV (StorioTV in Europe Excluding United Kingdom).[27][28]
Telecommunication (TEL) products
VTech introduced the world's first 900 MHz and 5.8 GHz cordless phones in 1991 and 2002 respectively. According to MZA Ltd,[29] the company is the world's largest manufacturer of cordless telephones.
In North America, VTech is the largest player in the industry, according to MarketWise Consumer Insights LLC,[30] selling both AT&T and VTech branded phones and accessories. Outside North America, VTech mainly supplies products to fixed-line telephone operators, brand names, and distributors on an original design manufacturing (ODM) basis.
Contract manufacturing services (CMS)
VTech started manufacturing products for other brand names on an original equipment manufacturing (OEM) basis in the 1980s and CMS became one of the company's core businesses in the early 2000s.
VTech has been identified as one of the world's top 50 electronics manufacturing services providers,[31] providing electronics manufacturing services for medium-sized companies. VTech's CMS has focused on four main product categories: professional audio equipment, switching mode power supplies, wireless products, and solid-state lighting.[32]
Criticism
A June 2012 report from the Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights[33] said the working conditions in the VTech factories in China failed to meet the legal standards and could be described as sweatshops. VTech strongly rejected the allegations in a statement issued on 22 June 2012.[34]
Controversies
2015 data breach
In November 2015, Lorenzo Bicchierai, writing for Vice magazine's Motherboard, reported that VTech's servers had been compromised and the corporation was victim to a data breach which exposed personal data belonging to 6.3 million individuals, including children, who signed up for or utilized services provided by the company related to several products it manufactures.[35] Bicchierai was contacted by the unnamed attacker in late November, during the week before Thanksgiving, at which point the unnamed individual disclosed information about the security vulnerabilities with the journalist and detailed the breach.[36][37]
Bicchierai then reached out to information security researcher Troy Hunt to examine data provided by the attacker to Bicchierai, and to confirm if the leak was indeed authentic and not an internet hoax. Hunt examined the information and confirmed it appeared to be authentic. Hunt then dissected the data in detail and published the findings on his website. According to Hunt, VTech's servers failed to utilize basic SSL encryption to secure the personal data in transit from the devices to VTech's servers; that VTech stored customer information in unencrypted plaintext, failed to securely hash or salt passwords.[38]
The attack leveraged an SQL injection to gain privileged root access to VTech servers. Once privileged access was acquired, the attacker exfiltrated the data, including some 190 gigabytes of photographs of children and adults, detailed chat logs between parents and children which spanned over the course of years, and voice recordings, all unencrypted and stored in plain text. The attacker shared some 3,832 image files with the journalist for verification purposes, and some redacted photographs were published by the journalist. Commenting on the leak, the unidentified hacker expressed their disgust with being able to so easily obtain access to such a large trove of data, saying: "Frankly, it makes me sick that I was able to get all this stuff. VTech should have the book thrown at them" and explained their rationale for going to the press was because they felt VTech would have ignored their reports and concerns.[39][40]
VTech corporate security was unaware their systems had been compromised and the breach was first brought to their attention after being contacted by Bicchierai prior to the publication of the article. Upon notification, the company took a dozen or so websites and services offline.[36][39]
In an FAQ published by the company, they explain some 4,854,209 accounts belonging to parents and 6,368,509 profiles belonging to children had been compromised. The company further claims the passwords had been encrypted, which is contrary to reports by the independent security researcher contacted by Vice. The company indicated they were working with unspecified "local authorities".[38][41] VTech subsequently brought in the information security services company FireEye to manage incident response and audit the security of their platform going forward.[42]
Mark Nunnikhoven of Trend Micro criticized the company's handling of the incident and called their FAQ "wishy-washy corporate speak".[43]
United States Senators Edward Markey and Joe Barton, co-founders of the Bi-Partisan Congressional Privacy Caucus, issued an open letter to the company inquiring as to why and what kind of information belonging to children is stored by VTech and how they use this data, security practices employed to protect that data if children's information is shared or sold to third parties and how the company complies with the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act.[44]
In February 2016, Hunt publicized the fact that VTech had modified its Terms and Conditions for new customers so that the customer acknowledges and agrees that any information transmitted to VTech may be intercepted or later acquired by unauthorized parties.[45][46]
In January 2018 the US Federal Trade Commission fined VTech $650,000 for the breach, around $0.09 per victim.[47]
References
- Baby monitor
- "Hong Kong's 40 Richest". Forbes. 5 January 2012.
- "VTech joins fray with tablets for children". South China Morning Post. 12 February 2011.
- "Company Research - VTech Holdings" (PDF). Maybank Kim Eng. 24 March 2014. p. 7.
- "VTech Global Site".
- "Corporate History | VTech". VTech. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
- "HKEx - Investment Service Centre".
- "Company announcement – Cancellation of Listing" (PDF). Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
- "Silicon's Search For Youth". Forbes. 31 January 2011. p. 1.
- "Transcript: Allan Wong, Chairman and Group CEO, VTech". CNN. 18 October 2006.
- "Silicon's Search For Youth". Forbes. 31 January 2011. p. 2.
- "Kids' computers through the ages". Computerworld UK. 18 July 2011.
- Veilleux, C. Thomas (20 April 1992). "While Comdex roars, industry shakes out". HFD. BridgeTower Media Holding Company. 66 (16): 110 – via Gale.
- "VTech Holdings Ltd. – Company Profile, Information, Business Description, History, Background Information on VTech Holdings Ltd". Reference for Business.
- "New Cordless Phones Offer Privacy, Remarkable Clarity". Chicago Tribune. 4 June 1993.
- Michael Rose (15 June 1992). "VTECH phone is no bump analog; this baby's digital". Business Journal-Portland.
- "VTech buys Lucent's consumer phone business for $113m". ElectronicsWeekly.com. 19 January 2000.
- "VTech Issues Profit Warning, Plans to Restructure Business". Wall Street Journal Online.
- "VTech reverses losses to post $11.2m profit". Reuters. 27 June 2002.
- "Annual Report 2012" (PDF). VTech. pp. 16–19.
- "The VTech phenomenon". Forbes. 19 October 1998.
- "V.Smile TV Learning System for kids". Gizmag. 21 January 2004.
- "VTech MobiGo 2 and InnoTab 2 Now Available for Pre-Order". VTech. 18 July 2012. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
- "VTech Welcomes 4th Generation Children's Learning Tablets to Award-Winning InnoTab Family, Including First to Feature Android Learning Content". VTech. 5 June 2014.
- "VTech brings teacher-endorsed Android games to its InnoTab Max tablet for kids". Gizmag. 8 June 2014.
- "There Is Now a 'Smartwatch' for Kids". Mashable. 18 February 2014.
- "VTech Global Site".
- "VTech Toys US Site".
- "Annual Report 2014" (PDF). VTech. p. 5.
- "Annual Report 2014" (PDF). VTech. p. 4.
- "The MMI Top 50 for 2014". Manufacturing Market Insider. Archived from the original on 17 March 2006. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
- "VTech Global Site". VTech.
- "Reports". Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights. 20 June 2012.
- "Media Statement". VTech. 22 June 2012.
- "Vtech, having leaked 6.3m kids' data, has a new EULA disclaiming responsibility for the next leak / Boing Boing". boingboing.net. 9 February 2016. Retrieved 8 January 2018.
- Franceschi-Bicchierai, Lorenzo (27 November 2015). "One of the Largest Hacks Yet Exposes Data on Hundreds of Thousands of Kids". motherboard.vice.com. Vice magazine. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- Rhysider, Jack. "Ep 2: The Peculiar Case of the VTech Hacker". Darknet Diaries. Darknet Diaries. Retrieved 5 May 2018.
- Hunt, Troy (28 November 2015). "When children are breached – inside the massive VTech hack". troyhunt.com. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- Franceschi-Bicchierai, Lorenzo (30 November 2015). "Hacker Obtained Children's Headshots and Chatlogs From Toymaker VTech". motherboard.vice.com. Vice magazine. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- Whittaker, Zack (30 November 2015). "VTech hack gets worse: Chat logs, kids' photos taken in breach". ZDNet.com. Ziff Davis. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- VTech press release (3 December 2015). "FAQ about Data Breach on VTech Learning Lodge (last update: December 3, 2015, HKT)". vtech.com. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- Mukherjee, Supantha; Finkle, Jim (3 December 2015). "Digital toymaker VTech hires FireEye to secure systems after hack". Reuters.com. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- Nunnikhoven, Mark (27 November 2015). "Hacked? Don't Respond Like This". linkedin.com. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- Finkle, Jim (2 December 2015). "Congress wants VTech details on child data it collects". Reuters.com. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- "Tech Tent". BBC. 12 February 2016.
- Hunt, Troy (9 February 2016). "No, VTech cannot simply absolve itself of security responsibility". troyhunt.com.
- "Vtech covered up a leak of data on 6.3m children and their families, then tried to force us not to sue - the FTC just fined them $0.09/kid / Boing Boing". boingboing.net. 8 January 2018. Retrieved 8 January 2018.