Google has promised to delete billions of records of browsing activity in its Incognito mode,Watch Scandal Sin in the City (2001) after a class action lawsuit filed at a California federal court.
In December 2023, the tech giant decided to settle the case, which claimed that Google collects user data from the private mode available on the Chrome browser. The case, Brown v Google, was filed in 2020 by Google account holders who accused the company of "surreptitious tracking" of user data, and declared Google "'one stop shopping' for any government, private, or criminal actor who wants to undermine individuals’ privacy, security, or freedom." The filing read:
SEE ALSO: Facebook secretly looked at Snapchat, Amazon, and YouTube user data, documents revealGoogle tracks and collects consumer browsing history and other web activity data no matter what safeguards consumers undertake to protect their data privacy. Indeed, even when Google users launch a web browser with "private browsing mode" activated (as Google recommends to users wishing to browse the web privately), Google nevertheless tracks the users’ browsing data and other identifying information.
Under the settlement, Google said it will delete billions of data records and also provide greater transparency of the data it collects, letting users know what data is collected each time "incognito mode" is launched. These have already been implemented, with Chrome's private browser displaying updated information. For the next five years, Google will additionally block third-party cookies as a part of the settlement.
The plaintiffs asked for $5 billion in damages, but the settlement holds no payment from Google. Individual users can instead pursue damages by filing their own complaints against Google in U.S. state courts. 50 people have already pursued this.
José Castañeda, a Google spokesperson, said in a statement to CNN, "We are pleased to settle this lawsuit, which we always believed was meritless. We never associate data with users when they use incognito mode. We are happy to delete old technical data that was never associated with an individual and was never used for any form of personalization."
The attorney representing consumers, David Boies, added in a statement that the settlement is "a historic step in requiring honesty and accountability from dominant technology companies".
Topics Google
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Did Elon Musk push former FAA leader out? Trump admin responds after deadly plane crash
Huawei is running out of display suppliers as Samsung and LG bail out, report says
Trump's latest flagged drew Twitter's wrath after just 90 minutes
Living near YouTube bro Jake Paul seems like hell on earth
Use Your Gaming Laptop and Play On Battery Power? Is It Possible?
Mindy Kaling is reportedly pregnant with her first child and fans are rejoicing
FBI and police departments say wildfire conspiracy theories spreading on Facebook aren't true
An internet prankster is trolling Donald Trump with literal Russian ties
They met on Tumblr, and their relationship outlasted their accounts
The French culture minister's Twitter was taken over by a 13
We'll always, er, sorta, have the Paris Climate Agreement
The $80,000 Lucid Air: It'll be nice when we can drive it
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。