City
Epaper

Google fined $40 mn for misleading users on Android location tracking

By IANS | Updated: August 12, 2022 16:40 IST

Sydney, Aug 12 The Federal Court in Australia on Friday ordered Google to pay over $40 million in ...

Open in App

Sydney, Aug 12 The Federal Court in Australia on Friday ordered Google to pay over $40 million in penalties for making misleading representations to consumers about the collection and use of their personal location data on Android phones.

According to Australia's Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC), the data was collected between January 2017 and December 2018.

The Court previously found that Google breached the Australian Consumer Law by representing to some Android users that the setting titled "Location History" was the only Google account setting that affected whether Google collected, kept and used personally identifiable data about their location.

In fact, another Google account setting titled "Web & App Activity" also enabled Google to collect, store and use personally identifiable location data when it was turned on, and that setting was turned on by default, the ACCC said in a statement.

"This significant penalty imposed by the Court sends a strong message to digital platforms and other businesses, large and small, that they must not mislead consumers about how their data is being collected and used," said ACCC Chair, Gina Cass-Gottlieb.

Personal location data is sensitive and important to some consumers, and "some of the users who saw the representations may have made different choices about the collection, storage and use of their location data if the misleading representations had not been made by Google," Cass-Gottlieb added.

The ACCC estimated that the users of 1.3 million Google accounts in Australia may have viewed a screen found by the court to have breached the Australian Consumer Law.

Google took remedial steps and had addressed all of the contravening conduct by 20 December 2018, meaning that users were no longer shown the misleading screens.

"Companies need to be transparent about the types of data that they are collecting and how the data is collected and may be used, so that consumers can make informed decisions about who they share that data with," Cass-Gottlieb noted.

The ACCC instituted proceedings against Google and Google Australia in October 2019.

In April 2021, the Federal Court found that Google breached the Australian Consumer Law.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: australiagoogleSydneyWord on macWho dgMicrosoft incUs google & youtubeSk duaDan patelFederal court
Open in App

Related Stories

FootballEnglish Premier League 2025-26 Google Doodle: Search Engine Giant Celebrates Start of Season With Football-Themed

Social ViralAustralia: Meteor Lights Up Skies Over Victoria; Residents Describe ‘Sonic Boom’ (Watch)

MumbaiCyber Fraud in Mumbai: Elderly Woman Loses Rs 98,202 After Calling Fake Customer Care Number Found on Internet

NationalBITS Pilani Placement 2025: Over 80% Students Placed, Average Salary Rises to Rs 19.4 Lakh

InternationalIndian Student Brutally Attacked in Australia: 23-Year-Old Left Unconscious with Severe Facial Fractures in Racist Assault

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndia successfully test-fires Agni-5 ballistic missile, validates strategic capabilities

TechnologyAdvanced therapies, tech key to tackle rare disease burden in India: CDSCO, NITI Aayog

TechnologyGaming worse than drugs, several lost lives after savings wiped out: Ashwini Vaishnaw

TechnologyIndia’s workforce goes AI-first as frontier firms lead transformation: Report

TechnologyEurope sets new records for mosquito-borne West Nile virus, chikungunya disease: ECDC