City
Epaper

Google to face lawsuit over Chrome’s data collection: US court

By IANS | Updated: August 21, 2024 09:45 IST

San Francisco, Aug 21 Tech giant Google will face a class-action lawsuit in the US over alleged data ...

Open in App

San Francisco, Aug 21 Tech giant Google will face a class-action lawsuit in the US over alleged data collection via Chrome browser without users' consent, a court here has ruled.

A federal appeals court in the state of California reversed a December 2022 ruling that dismissed the earlier case against Google.

The lawsuit, filed in 2020, alleged that Google collected data from Chrome users, regardless of whether they enabled Chrome sync.

“The panel reversed the district court’s summary judgment in favour of Google, LLC, in a class action alleging that the company surreptitiously collected users’ data in violation of various state and federal laws, and remanded for further proceedings,” read the court ruling.

According to the lawsuit, the plaintiffs claimed Chrome “intentionally and unlawfully” sent Google browsing history, IP addresses, persistent cookie identifiers, and unique browser identifiers without their explicit permission.

The new ruling explained that “the district court should have reviewed the terms of Google’s various disclosures and decided whether a reasonable user reading them would think that he or she was consenting to the data collection”.

A Google spokesperson said that the company had a general privacy disclosure yet promoted Chrome by suggesting that certain information would not be sent to Google unless a user turned on sync”.

“We disagree with this ruling and are confident the facts of the case are on our side. Chrome Sync helps people use Chrome seamlessly across their different devices and has clear privacy controls,” the Google spokesperson was quoted as saying in reports.

Plaintiffs alleged in their complaint that based on the terms of Google’s Chrome Privacy Notice, their choice not to sync Chrome with their Google accounts meant that certain personal information would not be collected and used by Google.

The district court had held that Google successfully proved that Plaintiffs consented to its data collection.

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

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessWhat is GPay’s Pocket Money Feature? Parents Can Now Monitor, Limit and Approve Kids’ Payments via Google Pay

InternationalBangladesh rights group flags 133 communal violence incidents around elections

NationalKerala girl who went missing while trekking found dead in K'taka’s Chikkamagaluru

InternationalFloods affect tens of thousands across Afghanistan: UN

EntertainmentSteven Spielberg says Christopher Nolan was ‘better’ choice to direct Interstellar

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyAI to boost general trade sales revenues by 15-20 pc: Report

Technology'Womaniya' initiative leads 2.1 lakh women MSEs onto GeM with 13.7 lakh orders

TechnologyKenya adopts India’s DPI to boost governance: Report

TechnologyGold, silver decline nearly 1 pc as profit booking offsets demand

TechnologyGlobal crude oil prices jump over 1 pc amid US-Iran ceasefire