Google faces $425.7 mn in damages for 10 yrs of smartphone snooping in US
The verdict reached in San Francisco federal court followed a more than two-week trial in a class-action case covering about 98 million smartphones operating in the United States for a decade.
PTI
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Photo: Pixabay
San Francisco, 5 Sep
A federal jury has ordered Google to pay $425.7 million for
improperly snooping on people's smartphones during a nearly decade-long period
of intrusions.
The verdict reached in San Francisco federal court followed a
more than two-week trial in a class-action case covering about 98 million
smartphones operating in the United States between 1 July, 2016, through 23 September,
2024.
That means the total damages awarded in the five-year-old
case works out to about $4 per device.
Google had denied that it was improperly tracking the online
activity of people who thought they had shielded themselves with privacy
controls. The company maintained its stance even though the eight-person jury
concluded Google had been spying in violation of California privacy laws.
“This decision misunderstands how our products work, and we
will appeal it,” Google spokesman Jose Castaneda said Thursday. “Our privacy
tools give people control over their data, and when they turn off
personalisation, we honour that choice.”
The lawyers who filed the case had argued Google had used
the data they collected off smartphones without users' permission to help sell
ads tailored to users' individual interests — a strategy that resulted in the
company reaping billions in additional revenue. The lawyers framed those ad
sales as illegal profiteering that merited damages of more than $30 billion.
Even though the jury came up with a far lower calculation
for the damages, one of the lawyers who brought the case against Google hailed
the outcome as a victory for privacy protection.
“We hope this result sends a message to the tech industry
that Americans will not sit idly by as their information is collected and
monetised against their will,” said attorney John Yanchunis of law firm Morgan
& Morgan.
The San Francisco jury verdict came a day after Google
avoided the US Department of Justice's attempt to break up the company in a
landmark antitrust case in Washington, DC, targeting its dominant search
engine.
A federal judge who had declared Google's search engine to
be an illegal monopoly ordered less radical changes, including requiring the
company to share some of its search data with rivals.
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