Google is in trouble over location tracking.
According to a report by the Washington Post, the state of Arizona sued Google on Wednesday for allegedly collecting data about users' whereabouts even if they had turned off location tracking.
Google's Android allows users to turn off location tracking in its settings. But according to the lawsuit, filed by Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, Android devices continued to record and keep location records in some apps, such as mapping, weather, and search apps, even if location tracking was disabled. To fully prevent their devices from collecting location data, Android users had to turn off a second setting which was hard to find.
The lawsuit also alleges that Google's Android sometimes changed the default tracking settings without seeking user consent or even informing them.
“Users, including in Arizona, have come to rely on Google’s products and services on a daily basis. At the same time, through these deceptive and unfair acts and practices, Google makes it impractical if not impossible for users to meaningfully opt-out of Google’s collection of location information, should the users seek to do so,” the complaint reads.
The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages for Arizona residents, but the final tally might go up to hundreds of millions of dollars, Brnovich said. Per Arizona laws, Google could also be fined up to $10,000 for each violation.
SEE ALSO: Google's Pixel 4a may have been delayed yet again“The Attorney General and the contingency fee lawyers filing this lawsuit appear to have mischaracterized our services. We have always built privacy features into our products and provided robust controls for location data. We look forward to setting the record straight,” Google Spokesperson Jose Castaneda told Mashable.
The lawsuit stems from a 2018 Arizona probe into Google's location tracking practices. It's definitely not the first of its kind: In July 2018, Google was fined $5 billion for Android antitrust breach, and in March 2019, Google was fined $1.7 billion for anticompetitive ad practices. In Sept. 2019, the FTC fined Google's YouTube $170 million for violating the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, and in Dec. 2019, France fined Google $166 million for anti-competitive behavior.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Arizona sues Google for tracking users' location even when they turned tracking off-如火燎原网
sitemap
文章
61993
浏览
9746
获赞
7365
We shot Portrait mode video with this iPhone app
Ever take a Portrait mode photo on your iPhone and wish you could do the same with video?Well, you'rFaceTime helps Good Samaritan rescue opossum on streets of NYC
Deborah Altman was walking with a friend in the trendy downtown NYC neighborhood of SoHo when somethFood sounds on TikTok like crunching and chewing make me anxious
I love Food TikTok. I just wish it would give my ears a break. I spend way too much time on the appWaze adds EV charging station locations to its driving map
For the first time you can see where to charge up while using the Waze app for driving directions. TIt's way too easy to accidentally reply to Instagram Stories
I used to love Instagram Stories.After long days at work, mindlessly tapping through Stories on theSouth Korea will use VR to assess whether elderly drivers can get a license
South Korea is planning to introduce conditional driver's licenses for the elderly by 2025 — a'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for September 1
So you're here for today's Quordleanswer. That probably means you already finished Wordle today befo'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for September 8
Short workweeks go so fast, don't they? It's already Thursday, and you're about to wind down the weeThe first photos of Harry and Meghan's new baby are finally here
Well, the wait is finally over. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have put us out of our misery and revTicketmaster disaster: The 11 best tweets from Taylor Swift fans' very bad week
It's been a weird week to be on Twitter. The whole thing is kind of falling apart under Elon Musk'sHertz orders 100,000 Teslas to build the largest EV rental fleet in the U.S.
Tesla cars might be hard to buy in the near future. U.S. rental car company Hertz has placed an ordeBiden administration says we need a Bill of Rights for AI
By now, stories about racistAI and facial recognitionleading to false arrestshave become way too comDark Sky mercifully gives Android users 1 more month until shutdown
Dark Sky has been sold to Apple, there's no changing that.However, Android users of the service willThousands of Tesla Model X and S vehicles recalled over airbag defect
Some Tesla Model X and S vehicles from 2021 could have an airbag issue.A recall filed through the NaApple's new Android app lets you check for AirTag stalkers without an iPhone
Apple has released a new Android app allowing users to detect whether there's an unfamiliar AirTag f