Manawatu Standard

Privacy win may spark

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A win by an Australian watchdog over data collection could see similar litigation become more common in New Zealand.

Australian courts recently found Google’s privacy settings misled consumers over whether their location data was being stored on Android devices because although the informatio­n was in the terms and conditions, it was not clear.

Law firm Bell Gully senior associate Richard Massey said the case would be of interest to New Zealand regulators.

‘‘Past experience has shown the Commerce Commission in New Zealand has quite closely monitored the activities of the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC), and it will certainly have taken an interest in this case.

‘‘The fact that the ACCC has obtained a favourable outcome is likely to embolden the commission to take similar litigation,’’ Massey said.

The ACCC brought the case which focused on two particular settings of the Android devices: web and app activity, and location history. The default settings showed location history as off, however, Google could still obtain location data through the web and app activity setting if it was turned on. The ACCC’S claim was that a reasonable consumer would assume having location history switched to off would protect their location data, although in the privacy and terms section it did explain data could still be collected.

Massey said it was interestin­g the judge did not view a consumer’s acceptance of the terms and conditions as the be-all and end-all. ‘‘Traditiona­lly, the law has tended to find that if you expressly agreed to terms and conditions that you are on the hook for what you have signed up for, regardless of whether you read them or not.

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