Enterprise-Record (Chico)

DC, 3 states sue Google over user privacy

- By Marcy Gordon

The District of Columbia and three states are suing Google for allegedly deceiving consumers and invading their privacy by making it nearly impossible for them to stop their location from being tracked.

In the lawsuit filed Monday in a District of Columbia court, D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine alleges Google has “systematic­ally” deceived consumers about how their locations are tracked and used. He also says the internet search giant has misled users into believing they can control the informatio­n the company collects about them.

“In reality, consumers who use Google products cannot prevent Google from collecting, storing and profiting from their location,” the lawsuit says. Google has “an unpreceden­ted ability to monitor consumers’ daily lives.”

Google makes it impossible for users to opt out of having their sensitive and valuable location data tracked, the suit alleges.

The attorneys general of Texas, Indiana and Washington state are filing similar lawsuits in their state courts, according to Racine’s office.

“Google’s business model relies on constant surveillan­ce of its users,” his office said in a news release. The suit asserts that Google has “a powerful financial incentive to obscure the details” of its location-data collection and to make it difficult for consumers to opt out.

It says location data is a key part of its digital advertisin­g business that generated $150 billion in revenue for Google’s parent company, Alphabet Inc., in 2020.

The company, based in Mountain View, is disputing the claims.

“The attorneys general are bringing a case based on inaccurate claims and outdated assertions about our settings,” Google spokespers­on Jose Castaneda said in a statement. “We have always built privacy features into our products and provided robust controls for location data.”

The company will defend itself and “set the record straight,” Castaneda said.

Google says that in recent years it has made several improvemen­ts to make location data easy to manage and understand, and has minimized the amount of data stored.

The lawsuits are the latest in a raft of legal salvos against the tech giant, whose search engine accounts for an estimated 90% of web searches worldwide.

In December 2020, 10 states led by Texas filed a federal suit against Google accusing it of “anticompet­itive conduct” in the online advertisin­g industry, including a deal to manipulate sales with rival Facebook.

In October 2020, the U.S. Justice Department joined by 11 states filed a landmark antitrust suit against Google for allegedly abusing its dominance in online search and advertisin­g. The suit asked the court to order structural changes “as needed” for Google, opening the door to possible fundamenta­l changes such as a spinoff of its Chrome browser.

European regulators in recent years have imposed multibilli­on-dollar fines on Google over competitio­n issues, in an effort to curb its clout on the continent.

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