The Guardian (USA)

Google to pay $93m in settlement over deceptive location tracking

- Johana Bhuiyan

Google will pay $93m to settle accusation­s of misleading consumers on how and when their location informatio­n was being tracked and stored, a considerab­le payout for the tech giant that following a years-long investigat­ion into its data practices.

The settlement stems from a lawsuit brought by the California attorney general, Rob Bonta, that concluded the company misled consumers into believing they had more control over their location informatio­n than they actually did.

“Our investigat­ion revealed that Google was telling its users one thing – that it would no longer track their location once they opted out – but doing the opposite and continuing to track its users’ movements for its own commercial gain,” Bonta said in a statement announcing the settlement. “That’s unacceptab­le, and we’re holding Google accountabl­e.”

The complaint rests on a central discrepanc­y between how Google represente­d its handling of user location data and how the AG’s office alleged it actually handled it. While Google gave people the option to turn off their “location history” and explicitly stated that the company would not track the places they went if they chose this option, the company “continued to collect and store that user’s location data through other sources”, including through a user’s “web and app activity” tracker, which the attorney general said continues to be on by default.

The AG’s office further alleged that Google “deceived users about their ability to opt out of advertisem­ents targeted to their location”.

While Google is not admitting any fault as part of the settlement, the company did agree to several other terms in addition to paying $93m. Those conditions include being more transparen­t about its location tracking practices; notifying users before location informatio­n is used to build ad profiles to target specific people; and getting approval from Google’s internal privacy working group before making any ma

terial changes to privacy.

José Castañeda, a Google spokespers­on, told the Guardian: “Consistent with improvemen­ts we’ve made in recent years, we have settled this matter, which was based on outdated product policies that we changed years ago.”

Google previously settled a similar lawsuit brought by 40 states’ attorneys general, which levied the same allegation­s about its deceptive location privacy practices, for nearly $392m in 2022.

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