Texas, Indiana and the District of Columbia sued Alphabet Inc’s Google yesterday over what they called deceptive location-tracking practices that invade users’ privacy.
“Google falsely led consumers to believe that changing their account and device settings would allow customers to protect their privacy and control what personal data the company could access,” Washington, DC Attorney-General Karl Racine’s office said in a statement. “The truth is that contrary to Google’s representations it continues to systematically surveil customers and profit from customer data. Google’s bold misrepresentations are a clear violation of consumers’ privacy.”
Washington state Attorney-General Bob Ferguson also said his office is filing a lawsuit against Google.
Google spokesperson Jose Castaneda responded that the “attorneys-general are bringing a case based on inaccurate claims and outdated assertions about our settings”.
“We have always built privacy features into our products and provided robust controls for location data,” he said. “We will vigorously defend ourselves and set the record straight.”
Texas Attorney-General Ken Paxton alleged that Google misled consumers by continuing to track their location even when users sought to prevent it.
Google has a “Location History” setting and informs users if they turn it off “the places you go are no longer stored”, Texas said.
Google “continues to track users’ location through other settings and methods that it fails to adequately disclose”, Texas said.
Ferguson noted that in 2020, Google made nearly $150bnfrom advertising.
“Location data is key to Google’s advertising business. Consequently, it has a financial incentive to dissuade users from withholding access to that data,” his office said in a statement yesterday.
In May 2020, Arizona filed a similar lawsuit against Google over its collection of location data of users.
That lawsuit is pending.