Google bound to face mass legal action in UK over data exploitation
Tech giant, Google
is being taken to court, accused of collecting the personal data of millions of
users, in the first mass legal action of its kind in Britain.
It focuses
on allegations that Google unlawfully harvested information from 5.4 million UK
users by bypassing privacy settings on their iPhones.
The group
taking action - Google You Owe Us - is led by ex-Which director Richard Lloyd.
He estimates
the users could get as much as "several hundred pounds each".
The case
centres on how Google used cookies - small pieces of computer text that are
used to collect information from devices in order to deliver targeted ads.
The
complaint is that for several months in 2011 and 2012 Google placed ad-tracking
cookies on the devices of Safari users which is set by default to block such
cookies.
The Safari
workaround, as it became known, affected a variety of devices but the UK case
will focus on iPhone users.
Mr Lloyd
said: "In all my years speaking up for consumers, I've rarely seen such a
massive abuse of trust where so many people have no way to seek redress on
their own."
He added:
"Through this action, we will send a strong message to Google and other
tech giants in Silicon Valley that we're not afraid to fight back."
Mr Lloyd
said Google had told him that he must "come to California" if he
wanted to pursue legal action against the firm.
"It is
disappointing that they are trying to hide behind procedural and jurisdictional
issues rather than being held to account for their actions," he said.
According to
BBC, Google said: "This is not new - we have defended similar cases
before. We don't believe it has any merit and we will contest it."
Those
affected do not have to pay any legal fees or contact any lawyers as they will
automatically be part of the claim, unless they wish to opt out.
The case is
being supported by law firm Mishcon de Reya, which specialises in large-scale
litigation.
Although
there is no precedent for such a mass legal action in the UK, there is in the
US.
Google
agreed to pay a record $22.5m (£16.8m) in a case brought by the US Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) on the same issue in 2012.
The firm
also settled out of court with a small number of British consumers.
The case
will be heard in the High Court, probably in spring 2018.
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