Jury Finds Google Liable for Using Personal Data
By Reuters | 03 Sep, 2025
A federal jury found Google liable for $425 million in damages for continuing to use personal data after users had turned off tracking.
People walk next to a Google logo during a trade fair in Hannover Messe, in Hanover, Germany, April 22, 2024. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo
A federal jury determined on Wednesday that Alphabet's Google must pay $425 million in a class action lawsuit that accused it of continuing to collect data for millions of users who had switched off a tracking feature in their Google account, a spokesperson for the plaintiffs' lawyer said.
The verdict comes after a trial in the federal court in San Francisco over allegations that Google over an eight-year period accessed users' mobile devices to collect, save, and use their data, violating privacy representations under its Web & App Activity setting . The consumers had been seeking more than $31 billion in damages.
The class action, filed in July 2020, claimed that Google continued to collect users' data even with the setting turned off through its relationship with apps such as Uber, Venmo and Meta's Instagram that use certain Google analytics services.
A spokesperson for Google confirmed the verdict.
(Reporting by Deborah Sophia in Bengaluru, Luc Cohen in New York and Kenrick Cai in San Francisco; Editing by David Bario)
Recent Articles
- Anthropic Allowed to Release Mythos AI Model to 'Tusted' US Organizations
- Apple Seeks Approval to Buy from Blacklisted Chinese Company to Ease Memory Crunch
- China's Industrial Profits Stay Resilient on Factories, Exports
- Getting Fit Pt. 2 - Raising Our Floor
- South Korea Survives World Cup Scare, Advances to Round of 32
- SpaceX Targets US Consumers with Starlink Mobile Service Push
- Former First Lady Kim Keon Hee Gets 7-Year Jail Term for Bribery
- Iran Reasserts Right to Control Hormuz Passage After Ship Hit Near Oman
- Trump's Cutoff of Clean Energy Tax Credit Drives Rush of New Projects Before Costs Soar
- US May Goods Trade Deficit Widened Sharply on Imports Surge
