Consumers Launch Landmark Legal Case Against Google Snooping
Consumers Launch Landmark Legal Case Against Google Snooping
AsiaNet 51952
LONDON, Jan. 27/ PRN=KYODO JBN/--
A group of internet users has launched a landmark privacy case against
Google for undermining the security settings on Apple's Safari browser to track
online usage covertly.
In the first case of its kind in the UK, a number of people with concerns
about Google's behaviour have decided to take action and are forming a
campaigning group called Safari Users Against Google's Secret Tracking.
They have instructed the law firm, Olswang, to coordinate the claims and
are marking Data Privacy Day tomorrow (Jan 28) by launching a Facebook page to
provide information to the many other people who might also have been affected.
The Facebook page can be found at
http://www.facebook.com/SafariUsersAgainstGooglesSecretTracking
The claims centre around tracking cookies, which had been secretly
installed by Google on the computers and mobile devices of people using Apple's
Safari internet browser.
The first claimant to issue proceedings, 74-year-old Judith Vidal-Hall,
said: "Google claims it does not collect personal data but doesn't say who
decides what information is 'personal'. Whether something is private or not
should be up to the internet surfer, not Google. We are best placed to decide,
not them."
Through its DoubleClick adverts, Google designed a code to circumvent
privacy settings in order to deposit the cookies on computers in order to
provide user-targeted advertising. The claimants thought that cookies were
being blocked on their devices because of Safari's strict default privacy
settings and separate assurances being given by Google at the time. This was
not the case.
The practice was only stopped when an academic researcher noticed Google's
activity and published an expose in the United States. Google was subsequently
found to be in violation of an existing order from the US Federal Trade
Commission and was fined a record $22.5million.
Olswang say that this action breached their clients' confidence and privacy
and are now seeking damages, disclosure and an apology from the company.
Dan Tench, a Partner at Olswang, said: "Google has a responsibility to
consumers and should be accountable for the trust placed in them. We hope that
they will take this opportunity to give Safari users a proper explanation about
what happened, to apologise and, where appropriate, compensate the victims of
their intrusion."
For information on joining the claim, email daniel.tench@olswang.com
Media enquiries: Olswang Press Office on +44(0)20-7067-3046.
Source: Olswang LLP
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