Key Points
- Google and its parent company Alphabet have settled a class action lawsuit over privacy concerns.
- The plaintiffs alleged the internet giant was tracking millions of users, even when they were in 'incognito' mode.
- Settlement terms were not disclosed, but the lawsuit was seeking US$5 billion ($7.3 billion).
Google and its tech conglomerate parent company Alphabet have agreed to settle a lawsuit claiming it secretly tracked the internet use of millions of people who thought they were doing their browsing privately.
US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in Oakland, California, put a scheduled 5 February 2024 trial in the proposed class action on hold on Thursday, after lawyers for Google and for consumers said they had reached a preliminary settlement.
The lawsuit had sought at least US$5 billion ($7.3 billion).
Settlement terms were not disclosed, but the lawyers said they have agreed to a binding term sheet through mediation, and expected to present a formal settlement for court approval by 24 February 2024.
Neither Google nor lawyers for the plaintiff consumers immediately responded to requests for comment.
The plaintiffs alleged that Google's analytics, cookies and apps let the Alphabet unit track their activity even when they set Google's Chrome browser to 'incognito' mode and other browsers to 'private' browsing mode.
They said it turned Google into an "unaccountable trove of information" by letting the company learn about their friends, hobbies, favourite foods, shopping habits, and "potentially embarrassing things" they seek out online.
In August, Rogers rejected Google's bid to dismiss the lawsuit.
She said it was an open question whether Google had made a legally binding promise not to collect users' data when they browsed in private mode.
The judge cited Google's privacy policy and other statements by the company that suggested limits on what information it might collect.
Filed in 2020, the lawsuit covered "millions" of Google users since June 1 2016, and sought at least US$5,000 ($7,300) in damages per user for violations of federal wire-tapping and California privacy laws.