Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

SecurityWeekSecurityWeek

Privacy

California Settles With Google Over Location Privacy Practices for $93 Million

Search giant Google has agreed to a $93 million settlement with the state of California over its location-privacy practices.

Search giant Google agreed to a $93 million settlement with the state of California on Thursday over its location-privacy practices.

The settlement follows a $391.5 million settlement with 40 states, reached in November 2022, to resolve an investigation into how the company tracked users’ locations.

The states’ investigation was sparked by a 2018 Associated Press story, which found that Google continued to track people’s location data even after they opted out of such tracking by disabling a feature the company called “location history.”

“Our investigation revealed that Google was telling its users one thing — that it would no longer track their location once they opted out — but doing the opposite and continuing to track its users’ movements for its own commercial gain. That’s unacceptable, and we’re holding Google accountable with today’s settlement,” Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement.

As part of the settlement, in which Google admitted no wrongdoing, the company also agreed to a number of restrictions, including providing more transparency about location tracking, disclosing to users that their location information may be used for ad personalization, and showing additional information to users when enabling location-related account settings.

“Consistent with improvements we’ve made in recent years, we have settled this matter, which was based on outdated product policies that we changed years ago,” Google said in a statement.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Related: South Korea Fines Google, Meta Over Privacy Violations

Related: Spotify Fined $5 Million for Breaching EU Data Rules

Related: Norway Threatens $100,000 Daily Fine on Meta Over Data

Written By

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing for the latest cybersecurity threats, trends, and expert insights.

Click to comment

Trending

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing to stay informed on the latest threats, trends, and technology, along with insightful columns from industry experts.

Join this live webinar as we break down why email-layer defenses alone can't keep pace with the modern phishing ecosystem, how agentic AI is changing the capacity equation for security teams, and more.

Register

This year's summit will help organizations learn how to utilize tools, controls, and design models needed to properly secure cloud environments. Interact with leading solution providers and other end users facing similar challenges in securing a variety of cloud deployments.

Register

People on the Move

Mark Carter has been appointed Chief Information Security Officer at Socure.

Spektrum Labs has named Mark Cravotta Chief Operating Officer.

Philip Martin has joined Uber as Chief Information Security Officer.

More People On The Move

Expert Insights

Four decades of incident response experience suggest that exploits are often the symptom, not the root cause, of today’s cybersecurity failures.

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing to stay informed on the latest cybersecurity news, threats, and expert insights. Unsubscribe at any time.