"Users Have A Right To Know": Class Action Lawsuit Sheds Light Onto Google's Opaque Data-Mining Practices
"Users Have A Right To Know": Class Action Lawsuit Sheds Light Onto Google's Opaque Data-Mining Practices
BY TYLER DURDEN MONDAY, NOV 21, 2022 - 06:00 PM
It turns out that big tech companies may not be as committed
to your privacy as their PR departments would have you believe - go figure.
The latest example of this reality appears to be Google, who was revealed last week
by MarketWatch to have data-mining practices that
employees say that they sometimes “don’t understand and can’t describe”.
The report cited a class action lawsuit alleging that Google
"violated promises not to collect data of those using the browser without
signing into their Google accounts". Documents recently became unsealed in
the case, offering a look into how privacy is discussed internally at
Google.
In the lawsuit, one unnamed employee seemed to make it clear
that Google's privacy policies are opaque, stating: “I don’t have the
faintest idea what Google has on me. The fact what we can’t explain what
we have […] on users is probably our biggest challenge."
“Users have a right to know,” one employee said. Another
commented: "The reasons we provide are so high level and abstract that
they don’t make sense to people.” A third employee said: “Consent is no longer
consent if you think of ads as a product."
Additional employees seemed to solidify the ethos within the
company. A former employee who recently left the company said: “I am more
than willing to believe this is how executives talked to each other."
“Even people I was organizationally close to, knew well, and
respected, were finding ways to justify that stuff to themselves,” they said
about the company's privacy teams. “The individual contributors [on
Google’s privacy teams] are always idealistic people. Some of these quotes
[from the case] look to me like things that idealistic people would say; others
look like things management would say when the idealistic people aren’t
around.”
When asked by MarketWatch, Google responded to the report by
stating that “privacy controls have long been built into our services and
we encourage our teams to constantly discuss or consider ideas to improve
them.”
As the report notes, ads are a material revenue generator for
Google, making up $209.5 billion in sales for the company in its 2021 fiscal
year.
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