Judge finds that plaintiffs suffered no real harm over Web giant's
bypass of users' privacy controls in the Safari and Internet Explorer
browsers.
A federal judge has dismissed a class-action lawsuit against Google,
finding that the Web giant's browser cookie tracking practices had not
caused them any harm.
The lawsuit, which was filed in February 2012 by users of Web browsers
from Apple and Microsoft, accused Google and three other online
advertising companies of having "tricked" the Web browsers into
accepting cookies that enabled Google to serve the plaintiffs targeted
advertising. The lawsuit was filed soon after it was revealed that
Google used special code to get around users' privacy controls in
Safari and Internet Explorer in order to track users on computers and mobile devices.
While agreeing that the companies bypassed the browsers' privacy
settings, U.S. District Judge Sue Robinson wrote in her 25-page opinion
(see below) Wednesday that the plaintiffs did not demonstrate that they
suffered harm as a result of their personal information being collected
and sold.
"Google did not intercept contents as provided for by the Wiretap Act,"
Robinson wrote in her opinion. "While URLs may provide a description of
the contents of a document, e.g., www.helpfordrunks.com, a URL is a
location identifier and does not 'concern the substance, purport, or
meaning' of an electronic communication."
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