A British iPhone owners’ lawsuit against Google filed in 2017 and which the High Court blocked in 2018 has today been reinstated.
The ‘representative action’ (the UK equivalent of a class action lawsuit) was seeking compensation for every Brit who used an iPhone between June 2011 and February 2012, with the campaign group behind it seeking £500 ($613) per user…
Background
We explained back in 2017 what the case is about.
Google argued that the case should be dismissed because the company used only aggregated data, so there was, it suggested, no breach of individual privacy. The UK High Court accepted this argument and dismissed the claim.
Stanford researcher Jonathan Mayer discovered that although mobile Safari’s default setting blocks cookies from third parties and advertisers, Google and advertising companies Media Innovation Group, Vibrant Media, and Gannett PointRoll fooled mobile Safari into thinking “a person was submitting an invisible form to Google,” letting them in turn install a tracking cookie on users’ iPhones and PCs without consent.
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission fined Google $22.5M for the same issue back in 2012.
iPhone owners’ lawsuit against Google back on
The Google You Owe Us campaign group led by consumer activist Richard Lloyd appealed the dismissal. Bloomberg reports that it has now won the appeal, and the case will proceed.
There is, however, some bad news for iPhone owners hoping to cash in.
On this basis, the court allowed the case to proceed.
Google now plans to seek permission to appeal to the UK’s highest court, the Supreme Court.
The judge said that by tracking and collecting data from users’ browsing history, Google took something of value from them. That meant all users suffered the same loss and could be counted as one group, he said. The customers had no remedy available to them but to file the litigation, Vos said.
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