
Google settled a lawsuit alleging that its voice-activated assistant improperly spied on smartphone users and violated their privacy by paying $68 million. The preliminary settlement was reached by Google to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging that the Google Assistant illegally captured private conversations without user authorisation.
U.S. District Judge Beth Labson Freeman must approve a preliminary class action settlement that was submitted late on Friday night at the federal court in San Jose, California.
After Google Assistant was activated, smartphone users accused Google, a division of Alphabet, of unlawfully capturing and sharing private conversations in order to give them targeted advertisements.
Similar to Apple’s, Google Assistant is built to respond when users use “hot words” like “Hey Google” or “Okay Google”, opening a new tab called Siri.
After Google Assistant misinterpreted their remarks as “hot words”, or “false accepts”, users objected to seeing advertisements.
In December 2024, Apple and smartphone users came to a similar $95 million settlement.
According to court documents, Google agreed to avoid the danger, expense, and uncertainty of litigation even though the company denied any wrongdoing. On Monday, the Mountain View, California-based business declined to comment.
According to court documents, the settlement includes individuals who purchased Google devices or were the victims of fraudulent offers since May 18, 2016.
Plaintiffs’ attorneys may request up to one-third of the settlement money, or around $22.7 million, as compensation.
More details on the settlements show that the allegations were that, in order to offer tailored ads, plaintiffs accused Google of unlawfully recording and disseminating private audio recordings, frequently in response to “false accepts” (when the gadget misinterprets sounds as trigger phrases like “Hey Google”).
The eligibility as of mid-May in 2016 to the present is for people who bought Google products with Assistant capabilities or encountered fraudulent activations that are covered by the settlement.
The payouts claimants may be allowed to apply for up to three gadgets; however, the precise sum per individual has not yet been determined.
Legal bills of approximately $22.7 million, or up to one-third of the fund, are set aside for legal bills.
Google’s stance has been that Google said it agreed to avoid the expenses and dangers of a protracted trial and denied any wrongdoing.
U.S. District Judge Beth Labson Freeman in San Jose, California, still needs to approve the settlement.
For the notification, after being accepted, qualified users will probably receive a notification through the Google Home/Assistant app or an email at the address linked to their Google account.
Action Needed: In contrast to certain other settlements, users will need to submit a claim in order to get their share of the $68 million fund.
This action comes after Apple paid $95 million to settle allegations that its Siri assistant similarly recorded users without permission in December 2024.
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