Google settles Photos facial recognition lawsuit for $100 million
to pay $100 million to settle a class action lawsuit accusing the company of violating Illinois' Biometric Information Protection Act through Photos'"Face Grouping" feature. The settlement will let you claim between $200 and $400 if you appeared in a picture on Photos between May 1st, 2015 and April 25th, 2022.
Google supposedly broke the law by collecting and analyzing faces without appropriate notice, asking for"informed" consent or sharing data retention policies with the public. Face Grouping is meant to help you find photos of given people by detecting faces and automatically organizing them into collections., and can object to the settlement terms before August 10th. The final approval hearing is slated for September 28th.
México Últimas Noticias, México Titulares
Similar News:También puedes leer noticias similares a ésta que hemos recopilado de otras fuentes de noticias.
Google to pay $100 million to Illinois residents for Photos’ face grouping featureThe class-action lawsuit against Google has been resolved.
Leer más »
Google May Owe You a Chunk of $100 MillionPlus: The US admits to cyber operations supporting Ukraine, SCOTUS investigates its own, and a Michael Flynn surveillance mystery is solved.
Leer más »
Best wireless earbuds under $100 of 2022Find the best wireless earbuds under $100. We’ve reviewed the top true wireless earbuds so you can find the right ones for your budget.
Leer más »
Australian politician wins defamation fight against GoogleAustralian court orders Google to pay John Barilaro, a former lawmaker, $515,000, saying its failure to take down a YouTuber's 'relentless, racist, vilificatory, abusive and defamatory campaign' of videos drove him out of politics.
Leer más »
These apps with 1B+ downloads on Google Play Store are hot targets for cybercriminalsSeemingly harmless productivity and gaming apps available on the Google Play store are after your banking credentials.
Leer más »
Google ordered to pay Australian politician over defamatory YouTube videosAn Australian court ordered Google to pay former lawmaker John Barilaro more than $500,000, saying its failure to take down a YouTuber's 'relentless, racist, vilificatory, abusive and defamatory campaign' of videos drove him out of politics
Leer más »