givesomefucks ,

Wilson last visited the DMV site last summer when she was renewing her disability parking placard online. At that time, she did not know that Google obtained her personal information when she filled out her application, communicated directly with the DMV, searched on the site, or clicked on various URLs, all of which she said revealed that either she had a disability or believed she had a disability.

Her complaint alleged that Google secretly gathers information about the contents of the DMV's online users’ searches, logging sensitive keywords like "teens," "disabled drivers," and any "inquiries regarding disabilities."

Google "knowingly" obtained this information, Wilson alleged, to quietly expand user profiles for ad targeting, "intentionally" disregarding DMV website users' "reasonable expectation of privacy."

So it's not like they were skimming the medical info provided, but if you went to the DMV page, Google knew what you clicked.

So they pulled all that.

But because they didn't set it up to exclude anything about disability plates, it violated a specific law in California from the 90s.

It's valid, although I doubt Google intended to gather info specifically on people with disabilities, they don't respect the law to ensure they follow it, they grab everything and pay settlements later if they need to.

This is America

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • kbinchat
  • All magazines