All sent and received e-mails in Gmail will be analyzed, says Google
Google added a paragraph to its terms of service as of Monday to tell customers that, yes, it does scan e-mail content for advertising and customized search results, among other reasons. The change comes as Google undergoes a lawsuit over its e-mail scanning, with the plaintiffs complaining that Google violated their privacy.
E-mail users brought the lawsuit against Google in 2013, alleging that the company was violating wiretapping laws by scanning the content of e-mails. The plaintiffs’ complaints vary, but some of the cases include people who sent their e-mails to Gmail users from non-Gmail accounts and nonetheless had their content scanned. They argue that since they didn’t use Gmail, they didn’t consent to the scanning.
US District Judge Lucy Koh refused Google’s motion to dismiss the case in September. Koh also denied the plaintiffs class-action status in March on the grounds that the ways that Google might have notified the various parties of its e-mail scanning are too different, and she could not decide the case with a single judgment.
This is the full text of Google’s terms of service addition related to e-mail scanning:
Our automated systems analyze your content (including e-mails) to provide you personally relevant product features, such as customized search results, tailored advertising, and spam and malware detection. This analysis occurs as the content is sent, received, and when it is stored.
While the new text makes the scanning practices very clear, the issue at hand for many of the plaintiffs in Google’s lawsuit is whether non-Gmail users are obligated to be familiar, or were familiar, with the Gmail terms of service even though they were not users themselves. The specific mention of “received” content suggests Google may not want the burden of warning non-Gmail users that e-mails sent to Gmail will be scanned.
by Casey Johnston – Apr 16 2014, 6:35am UST
E-mail users brought the lawsuit against Google in 2013, alleging that the company was violating wiretapping laws by scanning the content of e-mails. The plaintiffs’ complaints vary, but some of the cases include people who sent their e-mails to Gmail users from non-Gmail accounts and nonetheless had their content scanned. They argue that since they didn’t use Gmail, they didn’t consent to the scanning.
US District Judge Lucy Koh refused Google’s motion to dismiss the case in September. Koh also denied the plaintiffs class-action status in March on the grounds that the ways that Google might have notified the various parties of its e-mail scanning are too different, and she could not decide the case with a single judgment.
This is the full text of Google’s terms of service addition related to e-mail scanning:
Our automated systems analyze your content (including e-mails) to provide you personally relevant product features, such as customized search results, tailored advertising, and spam and malware detection. This analysis occurs as the content is sent, received, and when it is stored.
While the new text makes the scanning practices very clear, the issue at hand for many of the plaintiffs in Google’s lawsuit is whether non-Gmail users are obligated to be familiar, or were familiar, with the Gmail terms of service even though they were not users themselves. The specific mention of “received” content suggests Google may not want the burden of warning non-Gmail users that e-mails sent to Gmail will be scanned.
by Casey Johnston – Apr 16 2014, 6:35am UST
Comments
Post a Comment