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You could be owed a £750 payout from Google if you own an iPhone
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You could be owed a £750 payout from Google if you own an iPhone
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You could be owed a £750 payout from Google if you own an iPhone
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UK Supreme Court Urged to Allow Privacy Class Action Against Google
Blocking a proposed British class action against Google, that alleges it secretly tracked millions of iPhone users a decade ago, risks allowing big firms to behave with impunity, a lawyer told the Supreme Court on Thursday.
Hugh Tomlinson, a lawyer for former consumer rights champion and class representative Richard Lloyd, told senior judges that although the case was “novel and innovative,” it was an appropriate way to ensure access to justice and compensation.
“If we are wrong about this, there is no civil remedy,” Tomlinson told the final day of a two-day hearing, adding that pursuing Google with a U.S.-style class action was the only way to attract the necessary commercial funding for a claim.
Plus: Anti-Chocolate Factory campaign says it ll collect all the class-action damages, thank you
Gareth Corfield Fri 30 Apr 2021 // 15:55 UTC Share
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A barrister for the Information Commissioner s Office hinted the regulator would stop enforcing the law on data breaches if the Supreme Court sides with Google in a case about class-action lawsuits.
The startling threat was made on behalf of the ICO by barrister Gerry Facenna QC, who was intervening on the authority s behalf in the Lloyd v Google data protection case. If a large number of data subjects have had their data lost, then they have
per se suffered damage: harm of the type that I described, namely loss of control of their data, Facenna told judges in the UK s highest court. That is the commissioner s view of these provisions, that s the basis on which she takes regulatory action at the moment. If the word damage in this regime does not include mere loss of control, it would have to be t