Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Incognito mode isn't quite as private as some people think. (Anadolu via Getty Images) (Anadolu via Getty Images) Google is to ...
To settle a class-action dispute over Chrome’s “Incognito” mode, Google has agreed to delete billions of data records reflecting users’ private browsing activities. In a statement provided to Ars, ...
Google is settling its incognito lawsuit for $0. Instead of monetary compensation, the settlement includes Google deleting data records and making changes to disclosure agreements. Google is deleting ...
What just happened? Google has agreed to delete browsing data that it collected from Chrome users who were in Incognito mode. The move is part of a settlement in a lawsuit that claims the company ...
Google has agreed to delete data that was collected from customers who used the Chrome browser's Incognito mode, settling a class action lawsuit that started in 2020, reports The Wall Street Journal.
Google will destroy “billions” of data entries it collected on Google Chrome users’ private browsing activities to settle a class action lawsuit, and Chrome will enable default settings that prevent ...
Google will delete billions of data records as part of a settlement for a lawsuit that accused the tech giant of improperly tracking the web-browsing habits of users who thought they were browsing the ...
Google will destroy users' browsing data to settle a $5 billion privacy lawsuit about its "incognito" browsing, according to federal court filings. The 2020 class action lawsuit accused the search ...
Google has agreed to delete or anonymize Chrome web browser user records, collected particularly in “Incognito” mode. The search giant has dodged a $5 billion settlement, but the company may not be in ...
Google agreed to delete data points it collected on the internet habits of people using its “incognito” private browsing mode, according to a Monday court filing from lawyers representing consumers ...
Lorrie Cranor is a professor of Computer Science and of Engineering & Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon University. Hana Habib is a graduate research assistant at the Institute for Software Research at ...