Google Chrome Incognito Mode Users Lose Appeal to Pursue $5 Billion in Damages Over Data Collection

Plaintiffs claim that Google continued to collect data from users despite their use of private-browsing in Chrome's "Incognito" mode.

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Consumers suing Alphabet Inc's Google LLC over its data collection practices have lost their early appeal to pursue money damages as a class action seeking billions of dollars.

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Plaintiffs sued Google in 2020, claiming that Google continued to collect data from users despite their use of private browsing in Chrome's "Incognito" mode. The lawsuit seeks at least $5 billion in damages.

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The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco on Wednesday rejected the plaintiffs' bid to appeal a lower court decision last year that denied class-action status for money damages claims against Google.

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The plaintiffs had sought an appeals court hearing on the issue mid-case and can still seek to revive their money damages claims when there is a final judgment. A jury trial is set for November.

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The class-action status would mean the plaintiffs could pursue large-scale claims against Google as a group, as opposed to filing individual claims for monetary damages.

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The damages class would include at least "tens of millions" of Google browser users, court filings indicate. The plaintiffs, whose lawyers include veteran litigator David Boies of Boies Schiller Flexner, had argued in the 9th Circuit that the lower court ruling in December denying class certification on damages "sounds the 'death knell' for many users' damages claims who lack the means to individually litigate this case."

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