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"description": "Google violated state law by collecting users’ location, browsing, and biometric data, Texas' attorney general said.",
"path": "/texas-finalizes-1-3b-privacy-settlement-with-google/",
"publishedAt": "2025-11-03T17:16:00.000Z",
"site": "https://broadbandbreakfast.com",
"tags": [
"_a statement_",
"_in May_",
"_with Meta_",
"_in 2024_",
"_Texas Data Privacy and Security Act_",
"_$700 million_",
"_$8 million_"
],
"textContent": "WASHINGTON, Nov. 3, 2025 – Google will pay $1.375 billion to the state of Texas under a settlement finalized Friday, resolving two lawsuits that alleged the company misused Texans’ data.\n\n“This historic $1.375 billion price tag for Google’s misconduct sends a clear warning to all of Big Tech that I will take aggressive action against any company that misuses Texans’ data and violates their privacy,” Attorney General **Ken Paxton** said in _a statement_ Oct. 31.\n\nThe settlement covers claims that Google tracked users’ locations even when settings suggested otherwise, misled consumers about the privacy of its “Incognito” browsing mode, and collected biometric identifiers such as voiceprints and face-geometry without proper consent.\n\n“For years, Google secretly tracked people’s movements, private searches and even their voiceprints and facial geometry,” Paxton said _in May_ when the settlement was first announced. “I fought back and won.”\n\nThe Texas deal surpasses any prior single state settlement with Google in the data privacy realm and echoes Texas’s earlier $1.4 billion settlement _with Meta_ over unlawful biometric data collection.\n\nTexas established a dedicated team within the Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division _in 2024_ to lead aggressive enforcement of state and federal privacy laws.\n\nThe division was charged with enforcing the _Texas Data Privacy and Security Act_, which took effect on July 1, 2024, and gave residents new rights over how companies collect and use their personal information. That includes the right to know what information companies hold, to correct or delete it, and to opt out of targeted advertising, data sales, and algorithmic profiling.\n\nThe law is enforced exclusively by the Attorney General, who can levy civil penalties of up to $7,500 per violation following a 30-day cure window.\n\nThis settlement follows Texas’s earlier _$700 million_ and _$8 million_ settlements with Google resolving state antitrust and deceptive advertising claims.",
"title": "Texas Finalizes $1.3B Privacy Settlement With Google",
"updatedAt": "2026-03-11T03:20:24.245Z"
}