
Originally published byThe Verge
General Motors has agreed to pay $12.75 million to settle a California data privacy lawsuit that accused the automaker of selling driver location and driver data, as reported earlier by Reuters. In a proposed settlement filed on Friday, GM agreed to stop selling customer information to data brokers for five years and must give California drivers the ability to stop its OnStar service from collecting location data.
GM became the subject of several lawsuits after a 2024 report by The New York Times revealed that automakers, including GM, had been sharing driving data - such as speed, hard braking, and rapid acceleration - with data brokers an …
🇺🇸
More news from United StatesUnited States
NORTH AMERICA
Related News
How Braze’s CTO is rethinking engineering for the agentic area
10h ago
Amazon Employees Are 'Tokenmaxxing' Due To Pressure To Use AI Tools
21h ago

Implementing Multicloud Data Sharding with Hexagonal Storage Adapters
15h ago

DeepMind’s CEO Says AGI May Be ~4 Years Away. The Last Three Missing Pieces Are Not What Most People Think.
15h ago

CCSnapshot - A Claude Code Configs Transfer Tool
21h ago