It only took nine years, but Google+ may finally be worth something to users. Specifically, up to $12.
Past users of the now-defunct social media platform were hipped to a potential windfall Tuesday morning by an ominous looking email that helpfully assured wary recipients: "You are not being sued." At issue is at least one "bug" which revealed non-public user data to third-party developers, and a resulting class-action lawsuit.
According to the litigation website, you may qualify for a piece of the $7.5 million settlement if you are in the U.S., had a consumer Google+ account between January 1, 2015 and April 2, 2019, and had your "non-public Profile Information exposed as a result of the software bugs Google announced on October 8, 2018 and December 10, 2018."
You have until Oct. 8, 2020, to file, and can do so here.
Now, as is often the case with these things (remember Equifax?), there are a few important caveats. For starters, whether or not you get 12 whole dollars depends on how many people file a claim. As the the settlement info page explains, $12 is the maximum amount you may receive. You might just get pennies.
SEE ALSO: Google to kill Google+ early after exposing personal data of more than 50 million
Also, the settlement needs to get final approval by the courts. That decision will be made on Nov. 19, but as it has already been granted preliminary approval, it should (theoretically) be approved with little fuss.
So fill out your claim, maybe get your $12, and then happily forget you ever willingly handed over your personal data to Google+ in the first place.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Google+ settlement explained, and how to file a claim-啜英咀华网
sitemap
文章
71
浏览
64
获赞
4
Tumblr loses nearly 30 percent of its page views after banning porn
Tumblr has suffered a massive drop in traffic since banning porn late last year.In November 2018, TuJennifer Lawrence is a germaphobe and thinks 'dick is dangerous'
If you haven't noticed, Jennifer Lawrence is on a press tour, which means we get treated with quirkyTwitter forgets dead people, suspends plan to delete inactive accounts
Twitter forgot about dead people. The social media giant awkwardly copped to that fact late WednesdaStudent who survived school shooting mixes humor with activism tweets
In the days since the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that killed 17 people, studenDyson's V11 Torque Drive is 20 percent more powerful than Cyclone V10
The future of vacuuming is cordless.A year after halting all new designs of its wired stand-up vacuuDigital magazines will no longer be hosted on Google News
Surprise, surprise — Google News is done hosting digital recreations of print magazines.The anMacBook Pro keep shutting down? Apple has a weird fix.
After a number of MacBook Pro users complained about their computers randomly shutting down, Apple oPeople are weirded out by 'creepy' interview with New Zealand's PM
New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern certainly has been getting worldwide attention.But an inFacebook insists new Workplace tool was for 'preventing bullying,' not suppressing unions
Facebook wants to empower you to make the world more open and connected as you suppress your workersJennifer Lawrence is a germaphobe and thinks 'dick is dangerous'
If you haven't noticed, Jennifer Lawrence is on a press tour, which means we get treated with quirkyEveryone calm down about Chris Evans' moustache for a second
What people do with their faces is their own decision, you guys.SEE ALSO: These aCommentator says Chinese skiers 'all look the same' at Winter Olympics
The ears of Australian viewers of the Winter Olympics pricked up on Thursday night, when a commentatDyson's V11 Torque Drive is 20 percent more powerful than Cyclone V10
The future of vacuuming is cordless.A year after halting all new designs of its wired stand-up vacuuBJ Novak tweeting at Mindy Kaling is so pure you could filter water through it
If you are not already aware of the incredible friendmance that is Mindy Kaling and BJ Novak, pleaseI have seen the AI dystopia, and it looks like Neon's artificial humans
It's an odd feeling when your own science fiction catches up with you. A decade away I wrote a short