Amazon secretly tracked Californian consumers via cellphones, lawsuit alleges

Amazon.com was sued on Wednesday by consumers who accused the retailing giant of secretly tracking their movements through their cellphones, and selling data it collects.

According to a proposed class action in San Francisco federal court, Amazon obtained “backdoor access” to consumers’ phones by providing tens of thousands of app developers with code known as Amazon Ads SDK to be embedded in their apps.

This allegedly enabled Amazon to collect an enormous amount of timestamped geolocation data about where consumers live, work, shop and visit, revealing sensitive information such as religious affiliations, sexual orientations and health concerns.

“Amazon has effectively fingerprinted consumers and has correlated a vast amount of personal information about them entirely without consumers’ knowledge and consent,” the complaint said.

The complaint was filed by Felix Kolotinsky of San Mateo, California, who said Amazon collected his personal information through the “Speedtest by Ookla” app on his phone.

He said Amazon’s conduct violated California’s penal law and a state law against unauthorized computer access, and seeks unspecified damages for millions of Californians.

Amazon, based in Seattle, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Lawyers for the plaintiff did not immediately respond to requests for additional comment.

Individuals and regulators are increasingly complaining that companies are trying to profit from information gathered without consent from cellphones.

On Jan. 13, the state of Texas sued Allstate for allegedly tracking drivers through cellphones, using the data to raise premiums or deny coverage, and selling the data to other insurers.

Allstate said its data collection fully complies with all laws and regulations. At least eight similar private lawsuits against Allstate have been subsequently filed.

The case is Kolotinsky v Amazon.com Inc et al, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California, No. 25-00931.

—Jonathan Stempel, Reuters

https://www.fastcompany.com/91269436/amazon-tracked-californian-consumers-cellphones-lawsuit?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 7mo | 29 janv. 2025, 22:50:07


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

AI passed the aesthetic Turing Test, raising big questions for art

Pick up an August 2025 issue of Vogue, and you’ll come across an advertisement for the brand Guess featur

24 août 2025, 09:20:14 | Fast company - tech
This word-search website is the brain boost you never knew you needed

Language is the original technology, the tool we’ve all used to coordinate with each other for thousands of years. Our success in life—both professionally and in relationships—depends on it.

24 août 2025, 00:10:13 | Fast company - tech
Dropbox Passwords is shutting down. Do this before your passwords are deleted for good

It’s been a bad year for password managers. First, Microsoft announced earlier this summer that its popular Microsoft Authenticator app would be

23 août 2025, 10:10:09 | Fast company - tech
The TikTok dorm water panic is officially here

Instead of worrying about making friends or keeping up with their studies, new college students have a different concern on their minds: dorm water.

“Praying dorm water doesn’t ruin my h

22 août 2025, 20:20:07 | Fast company - tech
Reddit—and a dash of AI—do what Google and ChatGPT can’t

Hello, everyone, and thanks once again for reading Fast Company’s Plugged In.

For years, some of the world’s most

22 août 2025, 20:20:06 | Fast company - tech