Joining the lawsuit filed in December are Alaska, Florida,
Montana, Nevada and Puerto Rico, Texas Attorney General Ken
Paxton said. This brings the number of plaintiffs in the lawsuit
to 15 states and territories.
The lawsuit was one of three filed last year by the federal
government or states against Google.
In announcing Tuesday's amended complaint, Paxton and the other
attorneys general also divulged details about Google's
relationship with Facebook Inc.
"Our coalition looks forward to holding Google accountable for
its illegal conduct and reforming Google’s practices in the
future," Paxton said in a statement. "We are confident Google
will be forced to pay for its misconduct through significant
financial penalties."
Google is fighting the allegations, and a hearing scheduled for
Thursday is expected to include discussion of the company's
petition for a Texas federal court to move the case to
California.
The lawsuit accuses Google of violating the law in how it
dominates the steps in the process of placing ads online. It
alleges Google quietly teams with its closest online advertising
competitor, Facebook, and that it uses the excuse of protecting
users' privacy to act unfairly. Publishers complain that one
result has been lower revenues.
The amended complaint states that Facebook and Google "work
together to identify users using Apple products," without
elaborating. Apple Inc in recent years on its Safari browser and
iPhones has increased ways to block what it views as
privacy-intrusive user tracking by ad tech companies, some of
which have tried to devise circumvention measures.
Google in statement described the new claim as a "meritless"
addition to an "already meritless lawsuit."
Facebook declined to comment, and Apple did not respond to a
request for comment.
The revised complaint also adds that beginning in 2015, Google
could view messages from Facebook's WhatsApp service that users
backed up to Google's Drive cloud storage system.
Google knew users were uninformed about its access, but "did
nothing to correct this misunderstanding," the lawsuit states.
Google Drive gained almost 250 million new users by June 2016
because of the WhatsApp partnership, according to the lawsuit.
Google added in its statement that the lawsuit made a "false
insinuation that we use backed up WhatsApp data for advertising
purposes."
(Reporting by Diane Bartz in Washington and Paresh Dave in
Oakland, Calif.; Editing by Marguerita Choy, Matthew Lewis and
Kim Coghill)
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