London court throws out lawsuit against Google over medical records
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[May 19, 2023]
LONDON (Reuters) - Google on Friday defeated a lawsuit brought on
behalf of 1.6 million people over medical records provided to the U.S.
tech giant by a British hospital trust.
The Royal Free London NHS Trust transferred patient data to Google's
artificial intelligence firm DeepMind Technologies in 2015 in relation
to the development of a mobile app designed to analyse medical records
and detect acute kidney injuries.
Britain's data protection watchdog, the Information Commissioner's
Office, said in 2017 that the Royal Free, which is part of the public
National Health Service (NHS), misused patient data when it provided the
information to DeepMind.
Alphabet Inc unit Google and DeepMind were sued last year by Royal Free
patient Andrew Prismall on behalf of 1.6 million people for alleged
misuse of private information.
The companies argued in March that the case is "bound to fail" as there
was no prospect of establishing that all 1.6 million claimants' private
information was misused, or that they had any expectation of privacy in
relation to the information.
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The Google logo is pictured atop an
office building in Irvine, California, U.S. August 7, 2017.
REUTERS/Mike Blake//
Judge Heather Williams ruled on
Friday that the case should not proceed, agreeing the case is "bound
to fail".
"I conclude that each member of the claimant class does not have a
realistic prospect of establishing a reasonable expectation of
privacy in respect of their relevant medical records," she said in a
written ruling.
(Reporting by Sam Tobin; Editing by Sachin Ravikumar)
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