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Texas Sues Google for Allegedly Collecting, Using Biometric Data Without Explicit Consent

The suit accuses the company of collecting information through products such as Google Photos, Google Assistant and Nest Hub Max.

Marcos Cabello
Based in Boston, Marcos Cabello has been a personal finance reporter for NextAdvisor and CNET. Marcos has covered cryptocurrency, investing, banking, and the US economy, among other personal finance subjects. If you don't find Marcos behind his computer screen, you'll probably find him behind another screen, playing the newest Nintendo Switch title, streaming the latest TV show or reading a book on his Kindle.
Marcos Cabello
Silhouette of a person holding their phone over Google logo

Texas Attorney General Paxton alleges Google violated the state's privacy law. 

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Google was hit with a lawsuit in Texas on Thursday over allegations that the company collected millions of Texans' biometric identifiers, including facial and voice recognition information, without their explicit consent.

The suit, which accuses Google of violating a state consumer protection law, accuses the internet company of using products and services like Google Photos, Google Assistant and Nest Hub Max to collect the information.

"Google's exploitation of the personal information of Texans for its own commercial interests is a knowing violation of the state's Capture or Use of Biometric Identifier Act," state Attorney General Ken Paxton's office said in a statement.

That Texas law provides fines up to $25,000 per violation, and the lawsuit alleges that millions of people were potentially affected. The math adds up quickly: Google could potentially face a penalty in the billions.

Google didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.