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No. 10046241
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Patrick Calhoun v. Google LLC
No. 10046241 · Decided August 20, 2024
No. 10046241·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
August 20, 2024
Citation
No. 10046241
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
PATRICK CALHOUN; ELAINE No. 22-16993
CRESPO; MICHAEL HENRY;
CORNICE WILSON; RODNEY D.C. No. 4:20-cv-
JOHNSON; CLAUDIA KINDLER, 05146-YGR
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
OPINION
v.
GOOGLE, LLC,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of California
Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted July 19, 2024
San Francisco, California
Filed August 20, 2024
Before: MILAN D. SMITH, JR., MARK J. BENNETT,
and ANTHONY D. JOHNSTONE, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Milan D. Smith, Jr.
2 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
SUMMARY *
Data Collection
The panel reversed the district court’s summary
judgment in favor of Google, LLC, in a class action alleging
that the company surreptitiously collected users’ data in
violation of various state and federal laws, and remanded for
further proceedings.
Plaintiffs are a group of Google Chrome users who chose
not to sync their Chrome browsers with their Google
accounts while browsing the web. As they allege in their
complaint, Plaintiffs believed, based on the terms of
Google’s Chrome Privacy Notice, that their choice not to
sync Chrome with their Google accounts meant that certain
personal information would not be collected and used by
Google. The district court held that Google successfully
proved that Plaintiffs consented to its data collection.
The panel explained that the district court should have
reviewed the terms of Google’s various disclosures and
decided whether a reasonable user reading them would think
that he or she was consenting to the data collection. By
focusing on “browser agnosticism” instead of conducting the
reasonable person inquiry, the district court failed to apply
the correct standard. Viewed in the light most favorable to
Plaintiffs, browser agnosticism is irrelevant because nothing
in Google’s disclosures is tied to what other browsers do.
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 3
Because applying the correct standard reveals disputes
of material fact regarding whether “reasonable” users of
Google’s product consented to Google’s data collection
practices, the panel remanded the issue of consent—
assuming a plaintiff class is certified—to the district court
for trial.
COUNSEL
Matthew W.H. Wessler (argued), Gupta Wessler LLP,
Washington, D.C.; Neil K. Sawhney, Gupta Wessler LLP,
San Francisco, California; Jason O. Barnes, Simmons Hanly
Conroy, St. Louis, Missouri; Eric S. Johnson and Jennifer M.
Paulson, Simmons Hanly Conroy, Alton, Illinois; Thien An
Vinh Truong, Simmons Hanly Conroy, New York, New
York; Amy E. Keller, Adam J. Levitt, and Adam Prom,
DiCello Levitt LLP, Chicago, Illinois; Corban S. Rhodes and
David A. Straite, DiCello Levitt LLP, New York, New York;
Lesley Weaver, Bleichmar Fonti & Auld LLP, Oakland,
California; for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Andrew H. Schapiro (argued) and Joseph H. Margolies,
Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP, Chicago, Illinois;
Stephen Broome, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP,
New York, New York; Diane Doolittle, Quinn Emanuel
Urquhart & Sullivan LLP, Redwood Shores, California;
Alyssa Olson and Viola Trebicka, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart
& Sullivan LLP, Los Angeles, California; Christopher G.
Michel, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP,
Washington, D.C.; Jeffrey M. Gutkin, Cooley LLP, San
Francisco, California; for Defendant-Appellee.
Jeffrey R. White and Sean Domnick, American Association
for Justice, Washington, D.C.; Saveena Takhar, Consumer
4 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
Attorneys of California, Sacramento, California; for Amici
Curiae American Association for Justice and Consumer
Attorneys of California.
Kyle D. Highful, Assistant Solicitor General; Bill Davis,
Deputy Solicitor General; Lanora C. Pettit, Principal Deputy
Solicitor General; Aaron L. Nielson, Solicitor General;
Brent Webster, First Assistant Attorney General; Ken
Paxton, Attorney General of Texas; Office of the Attorney
General, Austin, Texas; Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General of
Alaska; Kris Mayes, Attorney General of Arizona; Kathleen
Jennings, Attorney General of Delaware; Anne E. Lopez,
Attorney General of Hawaii; Theodore E. Rokita, Attorney
General of Indiana; Brenna Bird, Attorney General of Iowa;
Daniel Cameron, Attorney General of Kentucky; Jeff
Landry, Attorney General of Louisiana; Anthony G. Brown,
Attorney General of Maryland; Dana Nessel, Attorney
General of Michigan; Lynn Fitch, Attorney General of
Mississippi; Aaron D. Ford, Attorney General of Nevada;
Raul Torrez, Attorney General of New Mexico; Drew H.
Wrigley, Attorney General of North Dakota; Dave Yost,
Attorney General of Ohio; Marty J. Jackley, Attorney
General of South Dakota; Sean D. Reyes, Attorney General
of Utah; Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General of Virginia; for
Amici Curiae the State of Texas and 18 Other States.
Alan J. Butler, Sara Geoghegan, and Suzanne Bernstein,
Electronic Privacy Information Center, Washington, D.C.;
for Amicus Curiae Electronic Privacy Information Center.
Cory L. Andrews and John M. Masslon II, Washington
Legal Foundation, Washington, D.C.; for Amicus Curiae
Washington Legal Foundation.
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 5
Stephanie A. Joyce, Potomac Law Group PLLC,
Washington, D.C.; for Amicus Curiae The Computer &
Communications Industry Association.
OPINION
M. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-Appellants Patrick Calhoun, Elaine Crespo,
Michael Henry, Cornice Wilson, Rodney Johnson, and
Claudia Kindler brought this class action lawsuit against
Defendant-Appellee Google, LLC, alleging that the
company surreptitiously collected users’ data in violation of
various state and federal laws. The district court granted
summary judgment in favor of Google, holding that Google
had successfully proven that Plaintiffs consented to its data
collection. For the reasons explained below, we reverse and
remand.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs are a group of Google Chrome users who
“chose not to ‘Sync’ their [Chrome] browsers with their
Google accounts while browsing the web from July 27, 2016
to the present.” As they allege in their complaint, Plaintiffs
believed that their choice not to sync Chrome with their
Google accounts meant that certain “personal information”
would not be collected and used by Google. Their belief was
based on the terms of Google’s “Chrome Privacy Notice,”
which “describes features that are specific to Chrome,” and
states in relevant part:
You don’t need to provide any personal
information to use Chrome, but Chrome has
6 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
different modes you can use to change or
improve your browsing experience. Privacy
practices are different depending on the mode
that you’re using.
Basic Browser Mode
The basic browser mode stores information
locally on your system [. . .]
The personal information that Chrome stores
won’t be sent to Google unless you choose to
store that data in your Google Account by
turning on sync . . .
Sign-in and Sync Chrome Modes
You also have the option to use the Chrome
browser while signed in to your Google
Account, with or without sync enabled.
[. . .]
Sync. When you sign in to the Chrome
browser or a Chromebook and enable sync
with your Google Account, your personal
information is saved in your Google Account
on Google’s servers so you may access it
when you sign in and sync to Chrome on
other computers and devices. This personal
information will be used and protected in
accordance with the Google Privacy Policy.
This type of information can include:
• Bookmarks
• Tabs
• Passwords and Autofill information
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 7
• Other browser settings, like installed
extensions
Sync is only enabled if you choose . . .
How Chrome handles your synced
information
When you enable sync with your Google
Account, we use your browsing data to
improve and personalize your experience
within Chrome . . .
You can change this setting on your Account
History page or manage your private data
whenever you like. If you don’t use your
Chrome data to personalize your Google
experience outside of Chrome, Google will
only use your Chrome data after it’s
anonymized and aggregated with data from
other users . . .
Notwithstanding the above statements, Plaintiffs allege that
“Google intentionally and unlawfully causes Chrome to
record and send users’ personal information to Google
regardless of whether a user elects to Sync or even has a
Google account.” Specifically, Plaintiffs allege that
“Chrome sends the following personal information to
Google when a user exchanges communications with any
website that includes Google surveillance source code—
8 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
again, regardless of whether a user is logged-in to Google
Sync or not”:
a. The user’s unique, persistent cookie 1
identifiers;
b. The user’s browsing history in the form of
the contents of the users’ GET requests 2 and
information relating to the substance,
purport, or meaning of the website’s portion
of the communication with the user;
c. In many cases, the contents of the users’
POST 3 communications;
d. The user’s IP address 4 and User-Agent
information about their device; and
e. The user’s x-client-data identifier. 5
1
Cookies are “small text files stored on the user’s device.” In re
Facebook, Inc. Internet Tracking Litig., 956 F.3d 589, 596 (9th Cir.
2020).
2
“When an individual internet user visits a web page, his or her browser
sends a message called a ‘GET request’ to the web page’s server. The
GET request serves two purposes: it first tells the website what
information is being requested and then instructs the website to send the
information back to the user. The GET request also transmits a referer
header containing the personally-identifiable URL information.”
Internet Tracking Litig., 956 F.3d at 607.
3
“Like a GET request, a POST request is one of ‘[t]he basic commands
that Chrome uses to send the users’ side of a communication.’”
4
“An ‘IP address’ is a numerical identifier for each computer or network
connected to the Internet.” Internet Tracking Litig., 956 F.3d at 596 n.2.
5
“The x-client-data header is an identifier that when combined with IP
address and user-agent, uniquely identifies every individual
download[ed] version of the Chrome browser.”
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 9
A. Motion to Dismiss
At the motion to dismiss stage, Google did not deny
collecting Plaintiffs’ data while using Chrome in an un-
synced mode. Instead, it asserted that Plaintiffs consented to
this data collection when they agreed to Google’s Privacy
Policy, 6 which policy is cross-referenced in the part of the
Chrome Privacy Notice discussing “Sign-in and Sync
Chrome modes.” Google argued that the Policy “disclosed
the alleged data collection” per the following terms:
We collect information about the services
that you use and how you use them, like when
you . . . visit a website that uses our
advertising services, or view and interact
with our ads and content.
This information includes: . . . device-
specific information . . .
When you use our services or view content
provided by Google, we automatically collect
and store certain information in server logs,
[including] details of how you used our
service, such as your search queries . . .
device event information such as . . . the date
and time of your request and referral URL
[and] cookies that may uniquely identify your
browser or your Google Account.
6
The Privacy Policy is incorporated in Google’s Terms of Service
(TOS), which all Plaintiffs agreed to.
10 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
While the district court recognized that consent is a valid
legal defense to Plaintiffs’ claims, it rejected Google’s
arguments that it had met its burden to establish the defense.
First, the court noted that Google’s General Terms of
Service (TOS), which incorporates the Privacy Policy, states
that where “these terms conflict with the service-specific
additional terms, the additional terms will govern for that
service.” It further noted that the Privacy Policy directed
readers to “additional terms for particular services,” and
included a hyperlink to the Chrome Privacy Notice. These
statements—combined with Google’s more specific
representation in the Chrome Privacy Notice that “the
personal information that Chrome stores won’t be sent to
Google unless you . . . turn[] on sync”—led the court to
conclude that a reasonable user would not think they were
consenting to the data collection at issue. The court noted
that a reasonable user viewing these disclosures might think
“that if he or she used Chrome without sync, his or her
personal information would not be sent to Google.”
Second, the court rejected Google’s argument that the
Chrome Privacy Notice was accurate regarding how Google
would treat “the personal information that Chrome stores”
because “readers would understand that ‘the personal
information that Chrome stores’” does not include the data
collection at issue in this case. The court rejected this
argument because the data collection “falls within the
definition of personal information under California law,
which governs Google’s [TOS],” and the terms of Google’s
own privacy policy.
In sum, the court concluded that “Google cannot show
that Plaintiffs expressly consented to Google’s collection of
data,” and that “[t]o the contrary, Google’s representations
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 11
might have led a reasonable user to believe that Google did
not collect his or her personal information when the user was
not synced.” It thus denied Google’s motion to dismiss on
its consent defense. 7
B. Motion for Summary Judgment
Google moved for summary judgment. In its summary
judgment briefing, Google introduced two additional notices
in support of its consent defense: the “Consent Bump
Agreement,” which it launched in June 2016, and the “New
Account Creation Agreement,” updated in June 2016.
The “Consent Bump Agreement” “is a push down banner
that Google showed to account holders either when they
visited a ‘Google owned-and-operated property’ while
signed into their account or when users signed into their
account for the first time after June 2016.” It reads in
relevant part:
[W]hen you use[] Google services like
Search and YouTube, you generate data—
things like what you’ve searched for and
videos you’ve watched. You can find and
control that data in My Account under the
Web & App Activity setting. With this
change, this setting may also include
browsing data from Chrome and activity
from sites and apps that partner with Google,
including those that show ads from Google.
7
This case was originally assigned to Judge Lucy H. Koh. After the
motion to dismiss order was issued, however, Judge Koh was elevated
to the Ninth Circuit, and Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers was assigned
to adjudicate the case.
12 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
The “New Account Creation Agreement” incorporates the
Privacy Policy, and states:
When you search for a restaurant on Google
Maps or watch a video on YouTube, for
example, we process information about that
activity—including information like the
video you watched, device IDs, IP addresses,
cookie data, and location.
We also process the kinds of information
described above when you use apps or sites
that use Google services like ads, Analytics,
and the YouTube video player . . .
We also combine data among our services
and across your devices for these purposes.
The district court referred to these agreements, along with
the Privacy Policy, collectively, as “Google’s general
policies” to distinguish them from the Chrome-specific
Privacy Notice.
Assuming that only Google’s “general policies” or the
Chrome Privacy Notice could govern Google’s conduct in
this case, the court identified the threshold issue at summary
judgment as “which agreement controls the at-issue data
collection.” “Plaintiffs contend[ed] that the Chrome Privacy
Notice applie[d] because they are Chrome users using the
Chrome browser.” “Google . . . argue[d] that because the
data collection at issue . . . is ‘browser-agnostic,’ Google’s
general policies apply.”
After holding a lengthy evidentiary hearing on the issue,
the court found that the collection of data listed in Plaintiffs’
complaint (the “at-issue data” collection) was “browser-
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 13
agnostic,” except for the X-client-data-header. 8 In other
words, the court found that the data Plaintiffs complained
was improperly collected was “transmitted to Google
regardless of the browser used.”
The court then explained the significance of the
“browser-agnostic” finding: “Because the Court finds that
the at-issue data collected is not specific to Chrome but
browser agnostic, the Court also finds that Google’s general
policies apply.” “More specifically, the General Privacy
Policy, New Account Creation Agreement, and Consent
Bump Agreement governs the collection of those categories
of information identified by plaintiffs.”
The district court then explained that all Plaintiffs had
consented to the general Privacy Policy, and at least some
had agreed to the Consent Bump Agreement and the New
Account Creation Agreement. Based on the terms of these
agreements, the district court explained that “a reasonable
person viewing those disclosures would understand that
Google maintains the practices of (a) collecting its users’
data when users use Google services or third party sites that
use Google’s services and (b) that Google uses the data for
advertising purposes.”
Finally, the district court rejected Plaintiffs’ arguments
to the contrary. Most notably, the district court held that the
Chrome Privacy Notice did “not negate []” Plaintiffs’
consent to the general policies outlined above. The district
8
The district court held that “plaintiffs agreed to Google’s use of the X-
Client-header data when they agreed to the Chrome Privacy Notice.”
14 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
court entered judgment for Google. 9 Plaintiffs have timely
appealed.
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We
review de novo the district court’s summary judgment order.
2-Bar Ranch Ltd. P’ship v. U.S. Forest Serv., 996 F.3d 984,
990 (9th Cir. 2021).
ANALYSIS
At summary judgment, the following causes of action
remained: (1) violation of the California Invasion of Privacy
Act; (2) intrusion upon seclusion; (3) breach of contract;
(4) breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair
dealing; (5) statutory larceny; and (6) violation of
California’s Unfair Competition Law. The parties do not
dispute that consent is a valid defense to these claims, and
that the contours of the defense as established in the
Restatement (Second) of Torts. 10 and in state law are as
follows.
First, consent “can be [express] or implied, but any
consent must be actual.” In re Google Inc., No. 13-MD-
02430-LHK, 2013 WL 5423918, at *12 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 26,
2013) (citing United States v. Van Poyck, 77 F.3d 285, 292
(9th Cir. 1996)); see also Pinnacle Museum Tower Ass’n v.
Pinnacle Mkt. Dev. (US), LLC, 282 P.3d 1217, 1224 (Cal.
2012) (stating that general principles of contract law include
9
The district court denied Plaintiffs’ motion for class certification as
moot.
California courts are generally guided by the principles outlined in the
10
Restatement (Second) of Torts. See, e.g., Korea Supply Co. v. Lockheed
Martin Corp., 63 P.3d 937, 951 (Cal. 2003).
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 15
express or implied consent). For consent to be actual, the
disclosures must “explicitly notify” users of the conduct at
issue. In re Google Inc., 2013 WL 5423918, at *13.
Moreover, “[c]onsent is only effective if the person alleging
harm consented ‘to the particular conduct, or to substantially
the same conduct’ and if the alleged tortfeasor did not exceed
the scope of that consent.” Tsao v. Desert Palace, Inc., 698
F.3d 1128, 1149 (9th Cir. 2012) (“To be effective, consent
must be . . . to the particular conduct, or substantially the
same conduct.”) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 892A(2)(b) (1979))).
The parties agree that consent is “an affirmative defense
for which defendant bears the burden of proof.” Van Patten
v. Vertical Fitness Grp., LLC, 847 F.3d 1037, 1044 (9th Cir.
2017). In determining consent, courts consider “whether the
circumstances, considered as a whole, demonstrate that a
reasonable person understood that an action would be carried
out so that their acquiescence demonstrates knowing
authorization.” Smith v. Facebook, Inc., 745 F. App’x 8, 8
(9th Cir. 2018). See, e.g., Long v. Provide Com., Inc., 200
Cal. Rptr. 3d 117, 125 (Ct. App. 2016) (disagreeing that a
“hyperlink was sufficiently conspicuous to ‘put a reasonable
user on notice of the Terms of Use’”). If that user could have
plausibly understood the disclosures “as not disclosing that
[the defendant] would engage in particular conduct,” then
the disclosures are insufficient to establish consent. In re
Facebook, Inc., Consumer Priv. User Profile Litig., 402 F.
Supp. 3d 767, 789 (N.D. Cal. 2019).
Before the district court, Plaintiffs had argued that they
did not consent to Google’s conduct because a reasonable
user viewing the disclosures would not have concluded that
they unambiguously disclosed the data collection at issue.
See, e.g., Plaintiffs’ Opposition to Summary Judgment,
16 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
Calhoun v. Google, 5:20-cv-05146, at 5-6 (Jan. 2, 2022).
Specifically, Plaintiffs asserted that the explicit statements
in the Chrome Privacy Notice would actually give a
reasonable user the opposite impression regarding Google’s
data collection practices. Further, Plaintiffs argued that—to
the extent Google relied on the Privacy Policy to argue
otherwise—that Policy also contained statements in favor of
Plaintiffs’ interpretation, such as: “the activity information
we collect may include . . . Chrome browsing history you’ve
synced with your Google Account,” and “[y]our Chrome
browsing history is only saved to your account if you’ve
enabled Chrome synchronization with your Google
Account.”
Google argues that the General Privacy Policy addresses
the “at-issue” data, such as IP addresses and cookies, while
the Chrome Privacy Notice reference to “personal
information” addresses only Sync-enabled data like
browsing history, bookmarks, tabs, passwords and autofill
information, and other browser settings. But the parties
dispute whether a reasonable person would understand, in
the context of all of Google’s representations in its privacy
policies, what “personal information” means.
Plaintiffs also argue that Google’s Chrome Privacy
Notice also makes representations about data collection
beyond Sync-enabled data. For example, the Chrome
Privacy Notice states that “[y]ou don’t need to provide any
personal information to use Chrome” and that “[p]rivacy
practices are different depending on the mode you’re using.”
It goes on to state that in “Basic browser mode,” information
such as passwords and “cookies or data from websites that
you visit” are stored locally on a user’s system. The Notice
then provides that “[t]he personal information that Chrome
stores won’t be sent to Google unless you . . . turn[] on
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 17
sync.” Although Google argues that the reference to
“personal information” is sufficient to indicate which subset
of data the Notice controls, together, these statements could
suggest that the “personal information” the Chrome Privacy
Notice addresses includes cookies and IP addresses.
Based on these arguments, the district court should have
reviewed the terms of the various disclosures and decided
whether a reasonable user reading them would think that he
or she was consenting to the data collection, which collection
Google has not disputed. See, e.g., In re Facebook, Inc.
Internet Tracking Litig., 956 F.3d 589, 602 (9th Cir. 2020)
(identifying “the relevant question” as “whether a user
would reasonably expect that Facebook would have access
to the user’s individual data,” and reviewing the terms of
“Facebook’s privacy disclosures” to answer that question).
However, rather than trying to determine how a
reasonable user would understand Google’s various privacy
policies, the district court held a 7.5-hour evidentiary hearing
which included expert testimony about “whether the data-
collection at issue [is] . . . browser-agnostic.” The district
court thus made the case turn on a technical distinction
unfamiliar to most “reasonable user[s].” If “the data
collection at-issue [wa]s specific to Chrome,” the court
believed, then the Chrome-specific promises in the Chrome
Privacy Notice applied. But if it was “browser-agnostic”—
if Google collected the same data from non-Chrome
browsers—then all that mattered were the company’s
generalized statements in the terms of service and Privacy
Policy.
Having determined that the data collection was “browser
agnostic,” the district court held that Plaintiffs consented to
this collection when they agreed to Google’s general privacy
18 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
policies, because under the “browser agnostic terms” of
those policies, the data collection was disclosed. The district
court therefore did not consider the terms of the Chrome
Policy Notice in its analysis. To the extent the district court
considered those terms at all, it only mentioned them to say
they did not “negate” Plaintiffs’ consent.
By focusing on “browser agnosticism” instead of
conducting the reasonable person inquiry, the district court
failed to apply the correct standard, despite its recitation of
it. Viewing this in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs,
browser agnosticism is irrelevant because nothing in
Google’s disclosures is tied to what other browsers do. And
that is because the governing standard is what a “reasonable
user” of a service would understand they were consenting to,
not what a technical expert would.
To resist this conclusion, Google cites our unpublished
decision in Smith to argue that the district court did not err.
The Smith panel held that “[a] reasonable person viewing
[Facebook’s] disclosures would understand that Facebook
maintains” certain data collection practices based on the
terms of its disclosures. 11 Smith, 745 F. App’x at 8-9.
Google argues that the reasoning in Smith applies here
because “[t]he transmissions at issue in Smith were
materially indistinguishable from those in this case.”
11
The relevant disclosure in Smith stated: “We collect information when
you visit or use third-party websites and apps that use our Services . . .
This includes information about the websites and apps you visit, your
use of our Services on those websites and apps, as well as information
the developer or publisher of the app or website provides to you or us,”
and “we use all of the information we have about you to show you
relevant ads.” Smith, 745 F. App’x at 8.
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 19
But the panel in Smith did not hold that plaintiffs
consented to the data collection because it determined that
the data collection at issue was “agnostic.” Rather, it held
that plaintiffs consented to the data collection because,
analyzing the terms of Facebook’s Terms and Policies, “a
reasonable person viewing those disclosures would
understand” that Facebook engaged in the contested
practices. Id.
More to the point, Smith, and our recent unpublished
decision in Hammerling v. Google, LLC, No. 22-17024,
2024 WL 937247, at *2 (9th Cir. Mar. 5, 2024) 12 are
inapposite, because plaintiffs in those cases had not argued
that Facebook or Google had service-specific privacy
policies that could reasonably be read to say the opposite of
what its general privacy policies disclosed. The panel in
Smith, for example, specifically explained that Facebook
was not bound by the contrary assurances of other websites’
policies because “Facebook’s Terms and Policies make no
such assurance, and Facebook is not bound by promises it
did not make.” Smith, 745 F. App’x at 9. By contrast, and
at least in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, Google did
make a promise in its Chrome Privacy Policy that it would
not collect certain information absent a user’s voluntary
decision to sync, so Google may be “bound by [those]
promises.” Id.
Google’s “affirmative statement that it would not receive
information” in its Chrome Privacy Notice puts this case
more in line with Internet Tracking Litigation than with
Smith or Hammerling. Internet Tracking Litig., 956 F.3d at
603. There, a panel of our court reversed a district court’s
12
Google filed a 28(j) letter notifying the court about this March 4, 2024
unpublished decision.
20 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
decision to dismiss a complaint in which users of Facebook
alleged that the social media site continued to collect their
data even after they had logged out. Id. at 596. The panel
began by assessing “whether a user would reasonably expect
that Facebook would have access to the user’s individual
data after the user logged out of the application.” Id. at 602.
It did this by reviewing Facebook’s various “privacy
disclosures” id., rather than looking at browser agnosticism.
The panel noted that Facebook’s general Data Use Policy
stated that Facebook “receive[s] data whenever you visit a
game, application or website that uses [Facebook’s
services].” Id. To the extent the policy mentioned log in/log
out, it stated that the data collection could include “the date
and time you visit the site; the web address, . . . and, if you
are logged in to Facebook, your user ID.” Id. (emphasis
omitted). The panel also noted that Facebook’s “Help
Center” answered the more specific question of data
collection at log in/log out: “[i]f you are logged into
Facebook, we also see your user ID number and email
address. . . . If you log out of Facebook, we will not receive
this information about partner websites but you will also not
see personalized experiences on these sites.” Id. Based on
these disclosures—including the applicable Help Center
page which “affirmatively stated that logged-out user data
would not be collected,”—the panel held that a reasonable
user would not necessarily expect that Facebook would have
access to the data after logging out of the site. Id.
Discussing other cases on this topic, the panel noted:
“[t]hat users in those cases explicitly denied consent does not
render those cases distinguishable from the instant case,
given Facebook’s affirmative statements that it would not
receive information from third-party websites after users had
logged out. Indeed, in those cases, the critical fact was that
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 21
the online entity represented to the plaintiffs that their
information would not be collected, but then proceeded to
collect it anyway.” Id. at 603 (discussing In re Google Inc.
Cookie Placement Consumer Priv. Litig., 806 F.3d 125, 129,
151 (3d Cir. 2015) and In re Nickelodeon Cons. Priv. Litig.,
827 F.3d 262, 293–94 (3d Cir. 2016)).
Here, Google’s general Privacy Policy broadly states
“that Google collects data about users’ ‘[a]ctivity on third-
party sites and apps that use [Google’s] services.’”
Hammerling, 2024 WL 937247, at *1 (analyzing same
Privacy Policy). Like the general policy in Facebook which
only briefly discussed the log in/log out distinction, the
Privacy Policy here only briefly mentions the sync/non-sync
distinction. Like the “Help Center” in Facebook, the
Chrome Privacy Notice includes more detail on the
distinctions between Chrome browsing modes, and includes
an “affirmative statement[] that it would not receive
information,” Internet Tracking Litig., 956 F.3d at 603, from
users “unless you choose to . . . turn[] on sync.” Thus, when
the disclosures are read together and in the light most
favorable to Plaintiffs, a reasonable user would not
necessarily understand that they were consenting to the data
collection at issue. It was the district court’s failure to apply
the correct standard that led to the opposite conclusion.
This point is illustrated by the outcome of a related case,
Brown v. Google LLC, 685 F. Supp. 3d 909, 930 (N.D. Cal.
2023). In Brown, the same district court presided over a
related class action lawsuit brought by users of Google
Chrome’s “incognito” mode. Id. at 919. As in this case,
plaintiffs alleged that Google surreptitiously collected their
data, notwithstanding statements in the same Chrome
Privacy Notice (and on the incognito splash screen) that
within Incognito mode “Chrome won’t store certain
22 CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC
information.” Id. at 930. As in this case, Google asserted
that the Brown plaintiffs consented to the Privacy Policy,
which Policy disclosed the data collection challenged. Id. at
926.
But unlike in this case, the district court rejected
Google’s “agnosticism” reasoning, instead properly turning
to the disclosures at issue and assessing whether a reasonable
user reading them might believe they were consenting to
certain practices. Brown, 685 F. Supp. 3d at 927-28.
Here, Google had a general privacy disclosure yet
promoted Chrome by suggesting that certain information
would not be sent to Google unless a user turned on sync.
Thus, “Google itself created a situation where there is a
dispute as to whether users’ consent of Google’s data
collection generally is ‘substantially the same’ as their
consent to the collection of their [non-synced] data in
particular.” Id. at 928.
Whether a “reasonable” user of Google’s computer
software at issue in this case consented to a particular data
collection practice is not to be determined by attributing to
that user the skill of an experienced business lawyer or
someone who is able to easily ferret through a labyrinth of
legal jargon to understand what he or she is consenting to.
Instead, a determination of what a “reasonable” user would
have understood must take into account the level of
sophistication attributable to the general public, which uses
Google’s services.
Because applying the correct standard reveals disputes
of material fact regarding whether “reasonable” users of
Google’s product consented to Google’s data collection
practices, the issue of consent—assuming a plaintiff class is
certified—is remanded to the district court for trial.
CALHOUN V. GOOGLE, LLC 23
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the order of the
district court and REMAND this case for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PATRICK CALHOUN; ELAINE No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PATRICK CALHOUN; ELAINE No.
024:20-cv- JOHNSON; CLAUDIA KINDLER, 05146-YGR Plaintiffs-Appellants, OPINION v.
03GOOGLE, LLC SUMMARY * Data Collection The panel reversed the district court’s summary judgment in favor of Google, LLC, in a class action alleging that the company surreptitiously collected users’ data in violation of various state and fede
04Plaintiffs are a group of Google Chrome users who chose not to sync their Chrome browsers with their Google accounts while browsing the web.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PATRICK CALHOUN; ELAINE No.
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This case was decided on August 20, 2024.
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