Victim of Jeffrey Epstein files class-action lawsuit against Google

0
950

Victim of Jeffrey Epstein files class-action lawsuit against Google

There's more legal trouble brewing for Google, as a victim of Jeffrey Epstein has filed a class action suit against the world's largest search engine, alleging its AI Mode improperly published personal information about sex trafficking victims.

The problem began with the Department of Justice, whose rollout of the Epstein files, following the passage of the Epstein Files Transparency Act last year, was riddled with hasty redactions, which often protected the identities of alleged perpetrators while the identities of victims were left unconcealed.

The DOJ, however, has acknowledged the errors and removed the personal information from its website. The problem now lies with Google, and more specifically, its artificial intelligence, which trawled the initial, unredacted document dump and still hosts the sensitive personal information of sex trafficking victims.

"Even after the government acknowledged the disclosure violated the rights of survivors and withdrew the information, online entities like Google continuously republish it, refusing [the] victim’s pleas to take it down," the lawsuit reads. 

Mashable Light Speed

The allegations don't stop there. Not only did Google knowingly refuse to remove the sensitive information, which includes "full name, contact information, cities of residence, and association with Jeffrey Epstein," but the AI also allegedly "generated a hypertext link allowing anyone to send direct email to Plaintiff with the click of a button."

Worse still, for Google: the lawsuit alleges that other artificial intelligence companies did not improperly publish victim information: "Notably, several other publicly available AI tools that generate content by analyzing online sources, such as ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity, provided no victim-related information whatsoever in similar repeated testing."

This latest lawsuit comes on the heels of a damning Los Angeles jury ruling that found both Meta and Google-owned YouTube liable for "designing products that addict and harm children," prioritizing online engagement over the well-being of their users. 

At the time of writing, Google has not issued a public statement on the lawsuit, but a verdict in this trial could set important precedents for privacy protections in the age of AI, with implications that would ripple across the tech landscape.

Αναζήτηση
Κατηγορίες
Διαβάζω περισσότερα
Food
The Restaurant Anthony Bourdain Ranked Above All Others In Miami
The Restaurant Anthony Bourdain Ranked Above All Others In Miami...
από Test Blogger1 2026-02-01 21:00:08 0 2χλμ.
άλλο
Prepaid Card Market: Growth Trends, Opportunities, and Future Outlook To Forecast 2024-2032
The global prepaid card market has witnessed remarkable growth over the past decade,...
από Priyanka Bhingare 2026-05-11 06:15:00 0 251
Music
5 Death Metal Bands Whose Third Album Is Their Best
5 Death Metal Bands Whose Third Album Is Their BestMark Horton, Getty Images, Christie Goodwin,...
από Test Blogger4 2026-04-18 13:00:08 0 668
Technology
The best AirPods Max deal isnt at Amazon during the Big Spring Sale
The best Apple AirPods Max deal isn't at Amazon during the Big Spring Sale...
από Test Blogger7 2026-03-30 21:00:25 0 963
Technology
The Fire TV Stick 4K Select hits its best-ever price in Amazons Big Spring Sale — save $25 with this coupon code
Best Fire Stick deal: Save $25 on Amazon Fire Stick 4K Select...
από Test Blogger7 2026-03-26 15:00:20 0 986