When “Opt Out” Doesn’t Mean Out: What Google’s 5M Lesson Means for You

In September 2025, a California jury ordered Google to pay more than $425M for collecting personal data from nearly 100M mobile users and 174M devices…even after those users had “opted out” of sharing data.

On the surface, this looks like just another big tech company in legal troubles for flouting the law. For the affected customers, and everyone who chooses to “opt out” of similar circumstances, new questions and concerns arise.

Privacy choices matter, and ignoring them has consequences. What happens if companies ignore when you choose to “opt out” of data collection?

Millions of people told Google they didn’t want the company to collect data on their app usage. Despite the clear opt-out policy, the company continued gathering the information on these users anyway. The court ruled that this was a direct violation of user rights, which lead to a massive class action payout.

This breach of privacy didn’t start with a hacker. It didn’t involve hacking the company database. Instead, this illegal data collection was a simple failure to honor the trust customers placed in a company when they set their privacy preferences.

Whether you run a multi-billion-dollar company like Google or use similar services everyday, data privacy applies to everyone.

Here are some principles to remember and abide:

  • Respect for privacy isn’t optional. If a client, coworker, or customer shares data with certain conditions, those boundaries must be followed.
  • Trust is fragile. Even if a policy violation feels “small,” it can snowball into huge reputational damage and legal problems.
  • Data handling is always personal. Every time you manage sensitive information (whether that’s financial records, medical details, or even an email address) you’re making a choice about trust.

The lesson is simple: When someone opts out, respect that decision.

This payout isn’t just about the money. Employees at Google now face a different kind of pressure: internal scrutiny, external mistrust, and the stress of knowing their company let people down.

That could happen anywhere. When privacy boundaries are crossed, employees often feel the brunt of the fallout. They have to deal with angry customers, answer difficult questions, and rebuild trust one conversation at a time.

Privacy isn’t just about laws and fines and breaches. It’s also about the trust that people place in you every day.

At work, that trust starts with the decisions you make about handling information. Protecting privacy isn’t only a corporate responsibility, but a personal one too. The Google case shows just how disastrous it can be to ignore data security.

Data collection and privacy matter to everyone. When you take it seriously, you help create a safer digital world for everyone.

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