Tag: Google Kenya

  • Why Mary Wambui’s Move To Delete Sh2.2 Billion Tax Evasion Articles Is Morally Untenable — And A Closer Look Into The Controversial Withdrawal

    Why Mary Wambui’s Move To Delete Sh2.2 Billion Tax Evasion Articles Is Morally Untenable — And A Closer Look Into The Controversial Withdrawal

    In 2014, the Court of Justice of the European Union handed a Spanish man named Mario Costeja Gonzalez the right to have Google suppress links to a decades-old newspaper notice about a debt auction he had long settled. The judgment was proportionate. The matter was resolved. The man was a private citizen. The information had no continuing public interest. European courts subsequently codified the right to be forgotten in law.

    Twelve years later, a Kenyan businesswoman who supplies military boots and cereals to the government, who funded presidential campaigns, who chairs a public regulatory body, and whose company is the subject of ongoing parliamentary and prosecutorial scrutiny has invoked that same Spanish man’s victory in a Kiambu High Court petition seeking to force Google to bury 35 news articles about her Sh2.2 billion tax evasion case.

    The two cases have almost nothing in common. And the audacity of the comparison reveals everything that is wrong with Mary Wambui Mungai’s petition.

    She is not asking for privacy. She is asking for impunity on demand — a digital eraser funded by the same wealth the public never saw taxed.

    The Anatomy of a Case That Disappeared

    The facts of the underlying tax matter are not disputed by Ms Wambui herself. In December 2021, she and her daughter Purity Njoki Mungai, both directors of Purma Holdings Limited, were arraigned at the Anti-Corruption Court in Milimani on eight counts of knowingly and unlawfully omitting income taxes between 2014 and 2019. The alleged unpaid taxes amounted to Sh2,231,789,125 — money that flowed from enormous state contracts for supplying boots, uniforms, cereals and medical supplies to the military, the Kenya Medical Supplies Authority (KEMSA) and other government departments.

    What followed was a masterclass in the art of evasion. When the Kenya Revenue Authority first summoned her in June 2021, she did not appear. When KRA pushed for her arrest, she reportedly surfaced at Weston Hotel — a property publicly associated with then-Deputy President William Ruto — and slipped away, leaving behind personal belongings including an identity card, bank cards, a firearms licence and a temporary travel permit to Zambia. The Directorate of Criminal Investigations issued arrest warrants. Airport and border checkpoints were sealed. The country watched a billionaire tenderpreneur duck and weave.

    KEY FACT: Wambui was also separately charged in January 2022 with illegal possession of a pistol and 22 rounds of ammunition without valid licences. That case was dropped in December 2022 — one month before the tax case was also withdrawn.

    By December 2022, President Ruto — the same man in whose hotel she had sheltered from police — appointed her chairperson of the Communications Authority of Kenya’s board. Days later, KRA wrote to the DPP requesting withdrawal of the charges, citing a December 6 compounding of offences and payment of fines. The case was withdrawn on January 10, 2023.

    She walked free. She did not receive an acquittal. She was not found innocent. She paid fines. The state absorbed the settlement. The public never learnt what the final tax figure paid was, or whether it bore any relationship to the Sh2.2 billion originally charged.

    A compounding of offences is not vindication. It is a transaction. Wambui bought her way out — and now wants to erase the receipt.

    The Google Petition: Anatomy of Reputation Laundering

    Ms Wambui’s petition, filed at the Kiambu High Court, asks the court to order Google LLC and Google Kenya Ltd to suppress all 35 links to news stories covering the tax evasion probe and the court proceedings from 2021 to 2023. She wants a temporary injunction prohibiting the links from appearing in searches pending determination of her substantive petition, which seeks their permanent removal.

    Her legal arguments rest on three pillars: the EU right to be forgotten as established in the Gonzalez judgment, section 25 of Kenya’s Data Protection Act, and constitutional Articles 28, 31 and 33 protecting dignity, privacy and reputation. Each argument falls apart on contact with the facts.

    On the EU precedent: the Gonzalez ruling explicitly excludes matters of genuine public interest from the right to be forgotten. A Sh2.2 billion criminal prosecution involving a government supplier who was evading taxes earned from public coffers is self-evidently a matter of public interest. The EU itself applies the public figure doctrine — holding elected officials and those in public life to lower privacy expectations regarding their exercise of public functions. Ms Wambui, as Communications Authority chair and now Athi Water Works board chair, is a public figure performing public functions.

    On the Data Protection Act: Section 25 requires that personal data be processed fairly and lawfully. News articles about public court proceedings are not ‘personal data’ in the private sense the Act is designed to protect. Court records are public by design. Journalism about criminal charges is protected expression. The Act was conceived to guard against surveillance, unauthorised data harvesting and digital exploitation — not to give powerful individuals a legal mechanism to suppress accountability journalism.

    On the constitutional arguments: Article 33, which she invokes to protect her reputation, must be read alongside Article 34, which protects freedom of the press, and Article 35, which guarantees the public’s right to access information. The Constitution does not rank reputation above press freedom, especially where the subject of reporting is a public official and the reported events are matters of public record.

    NOTABLE: Four of the 35 links Wambui wants suppressed lead to articles published by the Kenya Revenue Authority itself — the government’s own tax body. She is asking a court to help her bury the taxman’s own public record of the case.

    The Real Motivation: Sending Investors a Clean Search Page

    In her court papers, Ms Wambui is unusually candid about why these articles harm her. She states that ‘business engagements, particularly those involving foreign clients, donors, and partners, have been disrupted, as international stakeholders who carry out online due diligence encounter the outdated articles and are misled into doubting my integrity and suitability for engagement.’

    This is a confession dressed as a complaint. She is not arguing that the articles are false. She is arguing that they are inconvenient. Specifically, she is arguing that they are inconvenient to the due diligence process of her foreign investors and business partners. She wants to be able to send prospective partners a Google search result page that tells only the sanitised version of her story.

    What Ms Wambui calls ‘outdated information’ is, more accurately, accurate information about events that actually occurred. The prosecution happened. The arrest warrants were real. The eight criminal counts were formally charged. The fines were paid. The case is part of the permanent public record of the Kenyan court system. No Kiambu court order can change that. What she is asking Google to do is to ensure that investors who search her name cannot easily find that record.

    This is not a privacy case. This is a cover-your-tracks case — and the court must see it clearly.

    The Weston Hotel Escape: What The Record Shows

    For investors and partners conducting due diligence, the tax case is not the only chapter of the Wambui record that demands scrutiny. When KRA moved to have her arrested in December 2021, she was tracked to Weston Hotel along Langata Road — a property publicly and extensively associated with President Ruto. According to investigative reporting at the time, she and her daughter departed in a hurry, leaving behind personal items that no innocent person flees from police with.

    A court subsequently unfroze 13 of her bank accounts after a High Court judge found KRA had frustrated her stated willingness to pay. The unfreeze came before the compounding. The sequence matters: accounts unfrozen, a deal struck, fines paid, political appointment received, case withdrawn. All within a span of weeks straddling the December 2022 presidential appointment.

    The timing is not subtle. The appointment preceded the withdrawal by five weeks. The withdrawal preceded the formal dropping of the firearms case by the same prosecutorial office. Ms Wambui is right that the search results damage her reputation with foreign partners. Those foreign partners should be grateful for the information.

    A Pattern of Tenders, Scandals and Legal Intimidation

    The Sh2.2 billion tax case is not a standalone incident. It is the first published chapter in what has since become an extensive and documented record of controversies clustering around Purma Holdings and associated entities.

    In 2023, barely months after the tax case was closed, trade CS Moses Kuria disclosed in Senate testimony that Purma Holdings had been awarded KNTC contracts to supply 30,000 metric tonnes of rice, 12,500 tonnes of edible oil, and 20,000 tonnes of beans. Court testimony by KNTC Managing Director Lucy Anangwe subsequently established that Purma Holdings was paid Sh3.9 billion for rice whose actual market value was Sh3.1 billion — a Sh800 million markup that came out of the public purse. She also secured Sh2.5 billion for edible oil and Sh3.4 billion for beans, bringing the KNTC exposure alone to roughly Sh9.8 billion across these contracts.

    Separate associated entities — Charma Holdings, Enterprise Supplies Ltd and Evertec General Trading Company — each received additional KNTC contracts worth hundreds of millions. All four companies have documented connections to Ms Wambui’s network. The EACC opened an investigation. Former KNTC boss Pamela Mutua was charged. Ms Wambui’s companies were not charged. The pattern is consistent: proximity to scandal, distance from accountability.

    PATTERN: When Nation Media Group published the KNTC edible oils investigation in October 2023 linking Purma Holdings to the scandal, Wambui’s lawyers immediately demanded a retraction and threatened defamation action. NMG did not retract. The same playbook — suppress, threaten, litigate — is now being applied to Google.

    In 2024, the Directorate of Criminal Investigations froze bank accounts linked to her companies over the KNTC contracts. That freeze contributed, by her own account in court filings, to her inability to service an Sh8.267 billion loan from Equity Bank, secured against Glee Hotel, her flagship 211-room luxury property on the Northern Bypass.

    Glee Hotel: The Sh8 Billion Debt Mountain

    In January 2026, Nation Media Group reported that Ms Wambui and Glee Hotel Ltd had sued Equity Bank to block a planned February 5, 2026 auction of Glee Hotel after she defaulted on loans totalling Sh8.267 billion. Equity Bank’s court filings indicate that at one point she offered to pay Sh5 billion in full settlement, requesting the bank absorb a haircut of more than Sh3 billion. She later raised the offer to Sh7 billion. The bank declined both.

    The November 2025 correspondence from her camp, according to Equity Bank’s court filings, was not marked ‘without prejudice’ — a legal protection — meaning it constitutes an admission of the debts owed. Among assets charged as security are land parcels in Runda, Westlands, South B, Ruiru, Thindigua, Ruaka and Ongata Rongai. Her daughters are listed as guarantors.

    For a foreign partner or donor doing due diligence, this is the financial landscape: a businesswoman facing a multibillion bank default, whose core company has been implicated in a rice contract markup, whose bank accounts were frozen by the DCI, and who paid her way out of criminal tax charges rather than going to trial. These are not outdated stories. These are live, consequential facts.

    The irony is devastating: Wambui wants to suppress old articles to attract new investors, at the very moment that new articles are exposing why old investors should have been worried all along.

    The Communications Authority and Nightingale: The Conflict That Never Resolved

    When President Ruto appointed Ms Wambui as Communications Authority of Kenya board chair in December 2022, critics immediately flagged that her daughter Evelyn Nyambura Mungai was co-owner of Nightingale Enterprises, which had secured contracts to lay fibre optic cables under the government’s Sh5 billion Digital Super-Highway project. Investigations found that Wambui had transferred her shares in Nightingale to Evelyn shortly before the tender award — a move that critics argued was a cosmetic conflict-of-interest shield.

    The CA regulates the ICT sector. Nightingale was delivering ICT infrastructure under government contract. The Solicitor-General and the CA boss defended the appointment at the time. Ms Wambui served as chair until August 2025 when President Ruto revoked her appointment and simultaneously transferred her to chair the Athi Water Works Development Agency board — yet another parastatal responsible for public funds. The musical chairs of parastatal appointments has never slowed the controversies; it has merely moved them around.

    The Precedent Danger: Why the Court Must Reject This Petition

    The implications of granting Ms Wambui’s petition extend far beyond her personal reputation. If the Kiambu High Court orders Google to suppress search results about a criminal prosecution simply because the charges were tactically withdrawn through a financial settlement, it will establish a principle that any person with enough money to compound a criminal offence can also buy the erasure of the public record of that offence. Kenya’s accountability ecosystem cannot survive that precedent.

    Every corrupt official whose case is dropped by a politically influenced DPP could file similar petitions. Every tender fraudster who cuts a deal with investigators before trial could argue that the dropped charges create a right to be forgotten. Every tax evader who pays fine-level amounts to avoid conviction could demand that journalism about their prosecution disappear from the internet. The right to be forgotten would transform from a tool of personal dignity into a mechanism of institutional impunity.

    The court should also take note of the technical problems with Ms Wambui’s case against the respondents. Google Kenya Ltd has correctly argued that it is a separate legal entity that neither owns nor operates the Google search engine. It provides sales, marketing and research and development services exclusively. Its memorandum of association, attached as evidence, supports this. Google LLC, the actual operator of the search engine, has not filed a replying affidavit. The petition may collapse on jurisdictional technicalities before it ever reaches the merits.

    LEGAL CRACK: If Google Kenya Ltd is not a proper party — as it credibly argues — then Ms Wambui’s case against the entity that actually operates the search engine has a significant jurisdictional problem. The June 10 ruling on the interim injunction will test whether Kiambu court is prepared to grant sweeping relief against a respondent that may have no operational control over the outcome.

    What Foreign Investors Actually Deserve to Know

    Ms Wambui invokes foreign investors, donors and international partners as victims of Google’s search results. She argues they are being misled. The reality is the reverse. What foreign investors deserve is the complete picture — and the complete picture is this:

    The person they are evaluating is a tenderpreneur who built a fortune on government contracts, evaded taxes on that fortune for years, dodged a police dragnet by sheltering in politically connected premises, was charged on eight counts of tax evasion and two counts of illegal firearms possession, had both cases dropped following financial settlements and a high-profile political appointment, subsequently received multibillion-shilling KNTC contracts within months of the case withdrawal, is implicated by court testimony in a Sh800 million rice contract markup, is under an Sh8.267 billion bank default, and is now in court attempting to suppress the journalism that documented all of the above.

    That is not outdated information. That is the most current and relevant due diligence profile available on Mary Wambui Mungai. The 35 articles she wants buried are not a legacy of the past. They are the foundation without which no honest assessment of her present-day dealings is possible.

    If the truth about Mary Wambui’s history damages her reputation, that is the truth doing its job — not an injustice requiring judicial remedy.

    Conclusion: The Court Must Protect Public Interest, Not Private Image

    The Kiambu High Court will deliver a ruling on June 10 on whether to grant interim orders suppressing the 35 links pending the full hearing. That ruling will be closely watched not only by journalists and civil society, but by every Kenyan public official who has survived a criminal case through political intervention and wonders whether the digital record of that survival can be similarly managed.

    The court must reject the interim injunction. It must find that the public interest in the continued accessibility of accurate journalism about a criminal prosecution of a public figure outweighs the private inconvenience that journalism causes to that figure’s business dealings. It must recognise that the right to be forgotten — even if it were codified in Kenyan law — explicitly excludes matters of public interest, and that a Sh2.2 billion tax evasion prosecution of a government supplier is irreducibly a matter of public interest.

    And when the matter goes to full hearing, it must find that Google is not a publisher of defamatory content but an indexer of public information — that the news organisations who wrote the stories are not parties to this suit — and that the remedy Ms Wambui seeks is not available under Kenyan law as it currently stands.

    Mary Wambui built her fortune in the corridors of government procurement. She navigated two criminal cases by paying fines and leveraging political capital. She now chairs a public water authority. She runs a luxury hotel on borrowed billions. She is not a private citizen with a minor embarrassment from a distant past. She is a public figure with an active and ongoing public record.

    The public has a right to that record. The press has a right to report it. Google has no obligation to bury it. And the court has a duty to say so.

  • Google Rejects 62 pc of Content Removal Requests From Kenyan Government

    Google Rejects 62 pc of Content Removal Requests From Kenyan Government

    Google has rejected nearly two-thirds of content removal requests from the Kenyan government, marking an escalating confrontation between big tech and African authorities over online speech as Nairobi dramatically expands its digital censorship apparatus.

    The search and video platform turned down 62 per cent of demands from Kenya’s Communications Authority to delete YouTube videos, blog posts and search results in the six months to June 2025, according to Google’s latest Transparency Report. The rejection rate, which has more than doubled from 25 per cent a year earlier, represents one of the highest refusal rates globally and signals mounting friction over what constitutes legitimate content moderation versus state-sponsored suppression of dissent.

    Kenya submitted 42 items for removal during the period, nearly quadrupling from 11 requests in the preceding half-year. The 281 per cent surge coincides with a violent government crackdown on youth-led protests that left dozens dead and triggered nationwide internet disruptions, raising alarm among digital rights advocates about the weaponisation of cyber laws against political opposition.

    Google’s defiance stands in stark contrast to its compliance rates elsewhere in Africa. Nigeria saw only 30 per cent of its requests rejected, while South Africa faced a 33 per cent rejection rate. The divergence underscores Kenya’s increasingly aggressive posture despite its reputation as East Africa’s most connected economy and a regional technology hub with internet penetration exceeding 56 per cent.

    The Kenyan government, channelling requests primarily through the Communications Authority, cited defamation, privacy violations and national security concerns as grounds for removal. But Google’s internal review determined that many demands targeted politically sensitive content and government criticism, according to the company’s transparency disclosures.

    “Oftentimes, government requests target political content and government criticism,” Google stated in its report. “Governments cite defamation, privacy, and even copyright laws in their attempts to remove political speech from our services.”

    The company approved removal of only five items after determining they violated its platform policies. A further 11 requests were dismissed because authorities failed to provide sufficient detail to identify the targeted content, exposing gaps in Kenya’s technical capacity to enforce digital regulations.

    The standoff reflects Kenya’s broader authoritarian drift under President William Ruto, whose administration has deployed an arsenal of tools to silence online opposition. In October 2025, Ruto signed into law sweeping amendments to the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Act, granting authorities power to block websites and social media content deemed illegal without court approval. The legislation, signed controversially on the day opposition leader Raila Odinga died, was immediately challenged in court and suspended pending constitutional review.

    Human Rights Watch condemned the law as criminalising legitimate speech through vague provisions that punish “grossly offensive” communication with up to 10 years imprisonment or fines reaching 20m Kenyan shillings. Critics warn the elastic language creates a chilling effect on digital discourse, deterring citizens from criticising government policy on platforms where dissent has historically flourished.

    Kenya’s escalating censorship demands also trail a pattern of internet shutdowns that have devastated economic activity. In June 2024, authorities orchestrated an eight-hour internet blackout during anti-tax protests that paralysed mobile money transactions, e-commerce platforms and emergency services. Although officials blamed undersea cable failures, internet monitoring groups including NetBlocks and the Internet Society documented deliberate state-imposed restrictions coinciding with demonstrators breaching parliament.

    A year later, in June 2025, the Communications Authority ordered broadcasters to halt live coverage of anniversary protests, taking major television networks NTV, KTN and K24 off air until the High Court intervened. The brazen media blackout violated a November 2024 court ruling that declared the regulator lacked constitutional authority over broadcast content, demonstrating the government’s willingness to flout judicial oversight.

    “When citizens and digital workers fear surveillance or punishment for online expression, creativity, civic engagement, and economic participation decline,” warned Vivian Ochola of the Institute of Economic Affairs. “This chilling effect not only weakens democracy by silencing dissent and reducing government accountability, but also discourages both domestic and foreign investment.”

    Kenya now leads Africa in content removal requests to Google, having overtaken South Africa in 2023, though it trails far behind global leaders. India submitted 53,924 items during the same period with a 75.7 per cent approval rate, while Russia, South Korea and other authoritarian regimes dominate worldwide censorship attempts.

    The tension between Kenya and Google mirrors a global reckoning over platform governance. Worldwide government requests to Google dropped 11 per cent to 679,315 in the first half of 2025, down from a record 765,263 the previous period, as tech companies resist demands they view as political interference masquerading as content moderation.

    For American technology giants, the collision presents acute ethical dilemmas. Companies celebrated as engines of free speech and political empowerment must navigate jurisdictions where local laws criminalise expression that would enjoy constitutional protection in the United States. The balancing act between accessing lucrative emerging markets and avoiding complicity in authoritarian censorship grows more precarious as African governments adopt China’s playbook of digital control.

    Kenya’s trajectory alarms observers who view the country as a bellwether for democratic governance in sub-Saharan Africa. Unlike neighbours Uganda and Tanzania, which send minimal takedown requests but impose more systematic internet restrictions, Kenya’s approach combines aggressive content removal demands with episodic shutdowns, creating unpredictable hazards for businesses and civil society.

    The Ruto administration has intensified surveillance of social media, with telecommunications provider Safaricom accused of sharing subscriber data with law enforcement to facilitate abductions of protest organisers. While Safaricom denied the allegations, multiple activists linked to anti-government movements remain missing, and the Data Protection Commissioner has failed to investigate complaints.

    Digital rights advocates argue that Kenya’s censorship infrastructure, despite lower compliance from platforms like Google, achieves its objective through intimidation. The mere threat of criminal prosecution under expansive cyber laws deters ordinary Kenyans from online political participation, while internet disruptions at critical moments sever coordination networks essential for collective action.

    As Kenya heads towards its next electoral cycle, the collision between digital freedoms and state control will intensify. Google’s resistance offers limited protection when authorities can simply shut down connectivity entirely, leaving citizens cut off from both information and the global economy that Nairobi claims to champion.

    The question confronting tech platforms is whether principled refusal to comply with dubious censorship demands can withstand governments willing to sacrifice economic growth and international reputation to maintain political control. For now, Kenya’s digital activists fight a rearguard action, deploying virtual private networks and encrypted messaging to evade surveillance while the space for dissent contracts.

  • Google Releases Kenya’s 2024 Year In Search Lists

    Google Releases Kenya’s 2024 Year In Search Lists

    Google has released its Year in Search 2024 for Kenya offering insights into the topics, events and personalities that captured the nation’s interest throughout the year.

    The annual analysis highlights top trending searches, reflecting what Kenyans were eager to see, learn and explore.

    The Social Health Authority (SHA) topped the trending news list, following its launch as the primary healthcare system to replace the now, defunct National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF).

    SHA generated immense interest as Kenyans sought to understand the new healthcare framework.

    The controversial Finance Bill 2024 also dominated searches. Proposed changes to tax laws sparked national debate, with increased taxes leading to widespread public protests, particularly led by Kenya’s Gen Z. The demonstrations ultimately forced the government to withdraw the bill.

    The US Elections 2024 rounded off the top three news searches as Kenyans closely followed developments in the global political landscape.

    In the local personalities category, former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua led the list after his impeachment became a major topic of national conversation.

    He was followed by Rebecca Miano, Cabinet Secretary for Tourism and Wildlife, and Soipan Tuya, Cabinet Secretary for Defence.

    The global personalities list was a mix of political and entertainment figures. Leading the pack was Jamaican reggae and dancehall star Vybz Kartel, followed by US President-Elect Donald Trump and American televangelist Benny Hinn, who returned to Kenya after more than two decades to hold the “Healing the Nation” crusade at Nyayo Stadium in February.

    Kenyans’ passion for football remained strong in 2024. Searches were dominated by the AFCON tournament, held in Ivory Coast between January and February, and Euro 2024, hosted in Germany between June and July. The Olympics 2024 schedule also garnered significant interest.

    The untimely death of content creator Brian Chira in a hit-and-run accident in March was the most searched loss of the year. His passing sparked nationwide mourning, with thousands attending his funeral to celebrate his life and impact.

    Kenyans also mourned the deaths of Charles Ouda, a celebrated actor, director, and singer who made notable contributions to Kenya’s entertainment industry, and veteran journalist Rita Tinina, who succumbed to severe pneumonia.

    Kenyans’ love for diverse flavours was evident in top food-related searches, which included chicken curry recipes, pumpkin soup recipes and other culinary delights.

    In entertainment, shows and movies like “Supacell”, “Damsel”, and “Shogun” topped the trending list. Popular song lyrics such as “Anguka Nayo”, “Kudade”, and “Hit and Run” also saw significant search interest.

    Kenyans turned to Google for answers to everyday queries, including:

    • “How to check KCSE results 2023”
    • “How to update token meter”
    • “How to say ‘hello’ in Italian”
    • “What is Airbnb”
    • “What is endometriosis”
    • “When are schools opening in Kenya”
    • “When is Father’s Day in 2024”

    The Year in Search 2024 reflects a mix of curiosity, concern and engagement among Kenyans, showcasing how Google continues to play a vital role in connecting people with the information they seek.

  • Google Sued For Data Mining In Kenya

    Google Sued For Data Mining In Kenya

    A non-governmental organisation has sued tech giant Google over alleged privacy violations by illegally tracking Android users and collecting personal information.

    The internet search company is also being accused of breaching Kenya’s data protection laws by illegally invading the privacy of users and collecting their biometric information.

    The class-action lawsuit has been filed by the African Centre for Corrective and Preventive Action (ACCPA) together with 31 users. They have also sued the Attorney-General, the ICT Cabinet Secretary, the Data Commissioner and the Communication Authority of Kenya.

    The lawsuit that was filed yesterday through lawyer Karugu Mbugua at the High Court in Milimani, Nairobi, alleges that Google, through the Global Positioning System (GPS), “is … able to track the movement of Android users without their explicit consent”.

    Suit notice appearing on local dailies.

    It further alleges that Google’s cloud-based platform, The Google Photos app, which comes pre-installed on all Google Android devices, is set to automatically upload and store all photos taken by the Android device user.

    The claimants, who allege that the personal data is shared with third parties, are seeking damages for the alleged breach of privacy and a declaration that the lawsuit is a “public interest case”.

    Right to privacy

    The lawsuit also seeks a declaration that Google’s actions contravene provisions of Article 31 of the Constitution, which guarantees the right to privacy. The claimants have trained their sights on Google Search Engine, Gmail, Google Maps and Google Photos.

    “Once the personal data is uploaded … on Google Photos, the photos are [analysed through] artificial intelligence for unique points and contours (i.e biometric identifiers) of each individual face. Then it uses the data to create and store a template of each face without informing the user of this practice,” the claimants say in their court papers.

    “These unique face templates are also used to recognise individuals’ gender, age and location. Google has a set of functions and procedures allowing the creation of applications that access the features or data of an operating system where third parties can access personal data stored,” says the claimants.

    “Google also runs a digital distribution service dubbed Google Play Store and which … allows users to browse and download applications developed with the Android Software Development Kit (SDK) and published through Google.”

    The respondents are yet to file their responses to the suit as it is yet to get hearing directions.

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