Ask HN: Why does Google word privacy settings like you agree even when off?
Found this confusing language in personal Gmail account update today.
The intro paragraph says "You agree to let Google Workspace use your Workspace content and activity to personalize your experience across Workspace". And only then they present with the options - whether to turn the special features on or off.
It reads like you're agreeing to the data use regardless of whether you actually enable the features. The detailed documentation suggests data is only used when features are enabled, but that opening sentence creates blanket consent language.
Is this intentionally misleading UX copy, or just sloppy writing that creates legal ambiguity?
16 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 39.2 ms ] threadAll these things will have been through a legal review so I don’t think it’s carelessness
Sorry for the jab but I couldn't decode the question here.
From "The Age of Surveillance Capitalism" -- source https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/jan/20/shoshana-..."
Thankfully all my stuff is on own domains so will just move it to a more respectable provider
>When you turn this setting on, you agree to let Google Workspace use your Workspace content and activity to personalize your experience across Workspace. Workspace includes apps for businesses and schools, such as Gmail, Chat, Meet, Drive, and more. To learn more, visit the Workspace website. Smart features include:
The setting for the listed features is above the "you agree to let Google Workspace use your Workspace content and activity to personalize your experience across Workspace" intro, not below. The setting below is for features in non-Workspace services.
They want to trick/force you into doing something against your best interests.
EDIT: a little confused. You talk about a personal gmail account, but then talk about Workspace, which is a paid service.