Google's latest privacy tool comes as a long-promised feature from Facebook to delete some of the data it collects on people hasn't yet materialized.
Alphabet
Inc’s Google
said it will let users set up their profiles to automatically delete
location and web-browsing data, giving people a middle ground to the
internet giant’s always-on or always-off data hoovering mechanisms.
Users
can now choose to have their data deleted after a three-month or
18-month period, the company said Wednesday in a blog post.
The
change gives people more control over their information, but it also
may stop some users from opting to block out Google’s data
collection altogether. While people can stop all collection now, the
company relies on user data to target ads that feed its
multibillion-dollar revenue machine.
Google
has struggled to convince customers and regulators that it respects
their privacy and keeps the reams of data it collects on people safe.
It shut down the Google Plus social network last year after finding a
glitch that exposed the personal information of half a million users.
Google
and fellow online ad giant Facebook Inc. have become some of the
most-valuable companies in history by collecting billions of data
points on billions of people and selling targeted access to
advertisers.
Politicians,
consumers and privacy advocates around the world are questioning
those business models, and whether giving up personal information is
worth the services provided by the companies.
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