DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

General Motors to pay $12.5 million to settle claims it illegally sold California driver data

May 8, 2026
in News
General Motors to pay $12.5 million to settle claims it illegally sold California driver data

General Motors has agreed to pay $12.5 million dollars to settle claims that the automaker illegally sold location and driving data of hundreds of thousands of Californians, state officials said Friday.

The settlement is an example of how automakers are facing more scrutiny over allegations that they share driver data with the insurance industry, influencing how much people pay for coverage. California, though, has a law that bars insurers from using driving data to set rates.

“If we get word that a company is illegally collecting, storing or selling consumer data, we won’t hesitate to look under the hood and hold them accountable to the law,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a news conference.

The settlement is the largest California Consumer Privacy Act penalty in the state’s history, Bonta said.

The act gives California consumers the right to request that businesses disclose what data they collect. They can also opt out of the sharing or sale of their personal information and request that businesses delete their data.

Investigators found that from 2020 to 2024, GM sold driver data, including names, contact information, location data and driving behavior data, to data brokers Verisk Analytics, Inc. and LexisNexis Risk Solutions. The data came from a driver’s use of OnStar, which is owned by GM and provides roadside assistance, navigation and other services.

General Motors didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Various district attorneys throughout the state, including in Los Angeles and San Francisco, were involved in the investigation and settlement.

Technology has been playing a bigger role in the auto industry, but the data collected from drivers can reveal personal information about people’s daily habits, including where they drop off their kids and doctor visits.

The California Privacy Protection Agency in 2023 started investigating the privacy practices of connected cars. As the state was looking into the automakers, The New York Times reported in 2024 that GM was sharing consumer driving behavior with insurance companies. Nationwide, GM reportedlymade roughly $20 million from selling data to Verisk and LexisNexis.

The state’s privacy protection agency has taken action against other automakers before. Ford Motor Company was fined $375,703 in March and Honda was fined $632,500 in 2025 for privacy violations.

Under the GM settlement, which still needs court approval, the automaker would delete any driving data the company kept within 180 days and request that the two data brokers do the same. They would also stop selling driving data to consumer reporting agencies for five years and develop a privacy program that includes assessing and mitigating the risks of data collected from OnStar.

California’s settlement with GM came after the Federal Trade Commission in 2025 also took action against the automaker and OnStar for its privacy practices, barring them from disclosing location and driver behavior data to consumer reporting agencies for five years.

The post General Motors to pay $12.5 million to settle claims it illegally sold California driver data appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

Trump Plans to Fire F.D.A. Commissioner Marty Makary
News

Trump Plans to Fire F.D.A. Commissioner Marty Makary

by New York Times
May 8, 2026

President Trump has signed off on a plan to fire Dr. Marty Makary, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, ...

Read more
News

Justice Dept. Settles Case Against Provider of Meat Industry Data

May 8, 2026
News

Justin Baldoni suffering from ‘emotional stress’ after Blake Lively legal war: ‘A big burden to carry’

May 8, 2026
News

Mahmoud Khalil Hurtles Toward Potential Deportation as U.S. Speeds Case

May 8, 2026
News

Edith Eva Eger, Psychologist Who Barely Survived Auschwitz, Dies at 98

May 8, 2026
Will work for free? Trevor Bauer hypothetically offers to sign a ‘$0 salary’ deal with any MLB club

Will work for free? Trevor Bauer hypothetically offers to sign a ‘$0 salary’ deal with any MLB club

May 8, 2026
Alabama Asks Supreme Court to Allow it to Use New Voting Map

Alabama Asks Supreme Court to Allow it to Use New Voting Map

May 8, 2026
For A Third Time, Elderly Man Is Convicted of a Grisly Murder

For A Third Time, Elderly Man Is Convicted of a Grisly Murder

May 8, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026