Comment by shuckles
6 years ago
This is a fair distinction, though it does not include the option of discussing how the data _won’t_ be used.
6 years ago
This is a fair distinction, though it does not include the option of discussing how the data _won’t_ be used.
Per your observation, I would argue that the intent of the privacy policy as quoted above is pretty clear. When the policy says that the identifier doesn't contain PII, I believe that is meant to convey that it will not be used to identify you. But it's true that that use is not explicitly excluded. I'm not a lawyer so I couldn't tell you if being weasely in this way would count as fraud or not. Otoh, I suspect that Google is actually abiding by the spirit of the policy they wrote because honestly they have little to gain and much to lose by violating it.