(Associated Press via NewsEdge) Three AOL subscribers who suddenly found records of their Internet searches widely distributed online are suing the company under privacy laws and are seeking an end to its retention of search-related data.
The lawsuit is believed to be the first in the wake of AOL's intentional release of some 19 million search requests made over a three-month period by more than 650,000 subscribers, including the three plaintiffs, two unnamed Californians and Kasadore Ramkissoon of Richmond County, New York
Filed in a US District Court in Oakland, California, the lawsuit seeks class-action status. It does not specify the amount of damages being sought.
AOL already has apologized for the release, which it blamed on a researcher who had failed to gain proper clearances.
The researcher and another AOL employee have been fired, and the company's chief technology officer has resigned. AOL also pledged to name its first chief privacy officer.
John Dominguez, one of the attorneys who filed the lawsuit, said AOL ought to do more.
'People paid AOL with the belief that their privacy was going to be protected,' he said 'That's not what happened.'
Although AOL had substituted numeric IDs for the subscribers' real user names, the company acknowledged the search queries themselves may contain personally identifiable data, revealing names, credit card numbers and medical conditions.
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