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Consumer Watchdog

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Consumer Watchdog investigations and advocacy on data privacy, surveillance, AI, and your right to control your personal information.
Consumer Group Asks Feds To Block Orbitz, Expedia Merger

Consumer Group Asks Feds To Block Orbitz, Expedia Merger

<div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item even"> <p>A leading consumer group is joining the hotel industry in asking the Department of Justice to block the proposed merger of travel booking sites Expedia and Orbitz.</p>
Google Gives Itself A Brand-New Name: Alphabet

Google Gives Itself A Brand-New Name: Alphabet

<p style="">One of the world’s best-known tech companies, with a name no one can forget, just announced a new name for itself that’s exceptionally generic.</p> <p style="">Google said Monday it will be owned by a new umbrella company, Alphabet.</p>
G Is for Google, A Is for”

G Is for Google, A Is for”

<p><strong>Internet Giant Restructures Under New Holding Co., Alphabet</strong></p> <p>Search behemoth Google will reorganize under a new holding company dubbed Alphabet that will be run by co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin as CEO and president, respectively. Sundar Pichai, currently senior vice president of products for Google, will become CEO of the search giant.</p>
Google, Coming To Grips With Its Giant Size, Forms A Parent Company: Alphabet

Google, Coming To Grips With Its Giant Size, Forms A Parent Company: Alphabet

<p>SAN FRANCISCO — Google, coming to grips with its gargantuan size and the disparate nature of its many businesses, is forming a parent company called Alphabet in a move to streamline its corporate structure.</p> <p>The shakeup reflects the 17-year-old company's sprawling interests, which include Internet search, drones, investments, healthcare, wearables, online shopping, glucose-sensing contact lenses and self-driving cars. Under Alphabet, the company aims to better organize those businesses by operating as a collection of separate entities.</p>
California Lawmakers To Weigh Bid To Cut ‘Frivolous’ Initiatives

California Lawmakers To Weigh Bid To Cut ‘Frivolous’ Initiatives

<p>When the state Senate goes back into session this month, its members will have the delicate task of revising California’s 72-year-old filing fee for initiatives so that it will discourage over-the-top measures but still allow the “citizens’ democracy” that for more than a century has been a major part of the state’s political scene.</p> <p>But despite several changes to AB1100 by Assemblyman Evan Low, D-Campbell, critics remain unsatisfied.</p>
Group Seeks A Legislative Fix As California Refinery Profits Surge

Group Seeks A Legislative Fix As California Refinery Profits Surge

<p>A consumer advocacy group says Californians paid a $4.8-billion premium compared with prices in the rest of the nation during the first half of 2015 because of the state's gasoline price spike, and it proposed legislation to fix what it sees as problems in the market.</p> <p>At a news conference Wednesday, Consumer Watchdog, backed by billionaire environmentalist Tom Steyer, criticized the fuel refining industry for overcharging Californians while the rest of the nation paid as much as $1.50 less. In July, Californians paid $1.2 billion extra, the group said.</p>
Report Highlights Overly High Gas Prices In California

Report Highlights Overly High Gas Prices In California

<p>Southland motorists are used to getting gouged at the pump.</p> <p>But a new <a href="http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/resources/thegoldenstategouge.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener">report</a> from <a href="http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Consumer Watchdog</a> reveals that since the state’s record gasoline price spike began in February, Californians have paid $4.8 billion more than the rest of the nation for regular gasoline.</p> <p>That figure comes from a Consumer Watchdog analysis of state and federal data, which deducts California’s slightly higher taxes.</p>
Google Says No Global ‘Right To Be Forgotten’

Google Says No Global ‘Right To Be Forgotten’

<p>A French order to apply the "right to be forgotten" to Google searches not just across European domains but globally would risk "serious chilling effects on the Web," according to the Internet search giant. Rather than comply, Google is asking the French agency that issued the order to withdraw it.</p>
Advertisers Say ‘Right To Be Forgotten’ Conflicts With Free Speech

Advertisers Say ‘Right To Be Forgotten’ Conflicts With Free Speech

<p>The Association of National Advertisers is urging the Federal Trade Commission to reject a "misguided" effort to create a "right to be forgotten" in the United States.</p> <p>"Allowing the Right to Be Forgotten in the United States would cause serious and undue harm to the public’s right to determine for itself what is important and relevant information," the ANA says in a letter to the FTC. "It would force search companies to edit the past under the supervision of federal regulators. This runs contrary to consumers’ interests."</p>
Advertisers: US ‘Right To Be Forgotten’ Would Be Legally ‘Baseless’

Advertisers: US ‘Right To Be Forgotten’ Would Be Legally ‘Baseless’

<p>U.S. Regulators would be violating the First Amendment if they were to force Google and other search engines to delist certain irrelevant search results at a user’s request, a major advertising trade group said Friday.  </p> <p>The Association of National Advertisers sent a letter to the Federal Trade Commission urging it to “forcefully reject” a complaint from Consumer Watchdog, which requested that Google be required to allow Americans to have the “right to be forgotten.”</p>