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German Court: Google Must Stop Ignoring Customer E-mails

jfruh writes If you send an email to support-de@google.com, Google's German support address, you'll receive an automatic reply informing you that Google will not respond to or even read your message, due to the large number of emails received at that address. Now a German court has ruled (PDF) that this is an unacceptable response, based on a German law saying that companies must provide a means for customers to communicate with them. Update: 09/12 15:47 GMT by S : Updated to fix the links.

17 of 290 comments (clear)

  1. well done mods. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Did a mod even check the link to see if it went to what it claimed?

    1. Re:well done mods. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is the wrong place to ask those questions... email support@slashdot.org

    2. Re:well done mods. by Arancaytar · · Score: 5, Funny

      I shall be referring this matter to the German police.

      Go do that; their contact address is support@polizei.de

  2. The link is incorrect by WilliamJozef · · Score: 4, Informative

    The link in the article goes to something completely different (free wifi laptop).

    1. Re:The link is incorrect by WilliamJozef · · Score: 5, Informative

      Correct link should possibly be: http://www.computerworld.com/a...

  3. define "customer" by lkcl · · Score: 4, Informative

    from what i understand of the definition of "customer", a "customer" means "someone who is paying for a service". here, there's no payment involved, therefore there is no contract of sale. i would imagine that it's fairly safe to say that we're most definitely *not* quotes customers of google quotes.

    if on the other hand these individuals are actually _paying_ google for service and are not receiving a response, _then_ i could understand.

    1. Re:define "customer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      actually lots of people are google customers in the sense of payimg them money. Google play, etc

    2. Re:define "customer" by GroeFaZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A customer is someone who receives a service from a company, even if the (monetary) price for that service is zero. Google and their users have agreed on certain terms which gives the customer some rights (using the services offered by Google), and Google some rights (collecting and using the customer's personal information for ads, etc.)

      --
      The grass is always greener on the other side of the light cone.
    3. Re:define "customer" by GroeFaZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That may be a rhetoric criticism to be leveled against Google, but the law has a different opinion. Google and their users have entered mutual contractual obligations. Whether or not those obligations directly involve money in any way does not matter.

      --
      The grass is always greener on the other side of the light cone.
    4. Re:define "customer" by Andreas+Mayer · · Score: 5, Informative

      from what i understand of the definition of "customer", a "customer" means "someone who is paying for a service".

      The law isn't even talking about customers. The term is "Verbraucher" which is better translated as consumer.

      The judge explicitly stated that the law in question does apply to non-paying users.

    5. Re:define "customer" by jc42 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Simply contact the account manager that has been assigned to you. It's no problem at all to contact Google if you're actually bringing in revenue for them.

      In my experience, it is still a problem. Some years back, I signed up to run some google ads on a few web sites that I was responsible for, added their code to my pages, and got a few hundred dollars a month for the orgs that I was helping run the sites. After a while, I got a notice from google that the sites were violating some unspecified terms in their TOS, and the money stopped. I sent a good number of emails to various google support addresses, asking for details of the claimed violation. I never heard back from anyone at google. So I removed the ads from the sites.

      Presumably the small amount they paid these orgs to run their ads was a small portion of what google got from the advertisers. But this apparently didn't justify wasting their people's time explaining to us what we were doing wrong. The wording in their TOS docs were ambiguous enough that, as a programmer, I couldn't figure out what might be wrong, and I couldn't see any way of testing changes to the code to see if I could turn the contract on and off by changing a site's behavior. If their response time has a quantum of a month, it's difficult to test the effect of changes.

      We suspected that their problem with us was that we had a rather low click-through rate. The ads I saw were remarkably irrelevant to the topics of the sites, and no amount of playing with keywords changed this by much. Our keywords did work well with google search to direct people to the sites, but this apparently wasn't good enough to also direct the right ads to the sites. Mostly, I just shrugged, and said "So much for google's vaunted targeting of ads".

      But our inability to get any response at all from their support people didn't do much to fix whatever they thought the problems might have been.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
  4. Really? by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The only difference between Google and most customer service today is that at least Google are honest about it and tell you that you will be ignored. Most other companies will just ignore your email and not tell you or leave you in a call queue for so long that you end up having to hang up and go do something else.

  5. define by aaaaaaargh! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sure they are customers. They are paying with their personal data, which Google hords and then sells to third parties. Without the people who use Google's free services, Google wouldn't earn a cent.

  6. Re:Google should win this if they went to court... by Tanuki64 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Google can argue that they've met the requirements of the law by providing a means for customers to communicate. No where in the law does it require Google to respond

    No, Google cannot.

    2. Angaben zur schnellen Kontaktaufnahme

    Paragraph 5 Abs. 1 Nr 2 TMG sagt dazu woertlich:

    "Angaben, die eine schnelle elektronische Kontaktaufnahme und unmittelbare Kommunikation mit ihnen ermoeglichen, einschlieÃYlich der Adresse der elektronischen Post."

    Translation:

    2. information for quick access

    Paragraph 5 para 1 no 2 TMG says literally:

    "Information to enable a fast electronic contact and direct communication with them, including electronic mail address."

    You can hardly more clear than that. And if Google answers:

    Google will not respond to or even read your message

    it definitely breaks the law, since this is not even a one sided communication.

  7. Re:The End Result . . . by gnasher719 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    On the surface this sounds like a great decision for the google users in Germany. But do you really think Google is going to change their ways? Or spend one dime to appeal this ruling? Nope! They'll just change their automated reply to "Thank you for your issue/concern. We'll look into it and get back to you if necessary."

    If they don't act, they will be fined. However, in Germany being fined doesn't mean you paid for what you are doing wrong, it means the court did something to get your attention. So if after being fined they don't act, the fine will be increased until they act. There isn't really a limit, because not changing their ways tells the court "this fine was so small that we can afford to ignore it, fine us more!".

  8. Re:definition of "customer" by wagnerrp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In the US, if you receive something of monetary value in exchange for a service, you have received income, and that income is taxed. If Google is not being taxed on the data it receives for its free services, then the government itself is saying there is no monetary value on that data. No value means no sale, and thus no customer. Just because you have a contract does not require that one party be a customer.

  9. You are a vendor to slashdot by sjbe · · Score: 4, Informative

    Of course I'm one of slashdot's customers. Slashdot would be out of business if we (the customers) stopped coming to their website.

    I'm an accountant.

    Unless you are sending cash to slashdot, your relationship to them is most accurately described as that of a vendor or a supplier if you prefer that term. You provide data to slashdot in exchange for entertainment which is a form of in-kind exchange. Slashdot then uses that data to sell advertising to their paying customers. From an accounting perspective by providing this forum to you, you would be on slashdot's books as either Cost of Goods Sold or more likely some kind of Operating Expense. This effectively makes you a vendor to them, not a customer because they don't sell you anything.

    It can get a little murkier if you have a paid subscription but they still advertise to you because then you become both a customer and a vendor. Which you are depends on the transaction in question. Logically it would make sense to have the subscription be treated as a contra-expense because then you don't have to have this dual relationship. But it's more likely that they would book it as income and have the user on the books as both a customer and (indirectly) as a vendor.