Supported by a false corporate promise, in which it claimed to provide free access to its program for life to the first users of the cloud productivity, Strarford Company LLC filed a lawsuit directly with Google on behalf of everyone who was part of this initial push. project.
Services such as Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Google Docs are part of the Google Workplace service, formerly known as Google Apps, are part of the day to day of many people, being a completely free service, however for business purposes like personalized emails and shared storage Drive has a cost.
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The issue stems from the promise that these services would all be made available for free, later changing to paid options. The Stratford Company issued the lawsuit alleging breach of agreement based on attracting users to stages your software and allowing Google to make changes and apply a fee on functionalities.
From 2012 Google started charging new users monthly to use the software, in 2022 the company notified old users that they would also be charged. Stratfort Company reported in the complaint that Google abandoned the "don't be evil" policy, being a company valued at nearly two trillion dollars at break the promise it had with loyal customers who were part of the development process of the already profitable product to develop further profits.
Now the company that issued the suit is seeking class-action status for everyone who initially joined the project, with the damages to be determined at trial, pending in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in San Joseph.
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