Galaxy Internet Services, an ISP for homes and businesses in Massachusetts, has filed a class-action court case next to Google more than the search company's confess mistake that it inhale and stored data from Wi-Fi networks.

Through its legal delegate, Carp Law Offices, Galaxy said on Tuesday that Google dishonored U.S. federal and Massachusetts solitude laws when it imprison residential and business Web movement data.

Google refuse to remark about the court case.

Earlier this month, Google reveal that its Street sight cars, which take photos for services similar to Google Maps, had as 2006 incorrectly composed "payload data" from Wi-Fi networks they heard by that weren't password-protected.

Google did intentionally record the networks' names (SSIDs) and their routers' unique identifying numbers (MAC), but has stopped doing this.