EU Questions Google Privacy Policy 168
An anonymous reader writes "The BBC is running a piece noting that the EU is scrutinizing Google's privacy policy this month. The company's policy of keeping search information on their servers for up to two years may be violating EU privacy laws. A data protection group that advises the European Union has written to the search giant to express concerns. The EU has a wide range of privacy protections that set limits to what information corporations may collect and what they may or may not do with it. In the US on the other hand privacy laws generally cover government actions while the business sector remains largely unregulated. Is it perhaps time to follow the European example and extend privacy laws to include corporations?"
That is just ignorant (Score:2, Insightful)
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Obviously, this was all put in place before the Internet so its all a bit pointless, but I guess where the BBC i
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There is a relatively ineffective legal framework governing how collected information can be disseminated, but it's not really stopped the likes of, say, the credit reference agencies from doing what they've always done--whic
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The simple fact is that unless you close your bank accounts, break the law by not registering on the electoral roll or the council tax register, live in accommodation in somebody else's
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Then don't be an AC, you stupid ass.
A government concerned with it's citizens privacy? (Score:4, Funny)
No. (Score:2, Insightful)
Think "corporations" shou
Re:No. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Sure it does. Don't send e-mail to people who are supporting a business you don't trust. If you have actual, persuasive, sensible reasons to think that Google is Officially Evil, then you should have absolutely no trouble convincing an actual
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Finally, if I say something in private to my friend, I don't see what business it is of Googles (or any other company) to snoop on what I'm saying. This has nothing to do with Google being Evil(TM) or not, it's just common sense. In fact, it would be silly to say that nearly everybody in the world is Evil(TM) just because I don't
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So then tell your friend you won't email him at GMail. I am sorry, email is NOT something you can easily protect based on the very nature of how it is delivered and how much control there is at every point along its delivery route. Concerned about that? Encrypt your emails. Expecting email to be "private" is a joke. Its just like saying that your posts on a blog are private because you turn on some control lists.
Also, have you ever read Googles privacy policies? Its the only company that doesn't blanket st
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I don't need to read Google's privacy policy, since I'm not a gmail user. I'm not asking them for a service, they're the ones who insist on snooping on my words if I email a certain friend.
BTW, privacy policies don't protect customers over the long run. When a company wants to modify their policy, they phase it out with ol
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It's not about them reading your messages.
It's about them using the headers to link your email address(*) with all searches, cookies and ad-sense carrying sites browsed from your IP.
(*)Hence really your identity, if a message with you professional address, say, ends up forwarded to one of their accounts. )
Great idea in theory (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't like a company's privacy policy? Don't patronize them.
This libertarian idea is wonderful in theory, but not so easy in practice. If all of the companies in a given market have economic incentives to make use of your private data, they will all err on the side of making more revenue, not protecting your privacy. In a publicly-owned company, the profit motive will always beat out any concerns that are considered secondary. Even where a company knows that privacy is important to users, they also know it is not *the* most important determining factor for customers. Therefore, even though it might be high on the list of customer concerns, all the companies in the market will still ignore it.
For an example of this in action, look at those obnoxious watermarks all American TV channels now display. Nobody likes it, but it's not enough of a detriment that people won't watch whatever ABC, CBS, NBC, et al, is showing. The fact that they all do it makes it impossible to show your displeasure by switching channels anyway.
Your example of the landscaping company records is a red herring. These sorts of customer service businesses only gather information related to the work they do for you, while search engines gather a much broader range of information. The fact that small service businesses get audited is irrelevant as well. Nothing in the audit records is going to provide anything beyond transaction dates and amounts. Generally speaking, Mom & Pop's Garden Service doesn't get routinely attacked by ambitious hacker networks, either.
I understand that you enjoy the benefits of companies using your personal information to provide better service. So do I. So do the vast majority of people. But I think it's a gross simplification to say that as a practical matter we really have much choice in the matter.
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Yes, I agree. I find it disturbing that this must be explained so often. Also, I would like to add that this behavior should be fully expected from a company. And that is exactly why government should protect the general populace (and companies) from companies with law.
Libertarian approach to privacy (Score:2)
That goes both ways (Score:2)
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Don't like European laws? Don't do business there.
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Because you grant them that right. That's what terms of use are all about... it's part of the bargain you strike when you elect to do things like use their FREE EMAIL HOSTING, or make money by running ads they serve up on your web site.
[Personally, I like the fact that the franchise that changes my vehicle's engine fluids is already pulling up my service record when they see my license plate roll into their queue lane.]
Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
So, due to privacy concerns, the EU dislikes Google storing data on its users, but forces ISPs to retain data for two years [slashdot.org]? Under the catch-all excuse of 'terrorism' no less.
They could follow each others example: the EU could introduce laws to stop government snooping, whilst the US introduces laws to stop corporate snooping. Personally I find the EU government snooping worse than Google, at least Google is a product choice, government laws can't be worked around. Although the purchase of Double-click does make Google's tracking somewhat difficult to avoid when surfing around.
Failing that, just use Scroogle [scroogle.org] and/or Tor [eff.org] and/or an ad-blocker. :)
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Politics aside, as a rule I think that whichever solution limits more the spreading around of my data is the solution I prefer, at leas
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"Personally I find the EU government snooping worse than Google, at least Google is a product choice, government laws can't be worked around."
Let's just straighten this remark out: "I can stop using Google, and with the next elections I can send my government home." these are you
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This is the difference between USA and EU citizens' privacy worries. On the most part, very few people in Europe worry about what government agencies do with their personal info, but are extremely worried about how corporations use it. As opposed to the USA where it's the opposite way around.
It seems to be related to wider cultural differences. Europeans tend to trust public institutions a lot more than they trust large corporations whereas Am
What about retention? (Score:2, Insightful)
There is a big gap (Score:2, Insightful)
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It should be noted that not the emails themselves a kept, but the logs of the mailservers. Just as mobile phone records are kept and not the actual conversations. The differences there should be obvious.
The EU? The European Union? (Score:5, Insightful)
We're talking about that EU, yes?
Re:The EU? The European Union? (Score:5, Informative)
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Has it ever occurred to you that the world is not black and white? Just because an entity does SOME bad things doesn't mean that EVERYTHING it does is bad. You'd think that people from the USA of all places would understand that.
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No.
With 'everyone who has a "vested interest"' you mean the judge and secret services, don't you?
No.
It is in fact exactly the other way around. These things are very precisely described.
Good for them! (Score:2)
Re:Absolutely not. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Absolutely not. (Score:5, Interesting)
"[Company] collects information which you may wish to remain private. [Company] retains the information for up to 2 years, and information may be made available to outside vendors without your consent."
Almost everyone can understand that. It's still a high reading level (generally), but far simpler than the 8 page privacy policy most companies have.
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Re:Absolutely not. (Score:5, Insightful)
Nobody is better of with simpler laws! Not big business, not politicians and not the lawyers. Just imagine, someone from the general public reads your policy or the law, and really understands it. Do you understand the potential dangers there?
No, simpler laws is in nobodies interest. At least not somebody who has something to say about it.
Re:Absolutely not. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Absolutely not. (Score:5, Insightful)
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However, I'm not aware Google sells this information to anyone rather it does marketing research for it's advertising departments. Storing the search information to let them analyze the in for and turn an extra dollar from the advertising could mean the difference from paying a service fee to
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I prefer they just don't collect the information in the first place, though I'm not sure how we can be sure that they don't. They can still put up adverts, if they want.
In any case, I don't see any option for me to pay for a google service without adverts.
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And why would you think they need an alternative to their current business model if you don't like it? Your option is to find another search engine or whatever you use Google for. When your hungry for steak, you don't necessarily goto a fish shack for dinner complaining you couldn't get steak, you goto a steak house instead.
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It's more like going to a steak restaurant only to find that they serve BSE.
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There might be more to it then just an IP. They might have a user
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If you don't close the curtains before getting dressed and someone merely walking down the street sees you naked doesn't mean they violated your privacy. So because of an action you would have neglected to do, on purpose or by accident, you would have gave up that notion of privacy. I don't see why Cookies and the notion of not deleting them should
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The difference is in saying jerome walked through that door or the fifth person to walk through that door today. And unless you are always the fifth person, your not directly identified. Now, it is my understanding that google with your permission will associa
Re:Absolutely not. (Score:5, Insightful)
I for one want to know very much how are they using the data from the web stats service google provides. I see that everyone and their dog have the scripts, and while I agree to disclose some statistics to the sites that I'm visiting, I don't remember ever agreeing to disclose the same information to google.
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I certainly know what information I'm giving them. What I don't know is how much they store and how effectively they piece it all together. Why do I need to know what Google is doing with my data? I gave them my d
Re:Absolutely not. (Score:5, Insightful)
I used to live in a society in which detailed files on people were customarily kept, and used to make people behave. From my experience, allowing any company (or organization, for that matter) to have data files on people without any option of the people to control what's in those files and who's accessing them isn't the smart thing to do.
But to each their own.
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I much rather have a legal mechanism that requires them to tell me what data they have about me if I ask, and enables me to have it removed, then not
Say what you like about privacy here in the UK, but we have the data protection act, which does exactly that (if I give them aproximate times and places, I can even make people trawl through CCTV footage and show me any pictures of me they have). And if I don't want info x to be on the database of company y, then I can tell them to remove it.
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Yes, that is very "insightful". However, since you have no way of knowing what google does, you don't know if google is conning you.
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thankyouvermuch, but I don't like it
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A case can be made that I hold copyright to information about me, or a right to privacy which may work like copyright. That is, Google is f
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And truthfully, I disagree even with your premise. Unless you have the ability to do the same transaction without giving up your data, it isn't a willing exchange but coercion.
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Secondly, in the EU at any rate, we have this idea that there are certain rights that cannot be given up. One cannot give up basic rights to freedom by signing a contract agreeing to become someone else's slave, for example. This is the same sort o
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Corporations c
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The basis of the Constitution is that people have inalienable rights, and it specifies one form of government derived from those rights. It enumerates certain rights, but in no way claims that the list of rights is exhaustive. Courts can and have held that other rights are inalienable and thus covered by the Constitution. These are not privil
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The courts have
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This is like you printing a statement I said and then you being sued for it,
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1. Tell people what data you are collecting from them
2. Keep the data you collect safe
This allows you to "look after your privacy", as you suggest.
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<sarcasm>I agree 100%. We should wait for it to become a huge, entrenched problem first. Then, when this information is being lo
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As long as I know what data they're storing, I have no problem with them keeping my data for up to two years. Maybe I'll regret that two years from now, but it's very unlikely.
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Don't be so naive, every large co
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that was meant in reference to google's earlier stance on google china where it was decided that refusing to cooperate with china's censorship of its people was not worth it. it was in fact voiced on slashdot on more than one occasion on slashdot that this wasnt very good thing for google to do it. it was not meant as a flame in any way shape or form, just a comment on google's history and how it reflects on the current topic.
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since when was my right not to be essentially spied on a violation of Google's privacy?
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You can debate the right or wrongness of this. But until the laws and rules are changed, prepare to be disappointed a lot.
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But reinforcing or restating things that are wrong only make you look more wrong. Google is a US company and they store their information inside the US. In effect, they are a US citizen. Now they have offices in other countries and such but the laws on multinational corporations are pretty clear on it.
And if you read the post hist
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A corporation as a collection of people is no different. When you remove the rights of an entity because of it's size, you have removed the rights of all the individuals that comprise that enti
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The many and various individuals in a corporation do not lose their rights to privacy for being part of that corporation, nor do the shareholders or customers of that corporation. In particular, your suggestion that you might lose your rights for investing in a company su
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I'm not arguing against regulating corporations and I'm not arguing against regulating what they can do to some extent. HOwever, I am apposed to the idea that laws effecting
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Defining a corporation as a group of people might be your idea, but it's simply not the case. I've got nothing against corporations, I'm paid a very nice sum of money by a major US multinational. But I'm not confused about the idea of us being a group of people with rights to my data. I don't w
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What has no basis in fact? DO corporations auto-magically appear over night and then people auto-magically have a job afterwards? No, People decide to start a business and there is a legal structure to protect them from fraud and actions of other people in the business. They make this a corp
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You never said what is necessary. Who decides that or who defines that. At least in America,
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Google.co.uk and all the others you mentioned are mere domains owned by google. They aren't separate companies in any sense. Google, or "Google inc." is a Delaware based company. They incorporated under Delaware law in the united states. If you follow the links about google it will take you to the same incorporation certificate whether you start from Google.com or Google.co.uk. All the othe
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Corporations are not extensions of the rights of their owners and employees. You repeatedly make this statement, but it is not true. France, for instance, is particuarly tough on this, whereby in many cases there is a presumption of guilt until a company can prove that it's actions were not malicious.
Are you saying that an investigation endorsed by the board, the CEO, the security department and legal counsel would not be able to get
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This thread is about the idea that a group of people all the sudden lose their rights when they form a corperation. Follow the progression of the conversation. I never said that Google wasn't subject to EU laws, I even clarified that in the previous post as well as in other posts along the succession of
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Similarly, a collection of people have the same rights as an individual. The difference is that saying an average of $36k is less identifying then saying one person over
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Re:the obvious question: (Score:4, Informative)
The concern is over the fact that they trade with people in the EU. US corporations that trade in the EU are required to follow EU laws; if they aren't, they may be fined by the EU (e.g. Microsoft), and if they do not pay their fines to the EU then they face having any of their property that is within the EU confiscated. This would include any money in transit from their European customers to them.
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