Jaiku Bought By Google, Some Fear Privacy Issues 85
Platonic writes "According to the New York Times, Google's recent purchase of Jaiku, a little-known micro-blog service (think Twitter) might raise privacy concerns due to the automated nature of the web site's services. From the article: "The deal, announced this month, has much of the tech-tracking blogosphere abuzz. Some claim it is the harbinger of a new, truly interconnected world, where a chunk of our existence will migrate online ... Chris Messina, an open-source entrepreneur and founder of the consulting firm Citizen Agency, takes it a step further. In a blog post after the Jaiku deal was announced, he said that he envisioned a world where all information had migrated online, where the address book "lives in Googleland,"'"
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I don't personally care when my own friends go to the bank, the grocery store or the laundromat. If the place is robbed while they are there that is interesting, and worrisome as well. Since they are my friends, I would care if they found some sort of new food to try or if they figured out a time when the laundromat is more convenient, but mainly because I know these people.
Microblogging
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"It is unfortunate that it is human nature to fear losing privacy"
Where do you see a reference to "microblogging" in that? The ONLY thing that sentence states is that it's unfortunate for people to fear losing their privacy, and THAT is what I took issue with.
Again, read the parent fucking post, and stop making tangential arguments.
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You are right however that the thoughts expressed in my post were incomplete. They were not poorly thought out or intended to troll however.
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However, we value our privacy, so care about big broogle.
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You say that one thing we might wish to keep private is which porn sits we subscribe to. I say the reason one might want to keep such a thing private is very indirect. You aren't worried that others will you look at porn or porn of type $(?). You are worried that there will be a societal backlash. The problem is that society doesn't accept common thoughts and behavior as normal.
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Porn is really prevalent with men and s
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Jaiku (Score:2, Funny)
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And as for the privacy deal, there's nothing forcing people to use this kind of service.
If 90% of the people in the world are constantly updating the site with where they are and who they're with, the site will almost always have your location whether you sign up for it or not.
If 90% of the people in the world are a part of the service that degrades their privacy, the reasonable expectation of privacy gets lowered, and people start thinking that you have something to hide. It's an idiosyncrasy until it's a cop that gets that suspicion.
On the other hand, if 90% of the people in this wor
Google does something, privacy concerns raised (Score:1, Insightful)
Google is an information company. They do stuff with information. There will *always* be privacy concerns. I don't think that makes Google evil.
Though, as far as I am concerned, Google became evil the day they turned down my employment application.
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Come back with a clothespin on your nose and say "Here goes nuthin'..."
Oh great, just what I need... (Score:2, Insightful)
When was the last time you got a 404 from Google? (Score:2)
Re:When was the last time you got a 404 from Googl (Score:1)
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I do to, and all I can say is you've been very lucky. I've had 6 or 8 GMail outages, some for 30 mins, some for a few hours. Not in the distant past either. The most recent outage for me and my accounts (or, probably the server my account was on) was about 3 months ago.
Go search Google Groups. You will see lots of people that get random messages from GMail saying it's down. There's some people in those groups where GMail has been down for days at a time.
For you, GMail won
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Google Coolaid (Score:1)
Do your part, don't use Google (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:Do your part, don't use Google (Score:5, Insightful)
My concern has rarely been what I put online. It's what others put online about me that I can't control or remove.
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*takes off hat and takes a moment of silence, for privacy lost by the carelessness of others*
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Little late... (Score:2)
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Mandatory ... (Score:1)
It has leaked that there are plans to make the use of the service mandatory for US-inhabitants.
CC.
Blogosphere (Score:4, Insightful)
What's next, newspapers are papticles and the news industry becomes the infoknot.?
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So what? Huh? (Score:5, Funny)
So this tool automatically gathers little scraps of information about a user and draws lines between what it thinks are logical connections (like any good tinfoil hat aficionado might do in a dank basement) into some sort of tag cloud for that user. Ostensibly the use is used by applications as a sort of "stuff about you" repository, so maybe in one application you set your default home address as something when you go to use an application that requires your home address it could dip into that repository and insert it for you.
The pro: It's like having an assistant
The con: It's like having an assistant who works for the FBI
YRO Ad Libs! (Score:5, Funny)
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Google is using OSS to become bigger than MS (Score:1)
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Dvorak agrees (Score:2)
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All of it?
Phew, that was easy.
Seriously though, omnipotance is only scary when it's one way. If the government knows everything about me, but I also know everything about them, I really don't need to fear them.
90% of the things people are worried over the world finding out about them are things that 90% of the world shares in common with them. And the remaining 10% of the things people are worried over others knowing about them are easily overlooked when you know the 10% of everyone else as well.
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Weak article. (Score:5, Insightful)
I understand the danger of having a single company (Google in this case) having easy access to comprehensive data about your life (location, email records, search habits, etc.). And I firmly believe that people need to educate themselves about the dangers of releasing too much personal information. But I fail to see how this recent Google acquisition is cause for great concern. Mobile devices are increasingly useful. So are social networking tools. Merging the two is an obvious next step, and a step that Google is taking.
Don't you understand the Internet 2.0? (Score:3, Insightful)
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They provide
Profit (Score:1)
Jaiku haiku (Score:3, Funny)
Jaiku haiku (now with formatting) (Score:2)
Once alone, now of Google
Privacy, evil
Chris Messina Rebuttal To NY Times (Score:4, Informative)
Here is Chris Messina's blog entry [factoryjoe.com] on his inclusion in the NY Times piece.
In a nutshell, he doesn't like the NY Times' headline.
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Wait, there's a website with the same name as that asshole.
What happened to healthy paranoia? (Score:1)
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I know the Apple fanboys and Gmail Sheep don't want to hear it but it needs to be said. Just because a company's motto is "Do no evil" doesn't mean it's living up to it. Just because it may be the best/dominant search engine right now doesn't mean you should use it. Frankly, Google having a monopoly on internet searches is a little frightening. It's like having only one company that controls the TV, only one that controls newspapers, or one that controls radio
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I think I'm joking, but I probably have overly healthy paranoia.
It's About Trust (Score:2)
If anyone can pull this off it will be Google precisely because despite some bad press the vast majority of people outside of Slashdot still trust the company to "do no evil."
As we move from Web 2.0 to Web 3.whatever, companies will increasingly need to be able ensure that user data is both respe
personal information is worth a lot of money... (Score:2)
For example, in exchange for datamining your search and placing highly valuable tagetted ads, Google et. al. gives you free websearch. People get this, and agree to it-- but its probably not so muc
One more closed service (Score:1)
Micro-Blogging Alternatives. (Score:1)
Jaiku AND Zingku (Score:2)
This may be in anticipation of the launch of the gPhone, rumored to be launched end of this year.
Haiku? (Score:1)
Your data floats free from you
Your porn's now public