Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google Privacy

Google's 'Incognito' Mode Inspires Staff Jokes - and a Big Lawsuit (bloomberg.com) 60

An email mocking Chrome browsing mode's faux privacy has surfaced in the courtroom. From a report: On International Data Privacy Day last year, an email popped into Alphabet Chief Executive Sundar Pichai's inbox from Google's marketing chief Lorraine Twohill full of ideas on gaining user trust. "Make Incognito Mode truly private," she wrote in a bullet point. "We are limited in how strongly we can market Incognito because it's not truly private, thus requiring really fuzzy, hedging language that is almost more damaging." Now, billions of dollars in damages could be at stake in a consumer lawsuit targeting the private-browsing feature if a judge agrees Tuesday to let the case proceed as a class action on behalf of millions of users.

Twohill's assessment of Incognito's shortcomings was remarkably candid considering Google had already been sued at the time she messaged her boss, who himself had shepherded the feature through development back when the company launched its Chrome browser in 2008. Google denies wrongdoing. "Privacy controls have long been built into our services and we encourage our teams to constantly discuss or consider ideas to improve them," spokesman Jose Castaneda said in an email. Court filings show that well before the search engine giant was taken to court, rank and file Googlers frankly voiced their own frustrations that Incognito didn't live up to its name.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google's 'Incognito' Mode Inspires Staff Jokes - and a Big Lawsuit

Comments Filter:
  • But... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2022 @03:13PM (#62957541)
    Google _needs_ to know what porn I watch, so they can tailor advertising to my wants and needs! What company really wants to marker to old lonely depressed guys?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 11, 2022 @03:24PM (#62957569)

    Now you can browse privately, and other people who use this device wonâ(TM)t see your activity.

    Why should the courts care what some illiterate kooks falsely claim Incognito mode should do but very clearly does not?

    Chrome wonâ(TM)t save the following information:
    Your browsing history
    Cookies and site data
    Information entered in forms

    Your activity might still be visible to:
    Websites you visit
    Your employer or school
    Your internet service provider

    If a giant warning explicitly pointing out what it does and doesn't hide isn't good enough anymore, just imagine a world where YOU can be held liable for any random expectation the lowest common denominator out there makes up, even when you clearly and plainly stated your intent.
    Is that really a world you want to live in, just to "stick it to Google"?

    • by presidenteloco ( 659168 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2022 @03:33PM (#62957607)
      Yeah. Ridiculously litigious society.
      This is like, I sell you a hammer, which comes with a big warning saying:
      CAUTION: CAN CAUSE SERIOUS BODILY HARM IF SWUNG AT OR FALLS ON SELF OR OTHERS.
      And you sue anyway because of your purple thumbnail.
      Testimony: "Well it looked like a nail, so I hit it with the hammer."
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by splutty ( 43475 )

      Words have meaning. The word privacy means something. The words in the cover-your-ass text that Google puts under 'privacy' do not mean what the word privacy means.

      • It does provide privacy in exactly the means that it describes: It doesn't store anything locally. As soon as you close your browser, everything it has about you is gone. Common sense should tell you that if you give a website anything that it can use to track you, like say a login name, then it can track you. There's nothing your browser can possibly do about that.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2022 @04:30PM (#62957853)
      Yea reading some articles and I found this:

      According to the lawsuit, Google tracks user data even in “private mode” with the help of Google Analytics, Google Ad Manager, the “Google Sign-In button” for websites, website plug-ins, and various other applications.

      About 70% of all publishers use Google services. So when a user visits a website, Google receives their personal information like IP address, location, and even what the person is viewing or has viewed. Google gets the user’s real-time data whether or not the user uses any of the Google services.

      Seems people have a serious misunderstanding of what incognito mode is and isn't.

      • It's not even called "incognito" any more, but "Guest" mode. This makes it much more clear what kind of "privacy" is being offered.

        I personally find it useful for when I need to use somebody else's computer for some reason, I can log in to a site without worrying about things like saved passwords or shortcuts or auto-fill data.

        • I find it hilarious that these days I'd rather look at saucy content in regular browser mode (so I can remember such important urls ;)) but I look at Amazon and other legit sites in private browsing (so ads/recommendations don't stalk me forever). I never click those stalker product ads -- though if ads keyed in on the saucy stuff, I'd actually click them lol.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It would be very bad if they won. It would affect other browser's private modes and make it risky to offer any privacy enhancement at all, in case some bastard advertiser figured out a way around it.

      In fact one of the advertisers would probably try to sue the developer of uBlock and maybe the EFF over Privacy Badger, because they are not 100% effective.

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      Is that really a world you want to live in, just to "stick it to Google"?

      The Google.

      Stick it to the Google.

    • As Eddie Murphy once put it, this is another example of someone looking to get paid.
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2022 @03:36PM (#62957631)

    If you actually value your privacy, you won't use Chrome.

    That's step one - and, if you ignore it, any other steps you might take are meaningless.

    • If you actually value your privacy:
      - Don't use a web browser
      - Don't connect to the internet
      - Don't use a smartphone
      - Don't use a dumbphone
      - Don't walk down a public street

  • Or else, nobody really can complain if people didn't read TFA.
  • Is this a joke? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Murdoch5 ( 1563847 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2022 @03:51PM (#62957701) Homepage
    Maybe this screen changed, I don't use Chrome very much, but this is what the Incognito Tab is saying:

    You’ve gone Incognito

    Now you can browse privately, and other people who use this device won’t see your activity. However, downloads, bookmarks and reading list items will be saved. Learn more

    Chrome won’t save the following information:
    Your browsing history
    Cookies and site data
    Information entered in forms
    Your activity might still be visible to:
    Websites that you visit
    Your employer or school
    Your Internet service provider

    I can't see how there is any opening for confusion in that text, it never says "Google will unable to see or collect any of your data". Furthermore, everyone knows that Google has the same respect for person liberty and privacy as North Korea + NAMBLA, so if you give them any path to your data, even by accident, they won't just grab it, they'll full on grotesquely abuse it.

    • you are by definition not the reasonable person
      • A reasonable person can reasonably be expected to read and understand the gist of the not-very-fine print that comes up on the screen as an explanation of what incognito mode in the browser is.

        A lazy-ass entitled TLDR type deserves little sympathy, and certainly no compensation, if they are surprised, shocked, appalled sometime later.
    • The first part of your post I have no quarrel with.

      The second part, though:

      I can't see how there is any opening for confusion in that text, it never says "Google will unable to see or collect any of your data". Furthermore, everyone knows that Google has the same respect for person liberty and privacy as North Korea + NAMBLA, so if you give them any path to your data, even by accident, they won't just grab it, they'll full on grotesquely abuse it.

      seems troubling. It seems like you're saying that the reason it's okay for google not to take steps to be further in line with users' expectations is that everyone should know Google is out to get them --- which sounds an awful lot like blaming rape victims who were wearing skimpy clothing and going to the wrong part of town. The fact that it's generally understood that Google is a bad actor is itself a problem, and shouldn't excus

      • Of course I think Google should be forced to clean up their behavior, in fact, for the record, I think it should be illegal to collect and abuse peoples data, it should be considered a form of digital molestation, but that's not going to happen any time soon, or probably ever.

        I don't think anyone would argue that when you hear Google you think violation. My point was that you can't hear Google, or use a Google product, and think they'll be reasonable, that would be like hiring NAMBLA to watch your son, an
      • It's not just google on the server side that tracks you in private mode.
        Any website can easily do that.

        Basic problem here is that people don't understand the basics of the architecture and function of the web.
        When incognito mode / private mode browser feature was invented, people know what a f**king web browser was, and wouldn't expect its features to extend down to controlling what websites somewhere over the internet do.
        Now, it's fair to say, more people are less clueful, about the information infrastruct
        • That's hilarious, and you're hitting the nail on the head! Even if the browser window explained in detail that web-servers could track you and defined every possible term, Google would still be sued based on the TLDR nature of the warning. There was nothing Google could have done to prevent this lawsuit, because users are no longer held accountable for their lack of knowledge or total willful ignorance.
  • Safari on Mac/iOS. I can log into any number gmail accounts, fb, LinkedIn, hotmail, yahoo mail and so on. Each tab has its own session. Last I checked, that didn't work with Edge, FF or Chrome.

  • That's so far not really funny. What were those jokes?

  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2022 @05:22PM (#62957985)
    Google are essentially a glorified ad agency. They make their money by writing software that surveils people everywhere they go on the interwebs pipes, collecting information about the intimate details of their lives. They're unavoidable & relentless, & there's no depths they're not willing to sink to, including breaching contracts & breaking laws. Google has a long history of this & they're apparently unrepentant.

    Facebook, Twitter, and many others are very similar in this respect. I don't think suing corporations is the way to go about it. We need to make the bulk collection of personal data illegal. No exceptions. No ifs or buts. If anyone wants to collect it, they need a specifically targeted warrant in each & every case.

    The advertising industry won't go away & they probably won't lose much money as a result. They'll find other, less intrusive ways to sell their services.

    Whaddaya think?
    • While I agree with you, I don't think they are technically an ad agency. An ad agency creates ads for other companies. They are really a spy agency whose business is helping ad agencies target their ads.

    • Sorry, but I missed the point where an ad agency is by definition a worse spy agency than the Stasi. I know Google is, but that is their own choice and preferred level of evilness.
      • AFAIK, Google don't have powers of search & seizure or arrest, & AFAIK, they don't torture people (although it's up for debate in whether they aid & abet US govt & other countries' torture programmes). So maybe not quite the Stasi yet.
  • It doesn't matter what some pedantic nerds think people should understand, it's how people perceive it.

    If something says autopilot and is marketed as magic, people will treat is as magic self driving.

    Just like if something says private, people will treat it as if it was actually end-to-end private. They will not read the fine print. It's not guaranteed they will understand the fine print, even if they read it.

    And before people complain, you fucking nerds here don't read the article, don't read the
    • by presidenteloco ( 659168 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2022 @08:49PM (#62958451)
      So, people, on average, are to be treated as stupid and intellectually lazy then (not expected to read any of the f**ing simple instructions, never mind the TFM), is your premise?
      And are to be legally shielded for their one must say lazy if not willful ignorance?
      Sounds a lot like these people belong in daycare, not out in the nasty and brutish world wild web.
      • So, people, on average, are to be treated as stupid and intellectually lazy then (not expected to read any of the f**ing simple instructions, never mind the TFM), is your premise?

        Yes. You might like to live in a fantasy world, but we don't.

        brutish world wild web.

        Even tech-savvy people can't keep up with all the web shenanigans. You, presumably, work in this industry, or very adjacent to it, so you know enough and are familiar with it.

        But you obviously have never been around normal people who aren't exposed to it day to day and don't know the jargon well enough to even make sense of the limitations of "incognito mode". And they shouldn't have to be expected to understand it to be actually safe, just lik

        • to understand a simple warning like:

          Your activity might still be visible to:
          - Websites you visit
          - Your employer or school
          - Your internet service provider

          You just have to have basic comprehension skills in English. And I'm sure the browser has alternate language versions.

          I don't think it's the responsibility of the technology provider community to make the whole of the world's information infrastructure safe for those with sub grade-8 reading comprehension and vocabulary.
          There can be padded walled gardens fo
      • So google, on average, is to be treated as if it's above the law? They cooperate with fascist governments like China, hand over account credentials that can and do lead to people being jailed, tortured and killed. They buy enough influence in our government that they can operate with impunity, pay a pittance in taxes, use monopoly power, and collude with other silicon valley tech companies to keep worker salaries down. On top of that they collect and store personal information, irregardless of whatever p

    • It's pretty obvious that tech companies taking flak in the news have their paid shills AKA marketing and social media interns spam forums like this... or else we have a surprising number of people mouthing the same talking point "HERP DERR they shoulda read the fine print!"

  • As a user I quickly realised that incognito mode was nothing more than a sham when my kerberos credentials carried over from my regular session to my incognito session. I quickly realised that Google incognito is a bit like the wolf guarding the sheep.

    • My memory is hazy but I had a similar realisation when I did something like shifting to a different Firefox container to log into a second Microsoft account and found it was already logged in. I don't think this is a sham, it indicates that some authentication tokens are stored on the OS and accessed by the browser.

  • I sure had hopes for some Funny on this story.

How many QA engineers does it take to screw in a lightbulb? 3: 1 to screw it in and 2 to say "I told you so" when it doesn't work.

Working...