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Google's Response to the DoJ Motion

neoviky writes "Google Inc. on Friday formally rejected the U.S. Justice Department's subpoena of data from the Web search leader, arguing the demand violated the privacy of users' Web searches and its own trade secrets. Responding to a motion by U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, Google also said in a filing in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California the government demand to disclose Web search data was impractical."

315 comments

  1. Equal treatment? by ttimes · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So the government goes after Google- what about others like Microsoft? Or is this The Evil One's plan- the government is their largest contract. Hmmm

    1. Re:Equal treatment? by dc29A · · Score: 1

      IIRC, MS and Yahoo already caved in to the Kremlin^H^H^H^H^HWhite House.

    2. Re:Equal treatment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      From what I heard, M$ and Yahoo both turned over their records without even raising a fuss. Note this is just here hearsay*.

      *Any hearsay on /. should be considered a researched, and verified fact. If not, write a wikipedia article on it, then it will be verifiable.

    3. Re:Equal treatment? by luvirini · · Score: 1

      microsoft: http://blogs.msdn.com/msnsearch/archive/2006/01/20 /515606.aspx cannot find the AOL thing in orginal, but the same statement given on several websites for example: http://www.computerworld.co.nz/news.nsf/news/7597E 58808CE8391CC2570FE0026880E

    4. Re:Equal treatment? by Voltageaav · · Score: 2, Informative
      --
      Someone save me from this sanity.
    5. Re:Equal treatment? by fafaforza · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yahoo fought hard the request from RIAA a while ago for identifying information of owners of IPs that they logged on Kazaa. In the end they lost and a court ordered them to provide such information. In this case, the information provided contained no identifying data. Only statystics on searches.

      Now, if you put in identifying information on the web search, then that is your own folly. My startup page is on my own domain, which is comprised of my last name. You can be sure that I never pull up any pages from that startup page becase I don't want my domain -- and my last name as a result -- to pop up on various sites' Referrer field.

    6. Re:Equal treatment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Identifying information or not, this is clearly a fishing expedition. The stated purpose for this subpoena is a joke, if the DoJ wants to see how easy it is to find porn on google, it can have someone search for "porn" on google. They can get results 1 - 10 of about 134,000,000 for porn in just 0.06 seconds.

      No, it's pretty clear to me that the DoJ wants to know what real live people searched for so that they can do something about it. What they are actually looking for and what they are going to do about when they find it is something we'll have to wait and see.

      Personally, I hope that Google continues to fight this and GOOG continues to fall as a result. If enough investors are hurt by the Republicans' attacks, their campaign budgets will dry up fast as big business decides the neocons have stabbed them in the back.

    7. Re:Equal treatment? by publius_jr · · Score: 1

      If we know MSN and Yahoo complied with this type of subpoena, that means the statute in the Patriot Act banning the acknowledgment of the existence of such a subpoena did not apply in this case, most likely because the authority for this order did not fall under the Patriot Act but, instead, some "save the kids," anti-porn cover. Could there be other web-search subpoenas whose authority is granted by the Patriot Act, orders not only with which we would not know who complied, but whose very existence would be unknown by us?

    8. Re:Equal treatment? by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 1
      Check this quote out:
      With this data you:

      CAN see how frequently some query terms occurred.
      CANNOT look up an IP and see what they queried
      CANNOT look for users who queried for both "TERM A" and "TERM B".
      So they can't look up by IP, but it leaves the question: Can they associate individual queries to an IP? What about passport account? Email? He mentions they "CANNOT look for users who queried...", so I assume something is there to differentiate users.

      If the government finds queries it thinks incriminates people, can they now go back to MSN and subpoena for personal information?
    9. Re:Equal treatment? by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      "The" government went after Microsoft, declaring it a monopoly in 1999 after the lawsuit under Clinton. Then Bush took over the "remedy" phase, and - they're still a monopoly.

      When considering "selective prosecution" in the American system of "equal protection under the law", keep in mind Abramoff's rule that some casinos are more equal than others.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    10. Re:Equal treatment? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Comparing it to the Kremlin was good, but comparing it to the Reichstag would be better.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    11. Re:Equal treatment? by Mattcelt · · Score: 1

      If you're not already aware of it, the Opera browser allows you to turn off referrer logging globally. I only turn it on very rarely when a site requires it.

    12. Re:Equal treatment? by jamar0303 · · Score: 1

      You have to look at Yahoo from all sides- its China deparement does more than what you read on Slashdot every so often- look at http://mp3.yahoo.com.cn/ provides a convienient search engine for all MP3s on the web, lyrics and ringtone versions included, Chinese or not. So while Yahoo America has to turn people in for downloading MP3s off the web, Yahoo "must comply with all local laws" and only those laws- forcing Yahoo to abide by American laws would also remove this wonderful service that I use in place of a P2P network.

      --
      OSx86 FTW
    13. Re:Equal treatment? by notaprguy · · Score: 1

      Off topic...but the "remedy" of the DOJ settlement with Microsoft is not to eliminate the monopoly. Antitrust law is intended to (1) prevent abuse of monopoly power and/or (2) once abuse has taken place, put into place a remedy that prevents future abuse.

    14. Re:Equal treatment? by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      True as far as that goes. But of course Microsoft was not "guilty of being a monopoly", (though the judgement found that in fact it is a monopoly). Microsoft was guilty of abusing its monopoly power in specific ways (not just unfairly competing with Netscape, in violation of the original "bundling" consent decree that got the case started). And Microsoft continues to operate in those same ways, especially now that Netscape is dead.

      A real remedy would have broken Microsoft into Hardware, OS, Development, Application and Media corporations, which would have to compete with competitors without the vertical integration advantage - licensing among them just like any other player in the market.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    15. Re:Equal treatment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Yahoo complied"

      Didn't Yahoo!'s share price drop significantly in mid January when this was revealed?

      Link to graph

  2. Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by neonprimetime · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If Google hasn't done anything wrong ... then they shouldn't have to comply. Good job google.
    The only way they should get the data is if Google volunteers to give it.

    What's the government thinking anyways? If they just tapped on Microsoft's shoulder I'm sure Bill would hand over all of MSNs search data.

    1. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by savorymedia · · Score: 5, Informative

      What's the government thinking anyways? If they just tapped on Microsoft's shoulder I'm sure Bill would hand over all of MSNs search data.

      Ummm...Bill DID just roll over and send the gov't MSN's search data...as did Yahoo and AOL.
      http://www.techweb.com/wire/ebiz/177101984

      --
      1 is the square root of all evil.
    2. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Google has done plenty wrong. It's posing for the camera. All the DoJ has asked for was search results and statistics. Google releases parts of this information to the public every year on thier own for popular search terms.

      What makes this different is that Google doesn't want anyone to know is that many people get thier kiddie porn fix by searching with them. The DoJ's query is to discover how accessable child porn is to people using search engines.

      Note, that the statistics Google releases on their own accord are modified and censored to omit the most common searches such as "free porn". With Google's reaction to the DoJ, "kiddie porn" may be on this list of omitted results as well.

      Google is trying to make this into a privacy issue, but it's more akin to a tax audit. Someone want to look at the books, and Google doesn't want them to see what they are hiding.

      Google is doing plenty wrong.

    3. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Citizen925 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I totally agree with google's answer to the government's request. Ever since the Patriot Act, the government has aquired this belief that the people of America are ready to give up our basic rights. There is even a police chief in Houston that suggested building permits require cameras in apartment buildings, malls, and even *in privately owned homes whose owner calls the police very often. Another story I've recently heard of is that of a person sitting in a library being harassed by a librarian and two police officers for viewing pornographic material. I think that because this person was not calling attention to himself or flaunting his actions that his reading material is not only his own business, but also that his privacy was being seriously invaded and the police were using intimidation tactics to impress their own moral views upon this citizen. They made the matter into a form of public humiliation by bringing out into the open what the person may not have wanted his peers to have known about him or herself. And now, police want an internet search engine, with millions of users, to simply hand over any personal information about these people the government seeks. Does this only sound crazy and fanatical and ominous to myself? I am very worried about the future of America. The question the police chief of Houston put to us was, "If you're not doing anything wrong, why should you worry about it?" To this I reply, we shouldn't have to worry about worrying about it. By this I mean, taking away people's privacy leads to paranoia and people checking their every move. The average citizen doesn't have the detailed knowledge of the laws to know for certain if they're breaking an uncommon one or not. The government could arrest someone wrongfully, easily, because the person won't know if the accusations are or are not against the law. I'm not saying the U.S. would do this, I have a firm belief they would not, presently. But the way things are going privacy on the whole is being attacked on all sides. This bombardment, to me, implies that the government is trying to throw so many balls at us that we're bound to drop a few. I want the officials of America to know that it's people do witness these actions, and if they are unintentional it would do very well for the people's trust in our government if such actions were checked.

    4. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Chabil+Ha' · · Score: 1

      If Google hasn't done anything wrong ... then they shouldn't have to comply.

      Not entirely true. If the corporation has knowledge or posession of evidence of wrong doing, then they have a moral responsibility to divulge relevent details. On the flip side, however, the governement can't just go on a 'fishing expedition'. The government must present a compelling case based on *probable cause* that wrong doing has occured.

      Personnaly, I don't think they're going to get it, and they're just going to make the administration look like a bunch of idiots (if they already havn't).

      --
      We're all hypocrites. We all have hidden parts, it's the contrast between them that make us more a hypocrite than others
    5. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How would the government discern that people typing in "kiddie porn" are not looking for ways to report illegal content? Google has done nothing wrong, however the DOJ's over broad request disguised in "think of the children" rhetoric should be a major cause for concern.

    6. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by mesocyclone · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If Google hasn't done anything wrong ... then they shouldn't have to comply.

      This is ridiculous. There may be many reasons not to comply, but innocence is not one of them. Subpoenas are routinely issued to innocent parties, for very good reasons, and the parties comply.

      You don't have to be a lawyer to know this!

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    7. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by notque · · Score: 1

      Corporations are creations of law. If the government wins in the courts, Google WILL give up this data. Google is not fighting a good fight based purely on morality. If that were the case then they would currently be wiping all their stored data and risking jail time.

      Isn't it great the few times corporate power disagrees with political power?!

      It's the only time we can have a decent discussion on the merits of alternate points of view instead of having the opinion of the majority (meaning us, the actual people) be ignored.

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    8. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Google is doing plenty wrong.

      You got some proof to back that up, coward?

      If the government wants to find out about kiddie porn on the internet, they can type it into google and see what they get. The only thing that is "secret" here is why the our Justice Department is full pathetic losers who are too stupid to operate google. The Republicans should all be ashamed that their government has become such a stinking pile of rot on their watch.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    9. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by xmartinj · · Score: 1

      It would seem that Google's search data is valuable to them for different reasons than it is valuable to the government. Tracking search terms to actual click-throughs is valuable data for ranking purposes. Google **IS** search ranking. It seems a little extreme to ask them to delete data valuable to their primary mission. There has to be other moral choices.

      Couldn't they just selectively delete sensitive searches, or at least any data that could be used to connect a user to a sensitive search.

      Just my $.02

    10. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Flyskippy1 · · Score: 1, Redundant

      Of course they gave up the data. And google should have, too. All the government is asking for is the same data that google would give to any researcher at Standford if they asked for it. No IP addresses, no user names, just queries and frequencies. Heck, I've gotten several weeks worth of queries for IR research before. You know what it's useful for? Research. No way to stalk all my ex-girlfriends with it at all.

    11. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by statusbar · · Score: 1

      read google's legal pdf as linked to by TFA. The information is useless because of a number of reasons.

      --jeff++

      --
      ipv6 is my vpn
    12. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Corporations disagree with the Local, State and Federal Governments all the time. The notion that the Corps and Government are hand in hand skipping through the flowers is nonsense.

      Corporations are largely like normal people when it comes to the government. They push, bend, break the laws till they get caught. Instead of doing it with Speeding or drinking or other drugs, the Corps do it with taxes, tariffs, pollution laws and so forth.

      Yes corporations are special interests, so are organizations of people. While on one side Boeing, Microsoft, Google, Apple or Ford might seem like unstopable magastructures stomping Joe Worker and living in sin with the Government, on the other side AARP, NRA, AFLCIO are even more unstopable groups stomping around and casting fear into a Senator with whom they don't agree with.

      Take a minute to think about old people with vision and reflex problems and driving. Is there a need to have folks over say 70 retested for thier driver's licence? Hell yes, is there any damned chance of a Bill even making it to Committe in any state in the US? No way because the AARP will come down like your Great-Aunt's hug, theres no escaping it. Elsewhere there is talk about making bipods for rifles illegal...here comes the NRA* sending out millions of emails and sending in thiere lobbyists.

      * - I am a member of the NRA

    13. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by ToasterofDOOM · · Score: 1

      I personally lean towards the Republican side more often and not, and I am ashamed at the PATRIOT ACT. Whatever happened to the principle of minimal government interference in the lives of its people? I'm sure they are trying to do what is best, that I never doubt for most people (I think all Democrats and others with whom I disagree still want the best for America). I just know that their judgement is sorely lacking.

      --
      I am Spartacus
    14. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by sploxx · · Score: 1

      I'm just curious... this seems to be somewhat similar to the situation with the data from european airlines... does the US government get the search history of foreigners, too?

    15. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by edumacator · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point isn't what can the government get from it, it's does the government has the right to demand it from a company. In their brief Google makes a strong case that, no, they don't.

      We need to be very careful about this kind of thing. The government is trying very hard to define our online rights differently than any other rights. This subpoena tramples several rights companies have, and the government hasn't even made a compelling case, and it is their burden to do so, as to why they need the data.

      If we aren't vigilant about these kinds of issues, we will find our privacy compromised greatly in the growing online environment.

    16. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by jrockway · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > Corporations are largely like normal people when it comes to the government. They push, bend, break the laws till they get caught. Instead of doing it with Speeding or drinking or other drugs, the Corps do it with taxes, tariffs, pollution laws and so forth.

      In other words, corporations do really bad things that are a detriment to the planet as a whole and then get a slap on the wrist. Meanwhile, someone smoking some weed goes to jail for the rest of his life.

      If that's not "hand in hand skipping through the flowers", I don't know what is.

      --
      My other car is first.
    17. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If a researcher from Stanford asked about my sexual preferences as part of a study and the results were completely anonymous, I'd gladly help them.

      If the government about my sexual preferences as part of a study and the results were completely anonymous, I'd crap my pants.

      It's my information. I give it to whom I want. The government has no legal case to ask for it.

    18. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      Subpoenas are routinely issued to innocent parties, for very good reasons, and the parties comply.

      This is when a law has been broken. This is not the case now.

      This fishing attempt is part of a government effort to revive an Internet child protection law which was struck down over two years ago by the U.S. Supreme Court.

      Google has always worked with officials when the law has been broken and Google is correctly contesting this attempt to seize its data.

    19. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      Subpoenas are used for more than just law violations (for example, in civil suits).

      I wouldn't mind Google contesting the data (I don't know of any statutory reasons behind the request - if I did, I might change my mind). But it is hypocritical to challenge this but give in to the Chinese.

      "do no evil" unless PROFIT

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    20. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by ddeyoung · · Score: 1

      Interesting considering that the Stanford researcher is probably having his salary and most of his research money given to him by "the government".

    21. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I say "the government" I mean something like the census bureau or some investigative agency.

      Intent, funding, etc. is important too, but ultimately the Stanford researcher can't compel me with legal threats to tell them about my sexual habits. Neither should the government (unless I'm on trial).

    22. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      No, not in other words do "...corporations do really bad things that are a detriment to the planet as a whole and then get a slap on the wrist. Meanwhile, someone smoking some weed goes to jail for the rest of his life."

      People do bad things too, remeber Stalin, Hitler, Pol Pot? Ideology has done more to destroy the planet and humanity in the last 200 years that Corporations have.

      A Corporation can be held to Criminal and Civil crimes just like a person can be.

    23. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by stinerman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Whatever happened to the principle of minimal government interference in the lives of its people?

      It doesn't get the soccer mom and fundamentalist Christian votes.

    24. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You got some proof to back that up, coward?"

      Yes dickhead, if you had read the rest of the post. If you still need more, search for the term "pedovoyeur". Easy wasn't it!

      Your real brave yourself while using a gibberish alais. When you post under your real name, then you have room to talk about AC posters.

      And shame on whoever modded your flamebait up, my original post was concise enough to explain the position.

      This shit is simple, Google is being asked to prove that its searches don't assist child pornographers. They are not asked to reveal identities, only results. But Google knows it can't keep porn out of normal search results, much less specific search for said materials. For some reason, many of you dipshits can't see the nose in front of your face and try to pin this on politics. It's not about the Bush adminstration, they would outright sieze the information. This is about complaince with anti-child pornography laws. If Google doesn't like it, they should move thier offices to thier censor happy buddies in France, Germany, or China. However, most places throughout the civilized world have similar anti-kiddie porn laws, and would probably force Google to help in tracking down the pedophiles.

    25. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the above is true, why don't corporations get life in prison when they knowingly kill someone?

      Scares the hell out of me that you capitilize the word corporation as well, as if it is a proper noun.

      The point isn't whether people do bad things too or not, but the layer of protection that is practically bulletproof given to GROUPS of people in the form of corporations.

      Your analogy is totally bs, and you know it. If you steal $50 from a 7-11 you get time. If you steal billions via Enron type scandals, you pay back 5% and keep the change. Individual and corporate punishment are two entirely different beasts.

    26. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1
      Heck, I've gotten several weeks worth of queries for IR research before.

      From Google?

    27. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      It's not about the Bush adminstration, they would outright sieze the information.

      Ahahaha that's what they're trying to do. That's what Google is fighting, a subpoena for the information. Never mind that there's no court case, trial, or even charges against a person being researched for evidence, the government just wants to seize the information.

      If its "so easy" for me to search for the term pedovoyeur then why doesn't the government? If the government doesn't know what to search for, why doesn't it do some research?

      Google is being asked to prove that its searches don't assist child pornographers.

      No, see, that is not at all what the government said. The government publically said that they are looking to see how easy it is to find porn (not child porn) online so that it has the evidence it wants in order to argue that netnanny and the like can never be perfect (gee, they need to strongarm Google for this? Ask some 15 year old boy!). Of course, after decades of lies, what's one more? My question is, why do you assume that if the government has to lie to cover up their deeds, why do you believe that they're doing something that's so nice?

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    28. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thye may have a LEGAL obligation to hand it over, but I see no moral obligation to deliberately drop someone in it without prompting (or even with prompting)

    29. Re:Only way to get it ... Google to volunteer by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 1

      IG Farben. Dow Chemical and Bhopal. The Swiss banks. AT&T in both Operation Shamrock and the new suit. Royal Duch East India Company. Coca-Cola. Gold and diamond mines.
      Plenty of corperations comit capital crimes and get away with it.

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
  3. Here's some more. by Voltageaav · · Score: 4, Informative
    --
    Someone save me from this sanity.
    1. Re:Here's some more. by ginotech · · Score: 1

      The motion also reveals the government originally sought from Google an electronic file containing "all URL's that are available to be located through a query on your company's search engine as of July 1, 2005." Wow. They're stupid.

    2. Re:Here's some more. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder if they even know how to close a tag.

  4. Expect more subpoenas-- by luvirini · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The world is going in a direction where a lot of lawsuits and such are really "fishing expeditions" to you create overly broad subpoenas and then hope to find something in the material to back you view.

    1. Re:Expect more subpoenas-- by neoform · · Score: 1

      The World?

      Try the United States.

      I don't see any of this crap going on here in Canada..

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    2. Re:Expect more subpoenas-- by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Well now that we have Harper...
      Thank diety that he only got a minority

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  5. In Summary by pcgamez · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Google states that the data being requested has no relevance to what the government (specifically, the government-hired researches) wants to prove.

    Interestingly, they (the government) could just come around and request more specific data which would be relevant.

    1. Re:In Summary by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Maybe there's some hidden legal merit I havn't seen through the /. filter, but the Government's audacity in this situation astonishes me. It seems like they had no legal ground to request this information from search engines, and their following through with a lawsuit when Google saw through their BS is amazing.

      I imagine people asking their local photo shop to invade their customer's privacy and give them a few thousand random photos (all for ), then suing when the shop tells them to fuck off.

    2. Re:In Summary by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      The government is doing research relevant to a federal law. There is nothing silly about that. Google's statement that the data has not relevance is rather absurd. The government can obviously use the data to establish information about search patterns, etc that lead to online illegal porn (or kiddie porn, or whatever they are after). Furthermore, they have requested this information in a manner that protects the privacy of the individuals making the queries. Google claims that the government cannot tell what URL's the searches would yield, which is clearly nonsense (at least in most cases) because the government can use a bot to find out!

      In other words, Google is using technical obfuscation in an attempt to fool the court.

      This is not to say, however, that all of Google's objections are without merit.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    3. Re:In Summary by BigGerman · · Score: 1
      And is Google in the position to judge the relevance of what the government wants to prove?

      Would not that be even worse? A multinational moving in the position of the final judgement on good vs. evil?

    4. Re:In Summary by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      There is nothing silly about that. Google's statement that the data has not relevance is rather absurd.

      Didn't the other search engines already cave in?

      They already have data! Google's data has no relevance because it is no longer necessary.

      So why force Google to give in if that's the case, unless they have other motives?

    5. Re:In Summary by duffahtolla · · Score: 1

      I guess you've never seen a Government redacted document on it's own questionable activities.

    6. Re:In Summary by mesocyclone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      An interesting point. Given that google is the largest search engine, and the engine of choice for a whole lot of people, their statistics would be more valid if they had google data.

      More interesting is Google's choice to fight this request for anonymous data, but let the Chinese dictatorship get what it wants in suppressing access to information for 1 billion people.

      The contrast is strong.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    7. Re:In Summary by duffahtolla · · Score: 2, Funny
      Hmm, I wonder what the government would do if Google gave them the data from the Chinese servers?

      Would China object?

  6. Oh well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice knowing you, Google.

    1. Re:Oh well by Ciaran_H · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that you wanted Google to hand over its search data?

  7. I know they're evil... by xx_toran_xx · · Score: 0

    1. Reject subpoena 2. 3. Profit $$$

    --
    Arrrrrrr
  8. Coming up next... by Funkcikle · · Score: 1
    the government demand to disclose Web search data was impractical

    But luckily their upcoming product, GoogleGoogle, will be soon entering a two year beta program and the DoJ is welcome to send an SMS to register their interest in testing it out.

    1. Re:Coming up next... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    2. Re:Coming up next... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who would have thought Harry Potter was so popular. (And Paris Hilton? -- Maybe the DOJ wants her sex tapes)

  9. PR Stunt ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am amazed that people do not see Google's action for what it is -- a huge and hugely inexpensive public relations stunt. From a legal standpoint, Google does not have much ground to stand on. Yahoo and Microsoft realized this and that is why they complied. However, from a public relations point of view, it costs Google a small handful of hours of legal time and in return, Google gets featured on Slashdot and the countries newspapers, television and radio outlets, in addition to all over the internet numerous times. In the vast majority of cases, Google will be featured as the do-gooder ("do no evil") standing up to the U.S. Government on the public's behalf meanwhile making its competitors (Yahoo and Microsoft) look bad in the public eye.


    In the end, expect Google to comply with the DOJ's request but only after getting all the (almost) free publicity it can from this. I hope that there are some writers of marketing and public relations books paying attention to this stunt because this has got to be one of the best (and least expensive) public relations coups in recent history.

    1. Re:PR Stunt ... by neonprimetime · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If the information the government wanted was a matter of national security ...
      Then yeah, google should hand it over immediately, no questions asked ...
      But for pr0n and other irrelevant junk? The government should be
      focusing on more important stuff anyways ... MS and Yahoo! are just playing butt kissers in handing it over right away.

    2. Re:PR Stunt ... by MvD_Moscow · · Score: 1

      Well if it's so easy to get free PR, why didn't Yahoo and MS do the same?

    3. Re:PR Stunt ... by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      I have to agree with this 100%.

      Compare this from the legal documents;
      Google users trust that when they enter a search query into a Google search box, not only will they receive back the most relevant results,

      and how they are censoring/omitting results on the request of the government of China.

      Somewhere Google knows how this looks at first glance to the average Internet user. "Oh look, they are protecting me from Big Brother! I should trust them!". Alot of companies do this sort of "image-management" and I believe alot of people would too. Google is no different. Be aware.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    4. Re:PR Stunt ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is like saying that because not everybody engages in the same public relations stunt, that there are no public relations stunts.

      There are a variety of reasons why Yahoo and Microsoft may not have fought it on public relations grounds. The least of which is that some middle-manager may not have thought that fighting it would put their name in the headlines for untold number of months at little cost. In most companies, the legal department, management, and PR departments are in different divisions if not different buildings --or even companies.

      Word of mouth advertising is one of the most effective methods of advertising as any marketing / PR student will attest. This is why even the largest companies are looking for methods to generate word of mouth discussions. This can range from hiring students to go into bars and strike up conversations with people about a product to coming up with a creative commercial that gets everybody to tell their friend about it so that they will download the commercial over the Internet. (Remember the "Trunk Monkey" commercials?)

      Yes, there have been plenty of public relations stunts over the years -- some of them largely free. Because their competitors didn't think to do the same thing doesn't mean that they didn't exist.

    5. Re:PR Stunt ... by Robotech_Master · · Score: 1

      And telling users when results have been omitted/censored. Which no other search engine in China does.

      And letting their slower-but-uncensored version remain accessible to the Chinese people if they'd rather use that instead.

      If people could get past their knee-jerk reverse-Lars-Ulrich "Money BAD!" reaction and consider what Google's actions mean for the Chinese people--folks who might never have realized that their searches were being censored will now have evidence of it staring them right in the face--they might consider that it is, if not an unqualified good thing, at least a step or two closer to the right direction than the Chinese people have been able to use before.

      --
      Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
    6. Re:PR Stunt ... by AusIV · · Score: 1

      You're exactly right. The number one named brand of 2005 defied the United States Government, risking all sorts of possible reprecussions just to get more recognition. Surely they're not actually trying to uphold their customers' trust... That would be ludicrous.

    7. Re:PR Stunt ... by rainman_bc · · Score: 4, Insightful


      If the information the government wanted was a matter of national security ...
      Then yeah, google should hand it over immediately, no questions asked ...


      Yeah, according to the DHS, everything is a matter of national security. They use it as an excuse for just about everything they want to do, without being subject to scrutiny.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    8. Re:PR Stunt ... by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      >And telling users when results have been omitted/censored.

      Yes that makes all the differnce in the world.

      "These search results may be censored due to local laws, but we can't tell you why because that would be against local laws. It may be people getting run over by tanks or beastiality or pictures of Chairman Mao shaking hands with Elvis. Sorry for the ignorance we are propogating. Oh, and your search queries may be accessable to your local goverment for who knows what purpose. Except in America, where we will fight tooth-and-nail against doing something like this because this will result in a chilling effect on Google's Business and users trust."

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    9. Re:PR Stunt ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure it's good PR. And as long as it remains good PR, they will keep doing it. As long as companies see that they can profit by being on "our side" against the government, they will be on our side. We just have to keep supporting companies like this with our $$.
            I always see people complaining that corporations are not really on our side, it's all in self-interest. However, this is the only sure way to get more corporations standing up for us, and that is to make it in their best interest to do so. If companies see that they will lose customers when they violate our expectations of privacy, they will stop doing it (at least openly).

    10. Re:PR Stunt ... by defile · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I am amazed that people do not see Google's action for what it is -- a huge and hugely inexpensive public relations stunt. From a legal standpoint, Google does not have much ground to stand on. Yahoo and Microsoft realized this and that is why they complied. However, from a public relations point of view, it costs Google a small handful of hours of legal time and in return, Google gets featured on Slashdot and the countries newspapers, television and radio outlets, in addition to all over the internet numerous times. In the vast majority of cases, Google will be featured as the do-gooder ("do no evil") standing up to the U.S. Government on the public's behalf meanwhile making its competitors (Yahoo and Microsoft) look bad in the public eye.

      I can just imagine Google's competitors being similarly subpeona'd and making the business case to cooperate with the government solely in the hopes that their cooperation forces Google's cooperation. Google's the market leader in search, their competitors have a lot more to gain by giving up their secrets in exchange for Google's secrets. (In fact, if you want to conjecture^2, this may even be why Yahoo! announced recently that they don't want to compete in search.)

      Maybe we shouldn't be commending Google for taking a principled stand (which it isn't), but condemning Microsoft and friends for folding so easily. They had every right to refuse, the government is fishing for scientifically useless data from totally unrelated parties.

      The judge should be able to see that their competitors complied to gain access to Google's trade secrets, and that their compliance does not validate the government's request, but this may be of no concern to the court.

    11. Re:PR Stunt ... by Robotech_Master · · Score: 1

      No, as in "This search result has been removed by government request" as opposed to "Here are all the search results you asked for."

      --
      Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
    12. Re:PR Stunt ... by BCTECH · · Score: 1

      Not to mention when Microsoft and Yahoo complied they stripped out the IP addresses which is fine with the Government as they just want to analyse data where it pertains to unwanted porn coming up on searches.

      Now on the other hand Google bends over for the Chinese government and filters content. Google is evil.

    13. Re:PR Stunt ... by sp3d2orbit · · Score: 1

      "I am amazed that people do not see Google's action for what it is -- a huge and hugely inexpensive public relations stunt."

      I'm amazed at how short-sited people can be. Within the realms of the law, Google has two options: 1. Hand over the data, 2. File a formal opposition to the motion. Yahoo and MSN were more than happy to jetison our data to whoever wanted it. Google has, at least, taken this step to raise awarness. They may not get anywhere, but at least they tried, which is more than can be said for the Google-alternates.

      If Google were to follow the precedent set by Yahoo and MSN then there is absolutely no barrier to doing it again. While a bunch of random URLs may not do the government any good, you can bet that they are using this as a trial run. Next time it won't be random URLs. Next time it will be searches, or searches correlated with urls, or people correlated to searches. Monitoring the search engines is an easy way to monitor the internet as a whole.

      Its short-sighted to lambast Google's actions because they're the only major search engine that is trying to defend our rights. Google's business interests and our privacy go hand in hand. One has to remember that Google has to operate within the boundaries of the law. They're doing all they can to raise awareness about those laws, but it is OUR responsibility to get those laws changed. We need to make it politically expensive for our government to act this way; instead you're trying to make it politically expensive for Google to make a stand. Quit your whining, close slashdot, put down the anime, and write a letter to your leaders.

      House of Representatives:
      http://www.house.gov/writerep/

      Senate:
      http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/ senators_cfm.cfm

    14. Re:PR Stunt ... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      If the information the government wanted was a matter of national security ...
      Then yeah, google should hand it over immediately, no questions asked ...
      In a country that (supposedly) cares about Freedom, questions should ALWAYS be asked!
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    15. Re:PR Stunt ... by typical · · Score: 1

      I am amazed that people do not see Google's action for what it is -- a huge and hugely inexpensive public relations stunt.

      You're a troll or an idiot. The government is subpoenaing Google's data for reasons unrelated to national security, crime, or anything else. Some faction in the GOP wants to promote pornography filters, and wants statistical data to support this view. They have *no* legal basis for demanding this data of Google -- nor, frankly, do I want them to get said data *or* start the precedent of being able to demand this data. It dwarfs the ability to demand library reading lists (which *already* requires a warrant or national security justification).

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    16. Re:PR Stunt ... by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      Yeah, according to the DHS, everything is a matter of national security. They use it as an excuse for just about everything they want to do, without being subject to scrutiny.

      Utter nonsense!

      One needs look no farther than the case in hand to recognize that this is exceedingly over-general tripe. One even has to look pretty hard to find a single current case where the asertion is true (for example, the NSA's spy on overseas calls case was in fact disclosed to and subject to the scrutiny of a number of members of congress - of both parties).

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    17. Re:PR Stunt ... by notque · · Score: 1

      If the information the government wanted was a matter of national security ...
      Then yeah, google should hand it over immediately, no questions asked ...


      The Iraq war was wanted as a matter of national security, and look where that is...

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    18. Re:PR Stunt ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the next story down on the Slashdot front page, dumbass. And wake the fuck up.

    19. Re:PR Stunt ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's no publicity stunt. Google is responsible to their shareholders and to the law. If/when they do comply, it will be due to shareholder pressures or out of obligation under the law.

      This 'publicity stunt' is hurting them in a big way - don't have the misconception that 'any news is good news' or that making the front page of slashdot is something Google gives two hoots about.

      This has scared investors, and dropped their share prices. Nobody wants to invest in a company willing to do battle with the US Gov't...

      You and I might think it's kind of cool that Google is denying the request.. but to the people that actually matter (investors with big pockets) it is anything but cool.. it is a reason to drop the stock all together.

    20. Re:PR Stunt ... by notaprguy · · Score: 1

      I can just imagine Google's competitors being similarly subpeona'd and making the business case to cooperate with the government solely in the hopes that their cooperation forces Google's cooperation. That's a pretty rediculous statement. By emphasizing the word "solely" you undermind your arument. Reasonable people (I know, few and far between on /.) could argue that MSFT and Yahoo might comply in the hope that if Google complies that they might gain insight into Google's trade secrets - but that's a stretch. But to suggest they'd comply SOLELY for that reason is silly. There are lots of good reasons to comply. I can think of a two obvious reasons: (1) by complying they might help the govt learn whether their anti child porn efforts are working (2) by complying they avoid unnecessary legal tangling with the govt

    21. Re:PR Stunt ... by ssstraub · · Score: 1

      So it just wasn't disclosed to the special court set up to receive such disclosures in the first place? I see. All we have to do is tell a couple members of congress and the 4th Amendment no longer matters!

    22. Re:PR Stunt ... by jrockway · · Score: 1

      > "Except in America, where we will fight tooth-and-nail against doing something like this because this will result in a chilling effect on Google's Business and users trust."

      That's fine with me. America is where I live, and if Google wants to stand up to my rights, more power to them. America has a history of fighting for rights whereas China has always been (in modern times) under tyrannical control. It's a cultural difference, really... Google is trying to do what the Chinese want in China, and doing what Americans want in America. That's part of being a multinational corporation.

      (If I were to start a search engine, I wouldn't censor it in China. But I'm sure that the instant the authorities found out, my site would be blocked in China. Therein lies Google's problem. You don't get ad revenue when your site is blocked by an entire country.)

      --
      My other car is first.
    23. Re:PR Stunt ... by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      One even has to look pretty hard to find a single current case where the asertion is true

      Funny, all I did was google for it.

    24. Re:PR Stunt ... by legirons · · Score: 1

      "If the information the government wanted was a matter of national security ...
      Then yeah, google should hand it over immediately, no questions asked ..."


      I'm actually quite glad that you don't work for google, and they instead entrust their legal advice to people who understand trade secrets, communication and privacy laws, etc. The type of people who wrote this document, in fact.

      Amazing, what some people think should just be handed over without question...

    25. Re:PR Stunt ... by URSpider · · Score: 1

      I am amazed that people do not see Google's action for what it is -- a huge and hugely inexpensive public relations stunt.

      This is pretty much complete BS.

      First of all, as others have pointed out, Google's stock has actually fallen as a result of taking part in this lawsuit. Fighting the DOJ may win favor with Slashdot readers, but it's not considered good form for respectable companies.

      Second, after reading the FA, it seems like they have a pretty good chance of getting out of this subpoena. They've made some pretty good arguments, and quoted some really good case law. And, they've made the excellent point that the additional value from their search reports is small, now that the government already has data from AOL and MSN.

      Third, this fight is important for Google's future. If they lose this one, not only will they be more vulnerable to future government requests for search data, but they could very well find themselves on the witness stand answering detailed questions about the internals of their search system. As the FA points out, the government's expert witness is also a consultant for an online advertising and search ranking company, who would love to get their hands on this dataset.

      Finally, this brief alone represents hundreds of hours of billable time for Google's lawyers, not to mention quite a few hours of strategizing and deposing of some of Google's top engineers, like Matt Cutts. A week of Cutts' time is not "hugely inexpensive".

      Yes, this case could result in some good PR for Google, but that's not the only reason they're doing it.

    26. Re:PR Stunt ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      From a legal standpoint, Google does not have much ground to stand on.

      Wtf? Care to back this up?

    27. Re:PR Stunt ... by Clay+Caviness · · Score: 1

      and how they are censoring/omitting results on the request of the government of China.

      and in the US, and in Germany, and in France...

  10. The irony is... by nwbvt · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Google has no qualms about showing search related data to the general public.

    Back when I was in school several Google recruiters came and during the presentation were more than willing to demonstrate technology that allows you to see what others had been searching.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    1. Re:The irony is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Human power is contingent on ASYMMETRIC information availability, to allow elite control. If everyone knows some information, it's much less useful as leverage.

      I recommend reading David Brin's "The Transparent Society: Will technology force us to choose between privacy and freedom" (or you can try to read Popper, if you want...).

      If the government ever tries to investigate me, the first thing I'll do is spew signed contents of my HDD onto the P2P networks (I'm considering a dead-man's handle automated routine on a remote backup server too, though that has its own problems - what if comms are simply interrupted and the server spuriously thinks I've been assassinated?). Then they can't blackmail me with embarrassing info like my preference for clean-shaven ladies or whatever, or doctor the info to frame me.

    2. Re:The irony is... by Hrothgar+The+Great · · Score: 1

      I think the more important point they made in their argument is that entities which are in NO way involved in legal cases should not be compelled to give up confidential information unless that information is extremely relevant to the case. Read the linked opposition - the point of users' confidentiality is only barely touched upon, whereas several pages are spent on the irrelevancy issue.

      I completely agree with Google on this. If the government can request mountains of data from private companies in a case whose STATED purpose is to do a review of the data in order to sort of think about maybe making a law one of these days, then anyone should be able to request that same data for any equally as stupid reason, really. The DOJ shouldn't get special treatment in the courts.

    3. Re:The irony is... by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      This story didn't make in /.s "Your Rights Online" section because they were protecting the rights of big companies to not do extra work for the feds.

      That may well be the official reason they are not complying, but I doubt it is the real reason. They are now a public company who need good public relations, and they know this move will make them look like privacy advocates to people who either think no search information is ever stored anywhere or those who think (like the other guy who responded to me) that the DOJ wants personally identifiable information from Google. And it is especially neccessary with the recent news that Google backed down to Chinese requests to filter out searches.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    4. Re:The irony is... by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      So in this presentation Google did, did they provide you with a permanent and complete copy of all the search data Google has ever had? No? Then it's not really remotely similar, is it?

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    5. Re:The irony is... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      You've either got a very fat pipe, or a very small disk. Even over a firewire I run a backup copy overnight...and my disk was only large 4 years ago.

      I can see doing what you are proposing to some directories, but that wouldn't provide any proof as to what was on the rest of the disk.

      Perhaps you need to think of a better answer.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    6. Re:The irony is... by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      So these engineers were in a meeting discussing a way to get their new product to work, and one of them brings out a miniture prototype of his idea made out of things he found lying around in the office. After demonstrating the physics of his solution, the other engineers get excited, but the manager is less than convinced. "But this little model here is much different than our actual product. For example the color is all wrong".

      You remind me a lot of that manager.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    7. Re:The irony is... by WoodieR · · Score: 1

      why doesn't the DoJ simply google up some stats to fit it's nefarious purposes ?

      --
      Question Authority before IT questions You ...
    8. Re:The irony is... by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      There's a tremendous difference between Google showing prospective employees a handful of search records in a demonstration of their internal data management capabilities, and turning over millions of search records to the government. You tried to equate them in your original post (or at least insinuate that there was no real difference between "showing search-related data to the general public" and "giving millions of precise search data to the government"). Do you really think those are even vaguely the same thing? Good lord.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    9. Re:The irony is... by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      I never said they were the same thing, just as the engineer in my little story never said his prototype was the same as the actual product. I certainly did not "try to equate" anything. The quote you copied and pasted into your post in no way suggests that was what I was trying to do. The point of my origional post was to point out that Google does not, nor ever has, treated search related data as private data. Thats all. If you thought it said something else, you need to take a reading comprehension class.

      Are you really having this much trouble understanding this, or are you just blindly supporting Google because they have a cool website?

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  11. The bad guys computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If the wrong people have their way, all internet connections will have to be licensed. You will have to have a chip embedded in you so they can immediately identify who is doing what on the internet. They will call it trusted computing. The wrong people might not be the government though. It might be Google and Microsoft.

    I have a vision of small groups of criminals illegally tapping into the internet in railway yards huddled around steel barrels filled with burning garbage trying to keep warm. Totally distopian.

    There should be a limit on the amount of information ANYONE can collect about you; not just the DOJ.

  12. Warning! PDF behind article link! by Da+w00t · · Score: 5, Informative
    [this is bad] (yes, I am a member)

    Link to the blogger post, that's the article, and THEN the pdf! Thank you!

    (karmawhoring)

    Here's a portion of the introduction:

    • I. INTRODUCTION
      Google users trust that when they enter a search query into a Google search box, not only will they receive back the most relevant results, but that Google will keep private whatever information users communicate absent a compelling reason. The Government's demand for disclosure of untold millions of search queries submitted by Google users and for production of a million Web page addresses or "URLs" randomly selected from Google's proprietary index would undermine that trust, unnecessarily burden Google, and do nothing to further the Government's case in the underlying action.

      Fortunately, the Court has multiple, independent bases to reject the Government's Motion. First, the Government's presentation falls woefully short of demonstrating that the requested information will lead to admissible evidence. This burden is unquestionably the Government's. Rather than meet it, the Government concedes that Google's search queries and URLs are not evidence to be used at trial at all. Instead, the Government says, the data will be "useful" to its purported expert in developing some theory to support the Government's notion that a law banning materials that are harmful to minors on the Internet will be more effective than a technology filter in eliminating it.
    --

    da w00t. mtfnpy?
    1. Re:Warning! PDF behind article link! by hotdiggitydawg · · Score: 1

      Amen brother. Seriously who posts a link to a (large) PDF on the Slashdot mainpage? I'd expect that from Scuttlemonkey, but CowboyNeal?

      That said, from TFPDF:

      Perhaps the Government can be forgiven its glib rejection of this point because it is unfamiliar with Google's system architecture. If the Government had that familiarity, it would know that its request will take over a week of engineer time to complete.

      Perhaps it may take a week's worth of engineer time to complete once. But Google must serve many millions of queries a day, it wouldn't take almost no time (and minimal hardware cost, comparatively) to cache a million of those each week.

      Don't get me wrong, I agree entirely with Google's position, I just think the statement above actually weakens their argument.

    2. Re:Warning! PDF behind article link! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Wait until this gets to the supreme court with Bush's stooges Alto and Roberts, then we will see who "has has multiple, independent bases to reject the Government's Motion". My money is that the Supreme court will not find them, or will just decline to hear the case if the government wins and Google is forced to appeal up to the Supreme Court. But if Google wins, I'll be the Supreme Court rules in the government's favor.

    3. Re:Warning! PDF behind article link! by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      [offtopic]
      Seriously who posts a link to a (large) PDF on the Slashdot mainpage?
      I don't understand this vitrolic hatred of PDF on Slashdot. In a community of computer geeks, we ought to be able to handle an open format just fine.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    4. Re:Warning! PDF behind article link! by neoviky · · Score: 1

      I'll be more careful next time.....(strange how the article got posted in spite of this!) Vicki

    5. Re:Warning! PDF behind article link! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MOD PARENT UP

    6. Re:Warning! PDF behind article link! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I cannot read that PDF. Other references don't work either. Is there anymore referces I can read?

    7. Re:Warning! PDF behind article link! by hotdiggitydawg · · Score: 1

      To be fair, the gripe was more about it being a large file than a PDF. That said, linking to an HTML article summary (if one exists) would be preferable. Save bandwidth and mean less reading to get to the point.

  13. Good for them by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If Gonzales can simply refuse to answer questions on the legality of domestic searches when he goes before Congress, then Google can refuse spurious warrants from Gonzales. The DOJ doesn't have a right to simply request any information for any reason, and its good that Google are fighting what seems to be a political thing rather than a law enforcement request.

    1. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful
      If Gonzales can simply refuse to answer questions on the legality of domestic searches when he goes before Congress, then Google can refuse spurious warrants from Gonzales.


      And another rabid liberal raises his ugly head. Care to make any more incorrect analogies to show your ignorance? There is a huge difference between refusing to answer questions in a confirmation hearing and refusing a legal warrent. Google hasn't refused any warrents, they refused a REQUEST for information, if it had been a warrent they would have turned over the information already.

    2. Re:Good for them by defaria · · Score: 0

      I really don't understand all the fuss! This is a search company there. If the government wants more info why don't they just google it like the rest of us have to do! If they can't find what they are looking for well then welcome to the world of internet research/search. Geeze.

    3. Re:Good for them by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      Here's hoping the come looking for you. I sure you will have proof that they are mistaken.

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
  14. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  15. DMCA? by VisceralLogic · · Score: 3, Funny
    arguing the demand violated the privacy of users' Web searches and its own trade secrets.

    They just need to make it clear that it would be a violation of the DMCA for the DoJ to look at this stuff!

    --
    Stop! Dremel time!
  16. Laughable by fafaforza · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or am I just cynikal?

    From what I understand, the government asked for web search strings alone. No identifying information at all.

    Google claims to be fighting the good fight of protecting their users' data, but how different is the data that the government wants, from the data the Google itself uses to comprise the various lists of most popular searches, the 'popular topics' are in news.google.com, etc? I'm not sure that I'd like my search to be part of such a public display. Is Google's users' data being user improperly in that case, too?

    The way I see it is that Google is simply grandstanding. There have been some voices recently that Google has been getting too powerfull and encompassing. They have your email, they know what you search for, and they search your entire hard drive and call back home with their toolbar.

    From what I understand, the government asked them for similar search data, with no identifying information, for their own statystical analysis. Is this Google's chance to get back to the good graces of the Internet's geeks, stick to their missions to "do no evil" and retain their image of the anti-corporation, the underdog, and the rebel, while trying to get back to their $150 billion market cap?

    1. Re:Laughable by Urza9814 · · Score: 0

      Google doesn't claim to be doing this to protect privacy, that's just what the media's saying. The main reason they're fighting this is because it just takes too much effort.

    2. Re:Laughable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you give a mouse a cookie...he'll want everyone's IP address.

      Giving in to this request would show that they are willing to do what the government wants, even if it is the wrong thing to do. Maybe the government wants something minor now, but if Google gives in, next time they might have to give up something important. They will be looked at as a friend by the people we don't want considering Google as a friend.

      People always say, "Why worry. If you have nothing to hide, it shouldn't be a problem." This is stupid because right now, I may have nothing to hide, but what if they change what needs to be hidden? Everyday, new activities are criminalized, often with secret law. Ignorance of the law is no defense, so if you can't know the law you're screwed. Giving in to requests like this just encourages more information gathering. Maybe you think you have nothing to worry about, but you really do. We'll see when the FBI is knocking on your door asking if you are 183.43.54.101.

    3. Re:Laughable by dfsiii · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yet, it all comes down to you choosing to use their products and "forfeit" your privacy. Don't use their stuff, don't worry about too much information getting out.

    4. Re:Laughable by Scarblac · · Score: 1

      From what I understand, the government asked for web search strings alone. No identifying information at all.

      Just that the information in question isn't particularly sensitive, doesn't mean government gets to force corporations to hand over whatever they ask for.

      They don't intend to use this information as evidence in court, so they don't get to subpoena it.

      From what I understand, the government asked them for similar search data, with no identifying information, for their own statystical analysis.

      From what *I* understand, they didn't ask, they're trying to force them to hand it over. They were subpoenad, now it's the DoJ suing that it should be handed over - even though this has nothing to do with any specific criminal lawsuit, but as you say, just some statistical analysis they want to do. It's completely ridiculous.

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
    5. Re:Laughable by amishdisco · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How much disconnect is there between the DoJ finding search strings interpreted by them as criminal activity, and their demanding the IP addresses that made them? And why do so many people still trust the intentions of our government?

    6. Re:Laughable by Z0mb1eman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But why SHOULD they turn this data over? It's not connected to a criminal, or even civil, case. It's not even connected to "homeland security". The government is just asking for this data because they feel like it.

      What amazes me the most about this whole affair - and that I haven't really seen addressed - is that this is the kind of data usually provided by studies... that the government would have to fund. I really don't see what basis they have for asking this as free information.

      Put it another way - what would happen if the government said "we need to write an operating system that we can control, but that is 100% compatible with all the Windows apps" and requested the Windows source code from Microsoft, instead of writing their own? Again, for free? You know, just because they're the government, and they can ask for it? Besides the fact that Slashdot would implode because it wouldn't know which side to support, I can only assume Microsoft's reaction would be the same.

      I don't think anyone really believes this is about "identifying information". Plain and simple, this mountain of data Google is sitting on is a huge part of their value as a company, and giving it away would be equivalent to suicide.

      --
      ClutterMe.com - easiest site creation on the Net. Just click and type.
    7. Re:Laughable by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      And why do so many people still trust the intentions of our government?
      Willful (and extremely unpatriotic) ignorance.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    8. Re:Laughable by sp3d2orbit · · Score: 1

      "From what I understand, the government asked for web search strings alone. No identifying information at all."

      This is a trial run for the DOJ. If this works out, you can guarentee that personally identifyable information will be requested next. That request will come under a Patriot Act Secret Warrant, so you'll never hear about it. The goverment will use that data to secretely and warrantlessly tap your other communications, you'll be arrested and sent to a secret prison where you'll have no access to a lawyer or the red cross. Sure you may try to starve yourself or hang yourself from your bedsheets after 4 or 5 years, but the guards will make sure to tie you down and force feed you so that your misery can continue.

      Yeah, Google's the bad guy here.

    9. Re:Laughable by slavemowgli · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm sorry if this comes across as flamebait, but... honestly, are you a complete IDIOT? With a few exceptions (see below), the government has no, repeat, NO right to know about anything that goes on in the daily lifes of people, including businesses. There's an exception for criminal investigations, of course, wheen it might be necessary to obtain evidence for a trial, but that's about it.

      What's happening here is that Google was asked to turn over a huge pile of information just because the government felt it might be useful for their own purposes to have this data. And you complain about *Google* when they don't roll over and comply?

      I'm really at a loss for words at how stupid someone from the self-described "land of the free" can be.

      --
      quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
    10. Re:Laughable by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      A huge gap. Specifically, the courts would recognize what you do not: that demanding personally identifiable data invokes much stronger protections than demanding statistically significant but anonymous data.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    11. Re:Laughable by notque · · Score: 1

      Yet, it all comes down to you choosing to use their products and "forfeit" your privacy. Don't use their stuff, don't worry about too much information getting out.

      your should be the quoted word.

      At what point did we decide it was a reasonable opinion to be selfish and okay with the idea that everything around us was crumbling?

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    12. Re:Laughable by notque · · Score: 1

      Willful (and extremely unpatriotic) ignorance.

      Don't forget the indoctrination of us as children.

      - The obligation that people feel to one another goes back to the very beginning of human history, as a natural, spontaneous act in human relations. Obligation to government, however, is not natural. It must be taught to every generation.

      Who can teach this lesson of obligation with more authority than the great Plato? Plato has long been one of the gods of modern culture, his reputation that of an awesome mind and a brilliant writer of dialogue, his work the greatest of the Great Books. Shrewdly, Plato puts his ideas about obligation in the mouth of Socrates. Socrates left no writings that we know of, so he can be used to say whatever Plato wants. And Plato could have no better spokesman than a wise, gentle old man who was put to death by the government of Athens in 399 B.C. for speaking his mind. Any words coming from such a man will be especially persuasive.

      But they are Plato's words, Plato's ideas. All we know of Socrates is what Plato tells us. Or, what we read in the recollections of another contemporary, Xenophon. Or what we can believe about him from reading Aristophanes's spoof on his friend Socrates, in his play The Clouds.

      So we can't know for sure what Socrates really said to his friend Crito, who visited him in jail, after he had been condemned to death. But we do know what Plato has him say in the dialogue Crito (written many years after Socrates's execution), which has been impressed on the minds of countless generations, down to the present day, with deadly effect. Plato's ideas have become pan of the onhodoxy of the nation, absorbed into the national bloodstream and reproduced in ordinary conversations and on bumper stickers. ("Love it or leave it"-summing up Plato's idea of obligation.)

      Plato's message is presented appealingly by a man calmly facing death, whose courage disarms any possible skepticism. It is made even more appealing by the fact that it follows another dialogue, the Apology, in which (according to Plato), Socrates addresses the jury in an eloquent defense of free speech, saying those famous words: "The unexamined life is not worth living."

      Plato then unashamedly (lesson one in intellectual bullying: speak with utter confidence) presents us with some unexamined ideas. Having established Socrates's credentials as a manyr for independent thought , he proceeds in the Crito to put on Socrates's tongue an argument for blind obedience to government.

      It is hardly a dialogue, although Plato is famous for dialogue and the "Socratic method" is based on teaching through dialogue. Poor Crito , who visits Socrates in prison to persuade him to let his friends plan his escape, is vinually tongue-tied. He is reduced to saying, to every one of Socrates's little speeches: "Yes . . . of course . . . clearly ... I agree. . . Yes . . . I think that you are right. . . . True." And Socrates is going on and on, like the good trouper that he is, saying Plato's lines, making Plato's argument. We know the ideas are Plato's because in his well- known and much bigger dialogue the Republic he makes an even more extended case for a totalitarian state.

      To Crito's offer of escape, Socrates replies: I must obey the law. True, he says, Athens has committed an injustice by ordering him to die for speaking his mind (he seems slightly annoyed at this!), but if he complained about this injustice, Athens could rightly say: "We brought you into the world, we raised you, we educated you, we gave you and every other citizen a share of all the good things we could."

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    13. Re:Laughable by t-twisted · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know how this got to insightful.. can you not tell the difference between a corporation using its own data and the government attempting to access it?

      Let's put it another way: If search engines were run by the government, on government servers, would you really use them in the same way? Of course not! You'd find other ways to get what you wanted from the internet - a list of IP addresses, a list of websites, a handwritten list of your most useful sites to find things. No need for the government to know everything you look for and are interested in on the internet, right?

      Somehow how you twisted it around to Google abusing the privacy of its own users by publishing top 10 lists or publishing search results information. I guess if you had watched the superbowl this year you would have been suspicious of being included as one of the 65 million viewers of the event?

    14. Re:Laughable by Dirtside · · Score: 1
      From what I understand, the government asked for web search strings alone. No identifying information at all.
      You're not so much cynical as incredibly naive. If Google complied with this subpoena, it would show the DOJ (and the courts) that Google is willing to roll over for bogus subpoenas. The DOJ would come back demanding more sensitive information, and Google would have no choice but to turn over everything the DOJ asked for.

      The DOJ has no compelling need for this information. It's nothing but a fishing expedition.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    15. Re:Laughable by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      > huge part of their value as a company, and giving it away would be equivalent to suicide.

      The huge value to Google is the algorythm to their searches, the seeking of news stories from various sources, locating businesses local to you and combining that with a map and driving directions, etc. It isn't in their Apache access log file.

    16. Re:Laughable by blakestah · · Score: 1

      Google claims to be fighting the good fight of protecting their users' data, but how different is the data that the government wants, from the data the Google itself uses to comprise the various lists of most popular searches, the 'popular topics' are in news.google.com, etc? I'm not sure that I'd like my search to be part of such a public display. Is Google's users' data being user improperly in that case, too?


      You have a right to be secure in your person and possessions against unreasonable search by the government.

      You do not have this same right against Google.

      It is a very good thing to draw the line at stuff like this. The government SHOULD have to strongly justify its desire to have search data in general, and not search data that relates to any crime.

      It is a dumb fishing expedition, and Google is calling them on it and using it to their PR advantage.

      When you think about all the personal data that exists in the corporate world, you could easily conclude that we already live in a 1984-like state IF the government can access that data at its leisure.

    17. Re:Laughable by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      You know, for trying not to sound like flamebait, you did a pretty poor job. :P

      I'm not comlaining about Google. Only the holier-than-thou light that many people on the Internet are putting Google in.

      I did not hear the praises when Verizon refused to hand over personal, identifying information on its users to the RIAA which took down an IP from Kazaa. Verizon even went to court to protect that information. In my opinion that was a far more important event in the privacy and anonymity issue than this.

    18. Re:Laughable by sepluv · · Score: 1
      web search strings alone. No identifying information at all.
      I'm not particularly interested in this case (in its effect on private indivduals is limited and I don't live over the pond), so I haven't researched what the US gov asked for.

      However, assuming you are right, are you going to volunteer your time to the massive effort make sure there is no idenitifable information in there? Oh wait, then you would be looking at people's private data.

      Anyway, how do you decide what might be identifiable, especially when the government combines the data set with others from ISP/police/medical/&c records.

      The real point here is, unless they have some justification in law, it is none of the government's business to make a company to expend time and effort to provide the government with their commercially sensitive records for the government to do god knows what with. Ever heard of "[t]he right of the people to be secure...against unreasonable searches and seizures"?

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    19. Re:Laughable by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Do remember that Socrates was over 70 at the time, and there were no dentists. We have no idea of his health, but it probably wasn't excellent. He may well have had arthritis. And transportation was by walking or by riding in unsprung vehicles. (Travel and travail were the same word up through the 19th century in English.)

      Possibly when he looked at the alternatives, a painless death that was similar in appearance to going to sleep appeared the best alternative...and it was something which he probably couldn't put off much longer anyway. And, if he did escape, there would be the problem of re-establishing himself in a new location...with news of his conviction behind him.

      This doesn't denigrate ANY of your points...but there are reasons to suspect that Socrates accepted the verdict and didn't desire to flee which have nothing to do with Plato.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    20. Re:Laughable by legirons · · Score: 1

      "From what I understand, the government asked for web search strings alone. No identifying information at all."

      Insightful?!?

      Google mentions that the search data would include people searching for their own names, credit card or SSN numbers, and for text inadvertently pasted into the google search box.

      The government has mentioned that if it finds anything fishy in this information, it will hand it over to investigating teams (presumably the FBI)

      I'm sure you can think of plenty of other identifying information in google's search strings, including people searching for specific sets of interests, or searches relevant to their location, their company, their school, the stocks they hold, the projects they're working on, their personal websites, and many other pieces of identifying information. Merely removing the IP addresses and gmail usernames doesn't magically make the data anonymous.

    21. Re:Laughable by notque · · Score: 1

      Do remember that Socrates was over 70 at the time, and there were no dentists. We have no idea of his health, but it probably wasn't excellent. He may well have had arthritis. And transportation was by walking or by riding in unsprung vehicles. (Travel and travail were the same word up through the 19th century in English.)

      Possibly when he looked at the alternatives, a painless death that was similar in appearance to going to sleep appeared the best alternative...and it was something which he probably couldn't put off much longer anyway. And, if he did escape, there would be the problem of re-establishing himself in a new location...with news of his conviction behind him.


      I appreciate the response, I really didn't expect to get anything well thought out, people like you make intelligent discussions possible.

      That being said, I bolded a section. I agree with what you are saying, except that if that was indeed the case. If this was an issue of alternatives, then all of his arguments given would have not made any sense whatsoever.

      By escaping Socrates would confirm the jury's opinion of him as a bad influence on the young; one who breaks the law is not one who influences the young positively.

      If something like this would matter to you (as much as I beileve it shouldn't), then the issue certainly wouldn't be alternatives.

      If we say that those are all Plato's words, then it's irrelevant as well.

      Certainly I understand your premise, but the rest of Crito suddenly doesn't make any sense at all if we accept it.

      --
      http://use.perl.org
    22. Re:Laughable by Grym · · Score: 1

      Interesting. I also found that section rather weak as well. However, I came up with a different conclusion when I encountered this section of The Republic (which I have not read in its entirety) in one of my philosophy classes last year. The rest of the class didn't seem to agree, but I'd like to hear what your learned thoughts on this matter are.

      In short, it seemed to me that Socrates was someone who delighted in showing just how wise he really was, principally by bringing others down. The epitome of this is in his classic dialogue with Euthyphro. Note that in this section he often begins his critiques with self-depreciation or outright flattery, almost as if he's intentionally trying to build his opponents up--right before he crushes them. This is classic passive-aggressive behavior, which, as anyone who's ever experienced it can attest, can be particularly frustrating. Notice how Euthyphro, after being thoroughly trounced (with Socrates completely ready and willing to continue), ungracefully exits with the line "Another time, Socrates; for I am in a hurry, and must go now." Could this excuse be any weaker? He's in a hurry only after his position falls to pieces? He might as well just pretend that someone is calling his name and run away.

      When viewed in this context, is it so hard to imagine that Socrates had perhaps made fools of some powerful people within Athenian society just as he did with Euthyphro? Think about the charges against him for a moment: corrupting the youth and dishonoring the gods. What are these? They're appeals to both emotion ("Think of the children!") and religion; both of which reside in the realm of disingenuous politics, not rational arguments.

      I think we're fools if we believe that Socrates was put to death entirely for the philosophical content of his arguments. As colorful as that classical image may be, I don't buy it. Much of Socrates' work is interesting because it shows that human nature has largely remained static throughout the centuries, and yet, given that that is the case, the classical view dictates that we accept that the only outcome of Socrates' philosophical confrontations was a greater understanding of the subject at hand. But this is demonstrably false. How many people today enjoy losing an argument (even if their position was wrong in the first place)? Why then should we expect people in Athenian society to be any different in this regard?

      If we accept this premise that there was more going on than the philosophical differences discussed in Socrates' work, then we must include that into Socrates' point of view as well. Here's where it gets interesting. From this perspective, why wouldn't Socrates choose to either ignore the trial or escape? What would he have to gain from this decision? Well, it's quite obvious: he's simply calling their (his political enemies') bluff. Socrates--never one to be beaten--wins in the end (and in the annals of history) by intentionally martyring himself.

      Somehow the above motive seems much more likely than courageously holding oneself to some nonsensical view of law. As you show, his position with Crito is uncharacteristically weak. Are we really supposed to follow unjust laws or similarly accept the punishment of just laws that are enforced unjustly, simply by virtue of our mere residence within a state? What about in the case of conflicting laws? How does one resolve the fact that the mere act of moving to a different state is not (particularly in Socrates' time) without cost or risk? Similarly, what about the easily-imagined case of large area of states all having a particular brand of an unjust law, making injustice essentially impossible to escape? The conclusions Socrates gives us to all of these questions are very unclear if not outright wrong.

      Socrates was unquestionably an intelligent person. I refuse to believe that a person capable of coming up with the allegory of the cave couldn't imagine the above scenarios. H

    23. Re:Laughable by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Haven't you ever had an argument with yourself, when you were arguing that you had to do something, but it was really that the alternatives were undesirable?

      Not that I accept Plato as an accurate reporter, but it wouldn't surprise me if even Socrates pretended that he wasn't facing a choice in order to make it easier to accede to an unpleasant one. So I also don't find it implausible that Socrates could have said about what he was reported to have said. OTOH, Plato was an orator, and a partisan in the debate. He could well have said that which would have made his faction look good. (Well, if it hadn't made his faction look good, he probably wouldn't have said it, I meant he might well have fabulated to make his faction look good.)

      Reporters are never accurate, even when they try to be. I have no evidence that trying to be accurate was even one of Plato's main considerations. (Someone else may have some evidence, but I doubt that they have convincing evidence.) Still, something quite like that portrayal may well have happened.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  17. Thoughts by fimbulvetr · · Score: 4, Informative

    The funniest part of TFS follows:

    "The Government, of course, has told the Court none of this. Instead, it relies on a
    talismanic incantation that the standard of relevance is met 'so long as [the request] is reasonably
    calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.'"

    Talismanic incantion! LOL!

    Google's lawyers appear to be a good job refuting the Government's "expert":

    "The court should view the Cutts Declaration as standing in strong contrast to the
    Government's declarant, Professor Phillip Stark, a statistician who apparently has been hired to
    produce a study to support the Government's contentions. The Stark Declaration is vague,
    cursory, and uninformed about the operation of Google's search engine. In any event, Professor
    Stark's opinion ought to be viewed with some scrutiny. Although positioned as the Government's
    expert, he has not yet been qualified as a reliable expert by the Pennsylvania court trying the
    underlying case pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 702 or Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms.,
    Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993). The Pennsylvania court has thus not yet determined whether Professor
    Stark's testimony is reliable and of any assistance to the trier of fact."

    And I'd have to side with Google on this. I'd venture to guess that most of google's data is completely irrelevant when taken out of context, which Stark is trying to do. If Google does have to turn the data over, I wouldn't be suprised if Stark tried to strongarm his way into learning Google's methods, algorithms, etc.

    Another good argument is the following:

    "In addition, the Government will not be able to ascertain the content of a Web page from
    its descriptive URL name. A Web site's name that suggests potential harmful material may be
    benign. Conversely, a URL that seems innocent may actually return pornographic material. The
    classic example is www.whitehouse.com, which was a pornography site. Here, the adage "you
    can't judge a book by its cover" applies. A URL such as
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/prontline/shows/porn /etc/links.html contains the word "porn" but
    actually provides links to anti-pornography organizations."

    1. Re:Thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God dammit. Why does the Government even CARE about porn? Let's do something about violence first -- since it's actually harmful.

  18. who knew by twistedhumor · · Score: 1

    and all these years ive been thinking google was the goverment

    --
    Half the world is composed of idiots the other half are people just smart enough to take indecent advantage of them
    1. Re:who knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod this guy insightful... ;)

  19. US Govt being too direct... by PSaltyDS · · Score: 1

    The US Government is being too direct. They have (relatively) good relations with China. If they got the Chinese to demand the information for them, they'd have it by now.

    I'll go take a walk now in the hopes of reducing my Google cynicism...

    --
    Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced. - Geek's corollary to Clarke's law
    1. Re:US Govt being too direct... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fact is, my friend, we (the world in general) are moving towards a much more Orwellian future than we realize. Sweeping laws aren't the way it's being done; we're being nickel and dimed with cameras, anti-terrorist laws, airport security, sheriffs in Florida who want cameras in your house, etc, etc. Look at the UK. Cameras everywhere. Orwell's England is damn near in place. The DMCA, RIAA, all of the controls that are slowly stragling us.

      Now, before my tinfoil hat loses all of its shape and falls off, let me say that despite a good number of you disliking RMS, his ideas on freedom work. Too many people are content to accept DRM from Apple, MS, and others, while rejecting the whole notion of freedom. IF everyone were using something like Tor, but with millions of servers, using free/libre/oss, we might not be headed in this direction nearly as soon. Something to think about.

  20. Wrong again... by absurdist · · Score: 1

    When you or I have the power and authority of the DOJ, then come back to me with your incredibly poor analogy. Maybe it'll hold water then.

  21. Google is claiming it is a privacy issue by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

    From the legal document;

    but that Google will keep private whatever information users communicate absent a compelling reason. ...

    If Google is forced to compromise its privacy principles ...

    The privacy and anonymity of the service are major factors in the attraction of users - that is, users trust Google to do right by their personal information and to provide them with the best search results.

    --
    The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    1. Re:Google is claiming it is a privacy issue by Urza9814 · · Score: 1, Informative

      "These are fearful times for Americans who value freedom from government snooping, and it's a clear measure of that mood that Google's fight with the federal government is persistently taken as a struggle over personal privacy. It is not. In its subpoena for a week's worth of search results, the Justice Department is specifically not asking for the identities of the searchers. In response, Google is specifically not citing its users' privacy as justification for declining to comply. Rather, it is defending its own trade secrets -- proprietary details of the workings of its Web-searching software that it says would be revealed in those endless lists of addresses." http://www.startribune.com/561/story/222963.html

    2. Re:Google is claiming it is a privacy issue by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      You are quoting an editorial from Feb 2, 2006 written by some newspaper not related to Google.

      I am quoting the Feb 17, 2006 legal documents from Google's own lawyers and what they intend to argue in court. (Someone else already posted the link to the document)

      Think for yourself. Take the effort and look beyond the press-releases and stop believing everything you read just because you its printed.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    3. Re:Google is claiming it is a privacy issue by Urza9814 · · Score: 0

      You want a newer article? http://techdirt.com/articles/20060217/1510213_F.sh tml Google's a company. They wouldn't be fighting this JUST for privacy. If they cared that much they wouldn't be in China...though I fully support that move, I'm just saying that if they cared about their users that much they either wouldn't have censored in the first place or they'd be listening to all the people protesting.

    4. Re:Google is claiming it is a privacy issue by Hrothgar+The+Great · · Score: 1

      There is seriously about a paragraph in that document that says things like that, and about 15 pages of "The government doesn't need this data for anything so we don't think we should have to provide it." The privacy thing is just an extra, tacked on argument to try to strengthen their case.

    5. Re:Google is claiming it is a privacy issue by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      The first sentence of the introduction address privacy. Look at the second sentence, trust is listed before the burden and usefullness issues.

      Does that sound like privacy is an afterthought? If anything, its the technical issues that are the afterthought and is used to strengthen its case.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    6. Re:Google is claiming it is a privacy issue by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      When writing persuasively, people often write their most important argument last because that's what the reader will remember best.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    7. Re:Google is claiming it is a privacy issue by Hrothgar+The+Great · · Score: 1

      Did you read the document, or just the first two sentences? In the FIRST PARAGRAPH, they mention that the government doesn't need the information and that Google therefore shouldn't have to provide it. The first paragraph of this document is a neat summary of the points they will be making, sort of like the first paragraph of a college paper. If you go through the rest of the document, they make barely any arguments about user privacy, instead focusing about 90% of their attention on whether a third party in a case can be compelled to give up trade secrets. It would seem that there is quite a bit more legal precedent for this argument than the privacy one.

      As usual, everyone on Slashdot can only focus on whether Google is "good" or "evil" today.

    8. Re:Google is claiming it is a privacy issue by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      >Did you read the document, or just the first two sentences?

      Did you read my previous post? I quoted from all over the document. They do mention other points but privacy is definately one of them.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
  22. It doesn't align with their PR strategies... by Junta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    For google, a core part of their PR strategy is 'do no evil', and therefore any opportunity to grandstand in a way that appears to comply with this core promise is gold for Google.

    The other sites don't have that as a PR strategy at the moment. Therefore, they would perceive little to no value compared to their costs.

    Of course, it does sound good to stand up to the government lately with all the negative trends against privacy going on, but as many have pointed out, google themselves is using the data in ways not that much different from the government plans, so it isn't 100% as good as they like everyone to think...

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  23. Go Google! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    This is what Google means by the their "Do No Evil" slogan. Unlike their competitors who caved in to the DOJ request, Google is fighting it. Their competitors (some of which want to pay you to use their service), just gave the data regardless of the justification of the request or the privacy of their users. Microsoft has shown time and time again that they are after the almighty $ and really don't care about things that don't directly impact their bottom line like privacy. Security only became a focus at Microsoft when Linux came along and demonstrated a much more secure platform that threatened Microsoft's server sales.


    However, with China, Google has three choices: 1) don't do business in China, 2) fight it and delay business in China, 3) comply but fight it and do a minimalist job at it.


    1 and 2 are suicide as China is a VERY large, growing market. Microsoft, Yahoo, etc. would have loved for Google to stay out, hence they could get a very large market share. By doing 3, Google gets press (some good, a lot bad), but they get to play in China. They also are really raising the level of discussion about the censorship in China which is a VERY GOOD THING. Through the press and awareness of the problem, Google is Doing the right thing, unlike Microsoft, Yahoo, etc.

    1. Re:Go Google! by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

      Google should have appeased China by setting up google.ch, and giving in to China on that. This would have helped in a few ways:

      #1. Any query to that domain could be filtered.
      #2. google.com would have stayed fully open.
      #3. It would have been China's burden to block/redirect to google.ch, not google's. Important thing here folks. Put the burden on China and China's ISPs.
      #4. Wouldn't have to worry about inaccurately determining an address in china as non-chinese and not filtering results, and the opposite - IPs not in china mistakingly identified as Chinese and subsequently filtered.

      Alternatively, China could could work on entering the 18th,19th,20th, or even 21st century. Kind of sad that such a large society has such a patethetic record.

    2. Re:Go Google! by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

      I get one point for a pathetic spelling of pathetic.

    3. Re:Go Google! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought that they did exactly what you suggest.

    4. Re:Go Google! by Stradenko · · Score: 1

      fwiw, http://google.ch/ is great for people in Switzerland.

    5. Re:Go Google! by fimbulvetr · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh whoops, my bad:)

      As an American, I demand credit for understanding there's another country other than my own!

    6. Re:Go Google! by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

      I think you're right, according to their latest blog post:

      (1) Launch Google.cn.
      We have recently launched Google.cn, a version of Google's search engine that we will filter in response to Chinese laws and regulations on illegal content. This website will supplement, and not replace, the existing, unfiltered Chinese-language interface on Google.com. That website will remain open and unfiltered for Chinese-speaking users worldwide.


      My apologies for posting a "suggestion" that happened to be exactly what they were doing. I was under the impression google.ch and google.com were the same thing and Google did their thing based on IP.

    7. Re:Go Google! by BCTECH · · Score: 2

      Competitors did not cave in. Microsoft and Yahoo stripped out IP addresses and other data that would identify individuals. The government is interested in analysing the data as ia relates to unwanted porn coming up in searches. Google could have done the same but they are bent on playing the martry with our goverment and yet they are so willing to bend over for the evil Chinese government. But rest assured they will only sell your rights down the river when money is involved.

    8. Re:Go Google! by typical · · Score: 1

      The government is interested in analysing the data as ia relates to unwanted porn coming up in searches.

      And what right do they have to this data?

      I can't walk up to Google and say "Hey, Google. Gimme all the contents of your database."

      Maybe the police can, if they're trying to track a criminal. Maybe the FBI can, if they're worried about "terrorism". The PATRIOT Act gave up a lot for anything related to terrorism.

      However, this is strictly to support the interest of a group in the federal government that wants to install pornography filters everywhere. It is not related to law enforcement or national security. The fact that this group is associated with the federal government and that someone else that *also* happens to work with the federal government does, under a different set of conditions, have the ability to demand this data does *not* mean that these filtering advocates have any right to demand data whatsoever.

      And you bet your *balls* that it matters to Google's users whether or not their data can just go floating around wherever. I place a great deal of trust in Google not to simply barf out my search history to anyone that asks. If they did, I'd find use of Google unacceptable, and would have to do something like ram things through Tor or use alternate search engines. A search history contains a complete set of everything I researched, read about, or wanted to find out more about for *years*.

      So, yes, Google is both in the right and has excellent reason not to turn this data over.

      If the federal government wants to pay Google to produce a number that's a percentage of searches that return porn-related hits and Google finds this acceptable, I'd go for that.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    9. Re:Go Google! by Keeper · · Score: 1

      And what right do they have to this data?

      The same right any other federal agency with administrative subpoena powers has. The DoJ subpoena must only be "reasonable"; in other words, it must be for knowledge not already in their possession, relevent to their investigation, and not be considered an abuse of the court's process.

      The subpoena does not request personally identafiable information. And the information Google is freaking out over is the same kind of information they already share with advertising partners (their ad service tells you how many times the "query" you're buying an ad for has been hit recently).

  24. Selective Legality by Rydia · · Score: 1

    Very clever PR on Google's side... they obviously don't really care about law (especially copyright law), but if they can keep their base happy, it'll fool enough investors so they don't get hit with anymore hundred-million dollar loss days.

    1. Re:Selective Legality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      They aren't ignoring copyright law. They read it differently from the copyright cartels, but then they have vested interest in doing so, as much as Google would have the other way. Currently, the courts are agreeing with Googles interpretation, so it seems more correct to say that the publishers' guild are guilty of ignoring law by asserting righs they do not have.

    2. Re:Selective Legality by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Au contraire: of course they care about the law; that's why they're taking the side of the law instead of the side of the government in this issue. Please try to understand that the two are not synonymous.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    3. Re:Selective Legality by babbling · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, on most issues, Google's interests are the same as the public's interests. This is a good thing. For once, little people have a big giant ally.

      I'm not suggesting Google wouldn't turn against our interests if it suited them, just that there is currently a nice coincidence where the interests match up. They even pay people $1 for each person they refer to Firefox! (and they get to include their Google Toolbar with it)

      There are certain areas where this doesn't apply, though. Google in China is something that people are not too sure about. Google Video DRM is evil.

  25. Don't give up ... by chato · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ... or they will ask next for the logs of the Google Web Accelerator.

  26. Think about what exactly? by Serpent+Mage · · Score: 1

    Google specifically states that they will use their information for their own internal purposes to improve searches and such. They specifically state that they will not hand out that information to 3rd party. The government is 3rd party.

    Everyones complaining about googles hypocracy needs to get off their silly "they are a company now and like all companies have to be selfish and everything they do is public facing deception only". Get real. I'm by no means claiming they are protectors of the smaller people but they have done NOTHING wrong or hypocritical at all. In fact they are holding up their end of the promise they made to the smaller people.

  27. Why is everything evil? by Serpent+Mage · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google specifically states that they will use their information for their own internal purposes to improve searches and such. They specifically state that they will not hand out that information to 3rd party. The government is 3rd party.

    Everyones complaining about googles hypocracy needs to get off their silly "they are a company now and like all companies have to be selfish and everything they do is public facing deception only".

    I'm by no means claiming they are protectors of the smaller people but they have done NOTHING wrong or hypocritical at all. In fact they are holding up their end of the promise they made to the smaller people.

    1. Re:Why is everything evil? by TallMatthew · · Score: 1
      Google specifically states that they will use their information for their own internal purposes to improve searches and such. They specifically state that they will not hand out that information to 3rd party.

      When you use adwords, Google provides a summary of the number of times the phrase you're targeting has been queried in the previous n days to provide an estimate of how many clicks you can expect. So if you wanted the phrase "Osama Bin Laden" to point to your ad, you would see how many times people have searched for that term (and how many times they clicked through). Obviously they don't show you who searched for that term, but the information for a specific search term isn't that hard to come by.

      This makes it seem like either the government is asking for more than they're letting on or Google is grandstanding.

    2. Re:Why is everything evil? by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      either the government is asking for more than they're letting on or Google is grandstanding

      Bush states that warantless wiretapping on US citizens is okay and now this?

      You're being sacastic right?

  28. Re:PR Stunt? by mgabrys_sf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Some public relations stunt. It caused their net-worth to drop billions this quarter. If I were an investor, I'd say try something else.

  29. It's worse by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 1

    ...this is a government fishing expedition, and it's not even fishing for crime, it's fishing for data from which they suppose they might be able to theorize harm, and legislate a new crime.

    In reality, they just want to believe that harm is somehow being done. They aren't after evidence or scientific proof. They're after data that can be munged to confirm their biases and those of their constituents.

    For the record: in my own opinion images of sex, even wild and kinky sex, do not harm kids - and probably don't even much interest them except for snigger-value. All this fuss is saying much more about the repressed prurience of the more nutty kind of "cultural conservative" than about any scientific reality.

  30. No PR Stunt ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm amazed you bothered to login from Redmond so early today.

    This is most clearly a fishing expedition. The government wants bullshit stats their lackey can massage into something resembling evidence that there is pr0n on the interweb and some 17 year old might possibly see a nipple. Meanwhile, their close buddy Microsoft would probably love to have snuggly conversations with the private researchers who would, in all likelihood, discover information about Google's practices and methods.

    Google should fight like hell. Since it won't be for one reason, then it must be the other.

  31. I Love Google But... by eno2001 · · Score: 1, Troll

    ...impracticality is the current administration's way of life. Witness Iraq, the "War on Terra", even the most recent debacle of the Veep's shooting victim apologizing to HIM. Google better play dirty on this one since the current admin and all the neocons play that way.

    --
    -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    1. Re:I Love Google But... by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      actions between two friends regarding a hunting accident have absolutely no relevence or bearing on your point.

    2. Re:I Love Google But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes they do because they didn't pay the proper fees. They are criminals and you are a cocksucker. Check and mate.

  32. Anonymous stats != Private info by MarkByers · · Score: 1

    ... Google ... were more than willing to demonstrate technology that allows you to see what others had been searching.

    Google Suggest does this. It's a good feature.

    There is a huge difference between showing anonymous search statistics in order to aid the end-user and handing over personally identifiable private information to corrupt individuals. Although you could argue that the politicians think they are only doing what is in the public's best interest. I'm glad Google disagrees.

    --
    I'll probably be modded down for this...
    1. Re:Anonymous stats != Private info by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      So you don't think there is anything wrong with providing anonymous user statistics? Then you are saying you agree with the DOJ? Since of course that is exactly what they are requesting. In fact they specicially requested the removal of any identifiable information.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    2. Re:Anonymous stats != Private info by MarkByers · · Score: 1

      So you don't think there is anything wrong with providing anonymous user statistics?

      I said that there is nothing wrong in doing it if it provides value for the user, like completing your search terms by using a database of the most frequently requested terms, as I mentioned.

      Then you are saying you agree with the DOJ?

      No, you made that up yourself. I disagree with the DOJ because Google is a private company and *requiring* them to provide this information gives no value for its users and is an unnecesary burden. However, I think Google has the right to use non-identifiable statistics if they think it adds value to their service.

      I was agreeing with your first post by giving a concrete example of sharing search statistics with the general public. You didnt provide any facts apart from an unverifiable story.

      --
      I'll probably be modded down for this...
    3. Re:Anonymous stats != Private info by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      "No, you made that up yourself. I disagree with the DOJ because Google is a private company and *requiring* them to provide this information gives no value for its users and is an unnecesary burden."

      You said in your last post, and I quote,

      There is a huge difference between showing anonymous search statistics in order to aid the end-user and handing over personally identifiable private information to corrupt individuals. Although you could argue that the politicians think they are only doing what is in the public's best interest. I'm glad Google disagrees.
      You were clearly differentiating between what Google does everyday and what the government is asking them to do by whether or not "personally identifiable private information" is given out. And please don't try to say you were just trying to explain how there was nothing wrong with what Google did then and were not referring to the court case in any way. Unless of course you think my job hungry classmates and I are "corrupt individuals" and went off on a tangent in those last two sentences. And then please show the point where I said they were sharing "private info", or else the title you chose for this little thread is a little strange.

      If you are just going to find another reason to disagree with the government each time it is proven that you have the facts wrong, fine, but please be honest enough to admit that is what you are doing. Please don't try to argue that this is the opinion you have had the whole time.

      "I was agreeing with your first post by giving a concrete example of sharing search statistics with the general public. You didnt provide any facts apart from an unverifiable story."

      WTF do you mean "unverifiable story"? There were at least a hundred people in that room, plus Google probably gives the exact same presentation at every major university in the country. If needed, I could easily verify it, just ask anyone who attended. Or are you under the impression that unless a hyperlink can be posted, the information is questionable, while if a hyplerlink does exist, it must be true?

      The sad part about that is there are many who really do believe that.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  33. Why isn't the 4th amendment sufficient? by constantnormal · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Or are they saving that for the eventual appeal to the Supreme Court?

    "Article 4. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

    Is this because Google, being a corporation, is not regarded as a Person? Certainly the "papers and effects" portion would apply to those citizens whose data Google houses.

    Or is it being stipulated that the data in Google's keeping has no portion of ownership by the people? Or that "my" Gmail is not really mine, or that "my" search histories have no relation to me, that they would not constitute "my papers"?
    Perhaps this is an area into which Google does not wish to venture.

    IANAL, but this seems pretty cut & dried to me.

    Will someone (who IS a lawyer, please) point out the error in my thinking?

    1. Re:Why isn't the 4th amendment sufficient? by sp3d2orbit · · Score: 1

      It may be as simple as Google is not on trial. The fourth amendment prevents you from saying anything to incriminate yourself.

    2. Re:Why isn't the 4th amendment sufficient? by constantnormal · · Score: 1
      It may be as simple as Google is not on trial. The fourth amendment prevents you from saying anything to incriminate yourself.

      Actually, it's the 5th Amendment that does what you said -- hence the expression "taking the fifth".

      The 4th amendment is as I quoted:
      "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

      The 4th is the "unreasonable search and seizure" one. You can check out all of the first ten "amendments" -- which are not really changes, but things the founders felt needed to be emphasized, so they repeated them as the "Bill of Rights", which became the first ten amendments to the Constitution. All of the points they restate explicitly were present in either explicit or implicict form in the Constitution.

      If you want to know what the founders really intended, you could do worse than studying the Bill of Rights.

    3. Re:Why isn't the 4th amendment sufficient? by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      4th What?

      The 4th amendment isn't enough to stop RANDOM searches by POLICE in NYC subways.

      What makes you think anyone still remembers what it is?

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    4. Re:Why isn't the 4th amendment sufficient? by vampares · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The DoJ asserts it has probable cause and it does. Google must provide evidence that most of the searches are made by law obiding citzens who's queries are private information shared between google and the searcher, that should be "secure" as article 4 provides this as a right, and that google does not favorably propagate illegal activity, making particulars possible but not feasible -- all sites are indexed regardless of what they contain, users search unawares of the potential resulting set.

      Ultimately the number of words an American knows is woefully limited. The DoJ need only plugin a couple million queries into google to get the landscape. The only _use_ for google insides would be for search engine poisoning. That severely threatens googles profitability especially if the calculated techniques are examined and taken to, making searches return unfruitful and causing users to surf by site link, URL, human edited ad engines, backwards searching, double engine or ip shotgunning taking the google page out of the picture and the ads and revenue links with. Search engine poisoning can be a form of censorship, vandalism/spam or commercial tactic that effectively neutralizes would be market spoilers.

      The easiest way to throw this in the face of the DoJ would be to have an expert examine the material and have him/her testify that there is no way to make evidence of googles possesions, as a counter to the Doj's Professor. Or better yet would be to allow a government hired expert to examine the google and then charge him the cost of providing this google. They made a potential costly error in calling google trade secrets, the court would likely allow the information to be disclosed but not removed from the premises in this case. Had they called it a burdensome operation that is fueled by cash not queries the DoJ would have lost interest. To the point that "The Government Has Not Shown a Substantial Need" I think they have the need to fight the war on terror and they show it everyday. To the point "The Government's Offer to Collaborate Is Inadequate and Unrealistic" I think they're as serious as Dick Cheney. "The Data Is Not Useful for Any Study" I bet they've got someone who says it is. To the point "Google Should Not Bear the Burden of Responding to Potentially Inadequate Process Based on ECPA" you almost get the sense they're almost trying to do something historical here. Tree part essay that sums up w/ timber but it does cover a lot of area. If it was going to the supreme court I would stick to a single objection instead of dancing around. The reality is that the DoJ is looking for ways to rank bs results, as its the only secret google has and the only useful information that could be gleaned from google that can't be had by going to google.com or someweb site especially since there is no demographical information associated w/ searches. It would be unlawful to take the data because there is no correlation to criminal activity and queries and if there was there would be no way to determine what or who or when or how. I would bolster the similarity to dragnet.

    5. Re:Why isn't the 4th amendment sufficient? by sp3d2orbit · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you're right. Sometimes that extra chromosome makes it really hard for me to type.

    6. Re:Why isn't the 4th amendment sufficient? by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      The Fourth Amendment doesn't mean that nothing you own can ever be searched through by the government. It only protects (theoretically) against unreasonable searches (and seizures).

      You're right in that this case, the government has no compelling need to commit this search; they want the data for political ends, not for judicial ends. (Specifically, they want to use the data to support GOP initiatives on spreading anti-pornography filters.)

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    7. Re:Why isn't the 4th amendment sufficient? by Keeper · · Score: 1

      Actually, it will be used in an active DoJ investigation. That investigation may serve some GOP agenda, but it is still within the bounds of serving an administrative subpoena.

  34. Url? Torrent? by beacher · · Score: 1

    Page 11 (OTFPDF) - "In addition to bot queries, an individual may run hundreds of queries .... Some users have deliberately sent pornography queries to Google in response to the Government's subpoena. One striking example is that of an individual who wrote a feature for the Firefox (Mozilla) web browser that will send random pornoggraphy query to Google"

    Can I get a url to this new "feature" please?

  35. Imagine the printouts for that! by Xypheri · · Score: 1

    Maybe google is just stalling till they can get enough paper to print out all the google cashes on porn they have.

  36. Totally Off Topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    In the /. bottom of the page cookie:
    "After twelve years of therapy my psychiatrist said something that brought tears to my eyes. He said, "No hablo ingles." -- Ronnie Shakes"

    What the hell is an 'hablo' ingle? The only reference to hablo that I can find is some Spanish word.

    1. Re:Totally Off Topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No hablo ingles is spanish for "I don't speak English".

    2. Re:Totally Off Topic by Chexiepie · · Score: 1
      In Spanish, "no hablo ingles" means "I don't speak English."

      This is, of course, presuming that the above comment isn't a joke. I don't know, maybe the parent was scared of using Google to search for the whole phrase?

    3. Re:Totally Off Topic by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      > Ingle \In"gle\, n. [derived from Angel]
      > A paramour; a favourite; a sweetheart;

      So a slashdotter would not normally say "No hablo Ingle", as that doesn't make sense. A slashdotter would say, "No tengo Ingle", "I don't have a paramour, a sweetheart."

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  37. Will the argument stand in court? by audi100quattro · · Score: 1

    "arguing the demand violated the privacy of users' Web searches and its own trade secrets."

    seriously? I'm kissing the search history feature goodbye... Their only real defense is that there was no crime commited here.

  38. Re:PR Stunt? by Max+Threshold · · Score: 1, Interesting

    If you were an investor, I'd say shut the hell up. You have no say in the matter. The interests of the employees, the customers, and the community come before yours.

  39. What I don't understand by Bodysurf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    is why the DoJ thinks they have a legal right to access Google's information/logs?

    Do they have any credible evidence that Google broke the law? Or that a particular user broke the law? If so, they they should subpoena an individual users records.

    It seems to me that the DoJ merely wants Google information because they want to go on a "fishing expedition". Google should have no obligation to assist the DoJ in a "fishing expedition".

    The DOJ on "information and belief" have some theories apparently. Just because Google has information that may or may not disprove their theory, no one should compel Google to turn over that information. It's up the the DoJ to get their own information if they believe such. If they don't have their own independent source from which to obtain it, then too bad.

    1. Re:What I don't understand by notaprguy · · Score: 1

      Who could possibly mod this comment as insightful? The guy obviously doesn't have a clue what the issue is here. There is no suggestion that Google broke the law. The request from the DOJ is to gather information regarding child porn on the internet. While I can see why Google might be concerned about trade secrets being exposed, they're clearly on the wrong side of this issue. If they can help the govt fight child porn but making their log files available in a way that doesn't compromise trade secrets then they should do so. Also, FYI, the govt isn't asking for any personallhy identifiable information. They just want to see general information about searches relating to child porn. Anyone who has any mod points, mod this guy/gal down.

    2. Re:What I don't understand by Bodysurf · · Score: 1
      "Who could possibly mod this comment as insightful?"

      Someone who is intelligent and insightful too.

      "The guy obviously doesn't have a clue what the issue is here."

      The issue is the DoJ has no legal right, AFAICT, to compel Google to cough up this information.

      "There is no suggestion that Google broke the law. The request from the DOJ is to gather information regarding child porn on the internet."

      Just like Bush is just using these 'NSA warrantless wiretaps' only against terrorists?

      "While I can see why Google might be concerned about trade secrets being exposed, they're clearly on the wrong side of this issue. If they can help the govt fight child porn but making their log files available in a way that doesn't compromise trade secrets then they should do so. Also, FYI, the govt isn't asking for any personallhy identifiable information. They just want to see general information about searches relating to child porn. Anyone who has any mod points, mod this guy/gal down."

      If Google chose to do so, in the way they want to, then fine.

      But the DoJ is trying to compel Google to cough up this info without any legal basis behind it.

      My fear, just like Google's is the DoJ wants to use this info for stuff other than it claims:

      Another reason for objecting to the subpoena, Google says in its brief authored by Al Gidari and Lisa Delehunt at the law firm of Perkins Coie, is that government lawyers might share the information with the FBI for criminal prosecution--say, of people who typed in search terms like "marijuana cultivation or "directv hacking."
    3. Re:What I don't understand by Keeper · · Score: 1

      The issue is the DoJ has no legal right, AFAICT, to compel Google to cough up this information.

      The DoJ does, indeed, have the legal right to compel Google to produce this information. The DoJ has the power to issue administrative subpoenas (as do several hundred other federal agencies). The subpoena must merely be "reasonable", in that it must be sought for information not in the DoJ possession, be relevent to the DoJ's investigation, and would not be considered an abuse of the court's process. Check, check, and check.

      A subpoena is an order compelling testimony or information from a 3rd party in a trial or investigation. Google refused the subpoena. The DoJ is now asking the court to enforce the subponea, which is their legal right.

      Just like Bush is just using these 'NSA warrantless wiretaps' only against terrorists?

      The subpoena is quite clear in describing the information requested from Google. It does not request any personally identafiable information.

      But the DoJ is trying to compel Google to cough up this info without any legal basis behind it.

      As stated before, the DoJ does have a legal basis for doing so.

      My fear, just like Google's is the DoJ wants to use this info for stuff other than it claims:

      The subpoena does not request any personally identafiable information.

    4. Re:What I don't understand by Bodysurf · · Score: 1
      "The DoJ does, indeed, have the legal right to compel Google to produce this information. The DoJ has the power to issue administrative subpoenas (as do several hundred other federal agencies). The subpoena must merely be "reasonable", in that it must be sought for information not in the DoJ possession, be relevent to the DoJ's investigation, and would not be considered an abuse of the court's process. Check, check, and check."

      Google's attorneys disagree with the DoJ's (and apparently your) opinion that the subpoena is reasonable.

      IOW, Google may have information not in the DoJ's possesion, the info may be relevant, however Google's attorneys are rightfully arguing that the DoJ has no legal right to obtain this information. It's Google's private info, not subjective to disclosure merely at the whim of the DoJ, unless Google consents and they don't. Unless this information has been obtained illegally, I see this subpoena being illegal and quashed.

      Time will tell what the court thinks, won't it?

    5. Re:What I don't understand by Keeper · · Score: 1

      Of course our "opinions" differ, given that Google is entangling itself in legal proceedings about it. Personally, I would think they'd have to be getting some pretty piss poor legal counsil to challenge this in the first place...

    6. Re:What I don't understand by Bodysurf · · Score: 1
      "Of course our "opinions" differ, given that Google is entangling itself in legal proceedings about it. Personally, I would think they'd have to be getting some pretty piss poor legal counsil to challenge this in the first place..."

      And Google's council probably thinks you have a piss poor view of privacy rights and a obscenely psychotic and enflated opinion of what the DoJ's is entitled to.

      Shall we continue?

    7. Re:What I don't understand by Keeper · · Score: 1

      Sure, let's go another round: I can't figure out how a request for anonymous usage data comprises their user's privacy. I also can't figure out how they figure censorship is better than kiddy porn. But hey, the courts will figure it out right?

    8. Re:What I don't understand by Bodysurf · · Score: 1
      "Sure, let's go another round: I can't figure out how a request for anonymous usage data comprises their user's privacy."

      First of all, like I wrote, the DoJ is not entitled to Google's information. It's THEIRS to do with as they wish.

      Secondly, giving this "anonymous usage data" is a slippery slope and a fishing expedition. Let's say they get this "anoymous usage data", next time they come back and want a little more. Go read Google's reply to the DoJ's request... it's pretty well spelled out in there.

      "I also can't figure out how they figure censorship is better than kiddy porn."

      "Kiddie porn" is like "terrorism". It's one of those terms designed to elicit an emotional response without thinking. The problem is those words mean whatever the DoJ wants them to mean.

      Shine a penlight laser up at a plane, you are a "terrorist." Have pictures of your 8 month old son taking a bath, you got "kiddie porn."

    9. Re:What I don't understand by Keeper · · Score: 1


      First of all, like I wrote, the DoJ is not entitled to Google's information. It's THEIRS to do with as they wish.

      Read up on administrative subpoena's sometime; you don't appear to have a very clear understanding of the law governing them. You can argue that the government shouldn't have the ability to compel that information, but the fact of the matter is that they DO have the power to compel Google to produce that information.

      Secondly, giving this "anonymous usage data" is a slippery slope and a fishing expedition.

      What exactly is the DoJ "fishing" for exactly? Is there some information you believe that the DoJ is trying to obtain beyond anonymous usage data and statistics?

      Go read Google's reply to the DoJ's request... it's pretty well spelled out in there.

      That's the DoJ's reply to Google's reply. Though I would recommend reading it, as they express the same puzzlement over Google's objections as I do.

      Google's arguements, in summarized form:
      1. Google does not believe that the requested data is relevent to a defense of the COPA act being challenged before the Supreme court.
      2. Google believes the request requires them to disclose identifying information about their users.
      3. Google believes that the material requested is redundant.
      4. Google believes that the total number of search requests they receive per day is a trade secret.
      5. Google believes complying with the subpoena imposes and undue burden.
      6. Google believes complying with the request implies that their database is a representative sample of content available on the internet, and they object to that implication.
      7. Google believes the requested data can be obtained elsewhere, and thus shouldn't have to provide that data.

      All of their arguements are contrived and nonsensical, and the only conclusion I can draw is that they've misinterpreted the information being requested by the subpoena. If this were Microsoft or Yahoo making these arguements you'd be asking what kind of crack they were smoking ...

      I won't bother responding to Google's arguements in form as the document you referenced does so much better than I could.

      Shine a penlight laser up at a plane, you are a "terrorist." Have pictures of your 8 month old son taking a bath, you got "kiddie porn."

      So you're saying that because some people are dumbasses that nothing should be done about real terrorists or kiddie pornographers? Would you feel better if we used the terms "freedom fighters" and "kiddie lovers"?

    10. Re:What I don't understand by Bodysurf · · Score: 1
      "What exactly is the DoJ "fishing" for exactly? Is there some information you believe that the DoJ is trying to obtain beyond anonymous usage data and statistics?"

      http://news.com.com/Google+to+feds+Back+off/2100-1 030_3-6041113.html?tag=nefd.top

      [...]
      Another reason for objecting to the subpoena, Google says in its brief authored by Al Gidari and Lisa Delehunt at the law firm of Perkins Coie, is that government lawyers might share the information with the FBI for criminal prosecution--say, of people who typed in search terms like "marijuana cultivation" or "directv hacking."

      [...]

      Even more than that, I see the DoJ using this information to go after "subversives", just like Nixon did.

      "That's the DoJ's reply to Google's reply. Though I would recommend reading it, as they express the same puzzlement over Google's objections as I do."

      Sorry.

      http://dw.com.com/redir?destUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fi.i.c om.com%2Fcnwk.1d%2Fpdf%2Fne%2F2006%2Fgoogle-doj%2F notice.of.stark.declaration.pdf&siteId=3&oId=2100- 1030-6041113&ontId=1023&lop=nl.ex

      "All of their arguements are contrived and nonsensical, and the only conclusion I can draw is that they've misinterpreted the information being requested by the subpoena. If this were Microsoft or Yahoo making these arguements you'd be asking what kind of crack they were smoking ..."

      Right. All of their lawyers are stupid.

      Actually, that wouldn't be that hard to believe. Lawyers routinely routinely do and say outrageuous and unbelieveable things, but I don't see that in this case.

      "So you're saying that because some people are dumbasses that nothing should be done about real terrorists or kiddie pornographers?"

      No. What I am saying is that these "terrorist" (think Patriot Act) and "kiddie porn" laws shouldn't, but are routinely used by LEAs against NON-terrorists and NON-kiddie porners (against the spirit and intentions of the lawmakers) rather than real terrorists and real kiddie pornographers.

    11. Re:What I don't understand by Keeper · · Score: 1

      [...]
      Another reason for objecting to the subpoena, Google says in its brief authored by Al Gidari and Lisa Delehunt at the law firm of Perkins Coie, is that government lawyers might share the information with the FBI for criminal prosecution--say, of people who typed in search terms like "marijuana cultivation" or "directv hacking."
      [...]

      Even more than that, I see the DoJ using this information to go after "subversives", just like Nixon did.


      Anonymous data will not provide a link to the people who entered those queries, nor would a phrase entered into a Google search be sufficient probable cause to have a court issue a subpoena in a criminal investigation.

      Arguing that you are afraid that you may be served with a second subpoena isn't sufficient cause to quash the original subpoena: it does not further the arguement that the subpoena is an abuse of the court's process, it does not further the arguement that the information requested is not relevent to the stated purpose, it does not further the arguement that the requested information is already in the DoJ's posession.

      Just ask anyone who's tried to fight RIAA's subpoena's in John Doe lawsuits with that arguement; on a slight tangent, it appears that the most successful way to defeat those suits as the RIAA files them today is on grounds of improper joining; the RIAA joins random people together in a single action without any evidence of collusion or interaction between the various parties.

      http://dw.com.com/redir?destUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fi.i.c om.com%2Fcnwk.1d%2Fpdf%2Fne%2F2006%2Fgoogle-doj%2F notice.of.stark.declaration.pdf&siteId=3&oId=2100- 1030-6041113&ontId=1023&lop=nl.ex

      That link is the declaration of Philip Stark in support of the DoJ's motion to compel Google to comply with the subpoena. In it he states why he believes the requested information is relevent and useful in the investigation he is assisting the DoJ with.

      You don't need to post a link to Google's response; I *have* read it. However, I did not find any arguements that I thought were compelling or otherwise in their favor.

      Right. All of their lawyers are stupid.

      I didn't say they were stupid, rather that I don't understand their frame of reference. I don't understand how they think that they have a chance of winning this -- obviously they believe they have a shot, otherwise they wouldn't be putting up a fight in the first place.

      No. What I am saying is that these "terrorist" (think Patriot Act) and "kiddie porn" laws shouldn't, but are routinely used by LEAs against NON-terrorists and NON-kiddie porners (against the spirit and intentions of the lawmakers) rather than real terrorists and real kiddie pornographers.

      This is undoubtably true, however this sort of behavior isn't limited to just these sorts of laws. That behavior occurs to everything from jaywalking to changing lanes on the highway...

    12. Re:What I don't understand by Bodysurf · · Score: 1
      "Just ask anyone who's tried to fight RIAA's subpoena's in John Doe lawsuits with that arguement; on a slight tangent, it appears that the most successful way to defeat those suits as the RIAA files them today is on grounds of improper joining; the RIAA joins random people together in a single action without any evidence of collusion or interaction between the various parties."

      They do that to save filing fees -- sometimes the judge lets it slide.

      However if he doesn't, what happens is the judge typically severs all but the 1st defendent and tells the plaintiff to refile each defendent under a seperate suit.

      It's a win-win for the plaintiff: If it's not misjoined, it saves filing fees and attorney fees by sueing 5-10 people at once rather than 1. If it is misjoined because a defendent's attorney argues against improper joining, the plaintiff wins because it's costing the defendent money because he has to pay at attorney to do so. If it is misjoined, no big deal, they just refile seperately.

      Remember the RIAA's suits aren't designed to generate money, they're designed to generate press. The press being if you're even remotely suspected of pirating music, you are gonna get sued silly.

  40. Beat them up for Giving for blocking Info... by wtoconnor · · Score: 1

    Beat them up for Giving for blocking Info for the Chinese but request information when no crime has been committed and that is ok. couldn't they at least time these things so they are far enough appart so that they do appear so stupid?

    1. Re:Beat them up for Giving for blocking Info... by babbling · · Score: 1

      Good point about the hypocrisy of all this.

      I don't see why they should bother spacing out the scolding from the unreasonable invasion into their citizens' privacy, though. They spy on their own citizens, just the same as the Chinese do, and that's been in and out of the news within a couple of weeks. They got away with it so easily that it seems they can get away with anything.

      After all, who is going to stop them? No one can, until election time.

  41. Re:PR Stunt? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What evidence do you have that this "PR Stunt" was the primary cause of the stock to drop? If you actually knew, you could make a killing on the stock market, as nobody has figured out how to predict the exact causes of why stocks go up and down 100% of the time.

  42. Every URL in the Google Database by grahamdrew · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The response letter said the DOJ wanted a list of every URL that could be returned by a search query in the Google database. I can't even imagine how much data that is. I'd comply with that bit, print it all out, and send the DOJ the bill...

    Is it just me or does it sound like the DOJ had no idea what they were actually asking for?

    --
    // Dumps core here
  43. Declarations by Quixote · · Score: 1

    The PDF refers to several declarations (by Cutts, Ramani, etc.). Any links to those?

  44. The point being... by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    The point is, that Gonzales put his loyalty to the President above his duty to answer the legislative branch. When he talks to law students and the press he claims the President is acting legally when he bypasses the FISA, when he talks to Congress he simply refuses to answer the question.

    This is the same thing, he's acting as a politician with an agenda rather than as a enforcer of the law. Google are right to refuse to be dragged into what is simply a political lobbying exercise.

    1. Re:The point being... by typical · · Score: 1

      Gonzales is the Bush family lawer, which is why he got appointed to be Attorney General. You can be quite certain that he's loyal to Bush over anyone else.

      Compare to, say, Janet Reno, who worked her way up through the state AG route.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    2. Re:The point being... by Bodysurf · · Score: 1
      "The point is, that Gonzales put his loyalty to the President above his duty to answer the legislative branch. When he talks to law students and the press he claims the President is acting legally when he bypasses the FISA, when he talks to Congress he simply refuses to answer the question.

      This is the same thing, he's acting as a politician with an agenda rather than as a enforcer of the law. Google are right to refuse to be dragged into what is simply a political lobbying exercise."

      Then he should be put under oath and ordered to answer the questions or be found in comtempt. Nobody's fault but Congress for not doing that.

    3. Re:The point being... by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      Actually when he wasn't put under Oath, members of congress did put up a fuss, someone asked why the prior three times he was put put under oath but not now?. The one in charge (I forget who), stated he did not feel it was necessary, and it simply wasn't going to happen.

      Don't blame all of congress the the actions of one well placed Bush croney.

    4. Re:The point being... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Janet Reno is also no shining light of integrity. She actively assisted illegal actions attempting to close down PBS.

      Caution: IANAL. I may be certain that the actions were illegal, but lawyers protect each other.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  45. again.. by randyjg2 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The government doesn't have the resources for blind fishing expeditions; they are looking for something specific. If you listened to Negropontes speech yesterday, the government is pretty short handed as is, they hardly need another non directed task sopping up resources.

    I strongly suspect that what the government is looking for is evidence that Google is being used for things that are compromising to national security, for example, industrial espionage. There has been a lot of concern about that in the intelligence community lately.

    What really worries me is that Google certainly appears like it has something to hide, the other organizations subpeonaed yield up the information without hesitation. If Google was really concerned, they could easily scrub identity out of the records, anonymizers are a staple of NORA style text mining and easily written.

    Google has some other reason to be so defiant over a simple request, and I really don't buy the facile explanation that it would inhibit searching. I mean, anyone with a packet sniffer can find out google search strings, its not as if searching is done encrypted.
    I have never heard anyone worrying about it, though admittedly I am not that knowlegable in the community of paranoid conspiracy theorists.

    Whatever Googles reason, it is not to protect searchers identity, since they don't protect it in normal operations and the government isn't asking for it anyways. What is scary is that Google apparently believes the search patterns would reveal something they don't want known.

    And that warrants immediate and aggressive investigation.

    1. Re:again.. by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      And that warrants immediate and aggressive investigation.

      Face it. If the government wants to know how much porn is on the internet, they can type "porn" into google and get the results in roughly 0.06 seconds, just like everyone else.

      The real reason behind this attempt to strongarm private institutions warrants immediate and aggressive investigation.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    2. Re:again.. by randyjg2 · · Score: 1

      They aren't trying to find out anything about the Internet, they are trying to find out about how search engines are being used. I suspect they are also really interested in any descrepancies between that the internet monitoring logs show and googles records.

      Competitive intelligence from data mining is only one concern, albeit it should be primary. Traffic from search engines could easily be used to mask more sinister activity by pretending to be from google by spoofing.

      THere is a whole host of things about how search engines can be misused that make this a proper and valid line of inquiry for the government. I have only touched on a few things.

      I have to admit, since search patterns are anonymous, I am confused as to why why you feel any concern over the goverment investigating them. If the government was interested in any group of people, however big, they would simply goto the ISP's for records of Internet activity. They do it all the time when investigating cases. They certainly wouldn't go to the expense and bother of upsetting a major US asset like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft when there are eaiser alternatives to obtaining that sort of information.

      Because of that, I have to conclude that this is not about what individuals are searching, but about usage patterns.

    3. Re:again.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Because of that, I have to conclude that this is not about what individuals are searching, but about usage patterns.
      Let me see if I understand you correctly. Here you are saying that the DOJ request is being made under false pretense, yet you previously said that googles response warranted 'immediate and aggressive investigation'. I'm having a hard time figuring out if you're a kook or just an asshole, why not fuck-off to China where you will be governed exactly as you deserve?
    4. Re:again.. by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      I am confused as to why why you feel any concern over the goverment investigating them

      What is there to be confused about? The government has no authority and no real power to do this. There is no court case, no criminal proceedings, no valid ground to issue a subpoena at all. There's still no explanation of just what the government is really after here, and why they gotta have it so bad, they're straining the bounds of the legal process in order to get it. Why was yahoo and MSN's information not enough?

      Well you know what? I am concerned. I'm concerned that the past 5 or so years has shown a steady decline in the behavior of our government. This has just been one in a long stream of abuses of power by a government led by people who outright refuse to answer to anyone, supported on the backs of people who just can't be bothered to give a shit. If they feel they have the right to seize information from people without so much as a warrant, much less a trial for it to be subpoenaed for, then who knows what they'll try next?

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    5. Re:again.. by randyjg2 · · Score: 1

      There is no subpeona, no court case, because this isn't a prosecution. These are regulatory actions pursuant to and authorized by various statutes.

      For example, elsewhere in this discussion, somepointed asked why the government might want every URL Google has in persistant store.

      I know the answer to that one. In the early days of the internet, occssionally, protections against searchbots were left off for some military and government sites, resulting in classified information appearing in Google search results...and cache. It occasionally still happens, system administrators aren't all knowing, despite what they believe. The government just simply wants to know if that material is still in Google's caches. Do you believe the government doesn't have a right to ask if their security has been compromised?

      Lets take some other examples. There used to be this airline called Braniff, that shared a reservation system with several other airlines. Braniff eventually went bankrupt, partially because the reservation system ,run by one of the other airlines, always brought up Braniff flights last, so Braniff sold less flights.

      We know that Google can alter listing order arbitrarily, they just did so, very publicly, for an large company they whose actions they disapproved of.

      For the regulatory agencies protecting the integrity of America's financial markets, and for the governmenatal agencies concerned with economic warfare, this was the equivalent of Iran detonating a nuclear bomb.

      There are absolutely no regulatory protections against Google doing the same to any corporation for any reason. What happens if say, a Chinese company decides it wants a bigger share of the market, and gets Google to start listing negative web pages about its competitors first?

      Remember, China can offer immensely valuable concessions to access chinese markets to any company it approves of...the key word being approval. This isn't theoretical, it is known that they jailed the president of one middle sized American company until he signed over the company to them. It is also know that certain organizations that promote Chinese/American trade can arrange access to Chinese markets not even large corporations can get. What isn't known is the terms they are asking for offering those deals.

      Or lets take stock market manipulation. Google arguable controls a fair amount of information the average consumer recieves. They could easily boost or lower a stock price simply by adjusting their page ranking algorithms...and buy or sell the associated stocks accordingly. You think the possiblity of cheating the small investor isn't something the government should keep a close eye on?

      There are many more examples, but what it comes down to is this:

      Search engine companies like Google, Yahoo, etc. are in the same class as NRSRO's and Comcast...organizations with immense power to affect the lives of all Americans.

      It is the governments responsiblity and obligation to monitor such organizations before something bad happens. Would you rather have another Enron, a Parmalat, or any of a thousand other times goverment oversight was too little, too late?

      I do understand your concern about privacy. What I dont understand is why you cannot believe that at least some part of the American Government actually cares about it's citizens, and is doing it's very best to protect them.

    6. Re:again.. by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      What I dont understand is why you cannot believe that at least some part of the American Government actually cares about it's citizens, and is doing it's very best to protect them.

      If the government has such honorable intentions, why must it lie to the public and claim it's trying to see how easy it is to find porn?

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    7. Re:again.. by randyjg2 · · Score: 1

      I really do not understand about how finding porn relates, but perhaps if you understood how this situation came about, it woould help.

      Congresspeople have a number of constituencies that are very anti PRC, multidenominational Christian Churches, for example. At the start of election season earlier this year, a group of Republican congresspeople went to China to meet with the Chinese leadership to "voice their concern" over suppression of speech, especially religious speech...the people their constituencies cared about.

      It really was meant to be not much more than a photo op to placate their constituents, they would meet with Chinese leaders, make a statement, and go home. Harmless, in their eyes.

      Unfortunately, they got snubbed by the Chinese leadership, only a low ranking member would even meet with them. Partially, it was a misunderstanding, the Chinese take photo ops a lot more seriously than Americans, and didn't realize it meant nothing.

      It was't a "Mind you own business, great white father" (which would have been justified) as many believe, it was part of an internal chinese power struggle over how to handle the peasant revolution due in 2010.

      However, getting between a Congresperson and their photo op is a vary bad mistake, and when they came back, they help hearings to make sure that at least the American companies heard them...and get another photo op. (Congresspeople pursue photo ops like Pepe Le Peu pursues cats)

      However, the rest of the American government had to deal with the consequences of a major snub of the ruling party (If they had been democrats, it would have been different). Not a particularly small event in a city where there is no shortage of massive egos.

      So at this point, the American government wants to make it clear to the Chinese government that you don't deal with American companies without dealing with American leadership, even if those companies are multinationals. The Chinese leadership have essentially told the State Department they are irrelevant, and thats not something that can be ignored.

      More significantly, there is a growing suspicion that at least part of the problem is that the multinationals don't take the American government seriously either. Coupled with the growing realization of how much damage the search engine companies could do if left unsupervised, lead to the the recent spate of requests for various pieces of information about thier operations. All the American Government is trying to do is scope out the problem before it blows up in everyones faces.

      If you think this is some sort of unnecessary alarmism, consider this. Eight years ago, something similar happened, and it got to the point where several European and Asian Governments were raiding multiple Americam companies in retaliation before the offending multinationals were forced to back down and make restitution. In part, at least, that incident is what lead to the much greater interventionism by the American government of the late 90's and 2000's

    8. Re:again.. by DarkJC · · Score: 1

      What really worries me is that Google certainly appears like it has something to hide, the other organizations subpeonaed yield up the information without hesitation.

      What happened to "innocent until proven guilty"? Just because they refuse to give up information does not mean they have something to hide. This type of thinking will lead society into a more "guilty until proven innocent" mindset, and I fear that is a very dangerous path to be heading down.

    9. Re:again.. by randyjg2 · · Score: 1

      I would agree. Just simply because you stand by your rights does not mean you are automatically guilty...or even that you are suspect.

      On the other hand, when did I say that was even one of the reasons why I thought Google appeared like it had something to hide?

      I also never said Google was guilty of anything, so there never was a presumption of guilt. What I said was there was an appearance. And, for the record, I don't think Google is guilty of anything, but I do think there is quite a bit of information in Googles files that is relevant to the missions of the government agencies involved and do NOT violate any aspects of the social contracts involved.

      For the past few days, I have been watching the Katrina hearings on CSPAN, and the horrifying way the government has failed the survivors...and the reasons why.

      For the most part, it was because the rules the governmental agencies operate under were never designed to cope with a disaster of Katrina's extent... and civil service is about following the rules.

      It can't be any other way; the American government is too vast, too complicated for running things "ad hoc". For the most part, civil servants understand this, and try to do their best in spite of it.

      Sometimes they succeed, sometimes they fail, and sometimes the system doesn't work. Maybe it just fails, in the case of Katrina, or it gets abused, as in the case of Abramhoff, or Richard Jewell.

      And often, but not always, the system has checks and balances to correct itself. Checks and balances are a GOOD thing.

      But an unspoken assumption that the government is always the enemy, even when the system is failing, is not a check or balance, it's a mistake.

      You see, like it or not, if you enjoy the vast protections on rights that citizenship in America provides, you also assume some obligations. One of those obligations is that the same government that protects your rights and privileges, also occasionally has to investigate potential violations, and you are obligated to cooperate, at least within the limits of the social contract that applies.

      Look, the reasons you need for investigating are far less than the reasons you need for prosecuting, and less than the reasons you need for presumption of guilt. An investigation does not always result in conviction; sometimes it results in proving innocence.

      On the other hand, failing to investigate has often resulted in serious harm, such as 9/11, or a thousand other cases. That's why the level of evidence needed for investigation is much lower than that needed for prosecuting.

      Please try to understand that public service, or even election to public office, does not automatically turn someone into a insane, raving sociopath, despite what impressions watching CSPAN (or the Daily Show) might give. For the most part, the government is trying to do the best it can, even if it sometimes fails.

  46. Completely different by typical · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But there is a difference.

    With the RIAA, a crime had been committed, and Yahoo was asking to not turn over information identifying the offenders (more or less, yes, this is simplified).

    In this case, the government has *no* committed crime, and is not trying to track down any criminals. They are simply trying (or at least, this is their justification) to obtain Google's search data to support GOP initiatives to spread pornography filters based on the fact that N% of searches return pornography hits.

    My take is that Google is completely in the right. The federal government has absolutely no right to that data, nor do I want them to be able to subpoena it.

    As for not being identifiable, give me a break. You surf sites with ads served by people like Doubleclick and Google Ads. Google can match all past searches from your IP or from a machine with any cookies that they've set on your machine. This is not speculation -- they have specifically stated that they have this ability. It's a pretty good bet that a number of sites on the Web have your real name. Maybe it's not a drop-in "Google has a complete database", but it only takes Google + *one* other website you visit that has your personal name, and there's a damned comprehensive list of your thoughts, research, summary of what you're reading about and so forth available to the federal government.

    I don't think that this is a very good thing.

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    1. Re:Completely different by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find this a bogus argument - Hmm - the government has a legally issued subpoena - and Googles response - it'll take a whole man-week to comply with. Ah come ON. IBM had to put in something like 4000 man-hours into SCO vs IBM. I don't see that as a legitimate excuse.

      Well - the court WILL decide, not a bunch of us tech-wheenies on Slashdot.

    2. Re:Completely different by dlasley · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Well - the court WILL decide, not a bunch of us tech-wheenies on Slashdot.
      And this is desirable because ... ? I certainly hold no illusions that the legal system is looking out for the best interests of the average citizen. I applaud any corporation that wants to curb the intrusive and quasi-legal steamroller fostered by the former US Attorney General.

      Damnitall, folks, start taking a stand now while we still have the freedom of speech and free press (at least free press not run by the Rupert Murdochs of the world). Copping out with the excuse "oh, well someone agreed to do it, everyone should follow" is just as bad as running blindly after the lemmings in their shiny metal boxes as they jump off a cliff.

      Wait, can lemmings jump?

      Regardless, it shouldn't just be the court deciding something that affects democracy, freedom and privacy. The legislative branch is part of the checks-and-balances system in the US, not the representative branch of government that is empowered to decide whether or not freedoms can be suspended when it suits the interest of political agenda or socio-political pandering. Granted, actions such as the Patriot Act hardly commend them as being stewards of said freedoms, but thankfully many in the representative branch seem to be coming to their senses.

      You have to keep the pressure on so this process continues - people died for the freedoms we're taking for granted every day in the US, so don't squander them simply so you can sit back and chortle about winning and fanboy/flamebait war.

      &laz;
      --
      when it rains, it gets real soggy. when it pours, i'm under the tap just _waiting_ for the joy
    3. Re:Completely different by Stealth+Potato · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree with you, but I'd just like to note that in the RIAA example, no crime has been committed either. What happens when somebody downloads music they haven't paid for is called "copyright infringement," and is a civil matter, not criminal. Come on, this is Slashdot. I thought we'd been over this a million times already. :-)

    4. Re:Completely different by jareds · · Score: 1

      I find this a bogus argument - Hmm - the government has a legally issued subpoena - and Googles response - it'll take a whole man-week to comply with. Ah come ON. IBM had to put in something like 4000 man-hours into SCO vs IBM. I don't see that as a legitimate excuse.

      See, IBM is a party to the litigation in SCO v. IBM, but Google is not a party to the litigation in which this subpoena was issued. It is quite natural that actual parties to the litigation have greater duties than non-parties.

    5. Re:Completely different by ryanov · · Score: 1

      The thing I never undersood is that in the other article, it clearly stated that the Supreme Court -- the highest legal authority in the country -- blocked the child porn intiative in the past. Instead the DoJ says fuck precedent and goes on a fishing expedition in an attempt to bring the whole thing back? It's over, it's been decided, move on. This whole thing is just making them look foolish (at least I hope it is -- sometimes America surprises me).

  47. Get a grip! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is scary is that the Bush administration apparently believes just about everything would reveal something they don't want known. That warrants immediate and aggressive investigation, who cares about google? Let's impeach the figurehead before he announces himself dictator to coincide with WW3!

  48. Non-violent protest by porkThreeWays · · Score: 1

    If they do win and google is forced to give over searches, I think the best action would be a campaign to put so much noise in those searches it would be pointless for them to even try. i.e. searching for things like killing the president and how jews invented tornados.

    --
    If an officer ever threatens to taze you, say you have a pacemaker.
    1. Re:Non-violent protest by filmnorthflorida · · Score: 2, Funny

      Just set your home page to a google search for the text of the 4th amendment. See here (whence I stole this idea).

      --
      --- php: perl hates people
    2. Re:Non-violent protest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And send the data requsted in a single multi-terrabyte email :-)

  49. Re:When It's End of Year Zeitgeist... by mrraven · · Score: 1

    The difference in intent is vast, the end of the year zeigest looks at overall patterns while disclosing NO personal information. It's tells us such trivia as the average American dumbass likes to do searches for Janet Jackson's breasts or whatever.

    What the DOJ is looking to do is a whole other kettle of fish, linking together search queries to build dubious profiles of "terrorists."

    For example if I search for "semi-automatic rifle" (which I have a second amendment right to own), falafel recipe, and Syria, does that make me a potential terrorist? It is just such dubious fishing expeditions that make it extremely important that the 4th amendment be vigorously protected if we are to remain a free society.

    --
    Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  50. "Don't be evil"* *-certain restrictions apply by Churla · · Score: 2, Informative
    What I am seeing is this is... Don't be evil unless you need to in order to do business, but definitely Don't be evil if it will get you publicity. I will not give them "not evil" cred for a stance of "don't be evil when it benefits us", which makes me now think that whole mantra was wishful thinking which was turned into a marketing campaign. I hope the founders can sleep at night, of course since they probably have mattresses made out of billions of dollars stuffed into bags they probably do

    You talk about protecting user privacy, but what the government is asking for does not ask for any identifying information. They want the search strings, and no information about WHO made those searches.

    As for probable cause and a reason to get the information, if they have suspicion that Google is being used to search for information about and subsequently facilitate illegal acts they have a grounds. They have to prove that second part though as , at least in most cases, just having information about an illegal act isn't illegal (i.e. the Anarchist Cookbook). How can they do this? Simple:

    "Google, we request a list of all search strings run through your search engine which have the following keywords in them: Child sex, homemade bomb, American jihad"

    If that doesn't get them a sizable list I would scream they were editing things. Which would open up for them asking for a complete list to verify context of those searches, probably WITH identifying information.

    Another angle would be the DoJ pushing to have internet search engines considered a public service, if they pull that off it's a free for all with the information. (see phone companies and ISP's that have to keep RADIUS logging logs correlating dial up ID to IP)

    --
    I'm a fiscal conservative, it's a pity we don't have a political party anymore
  51. Re:PR Stunt? by JKConsult · · Score: 1

    If you were an investor, I'd say shut the hell up. You have no say in the matter. The interests of the employees, the customers, and the community come before yours. Your lack of knowledge (or interest) in how the business world works is frightening.

  52. Re:PR Stunt? by notque · · Score: 1

    Your lack of knowledge (or interest) in how the business world works is frightening.

    It takes a lot of knowledge and interest to get to the point where you understand what children know.

    The employees, customers, and community should always come first.

    --
    http://use.perl.org
  53. Re:PR Stunt? by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 1

    Besides the fact that investors in Google have no voting shares.

    Any responsible investor would read Google's prospectus, which makes it very clear how they intend to operate the company - and yes, they do intend to put their employees and customers first.

  54. Google = hypocrite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only problem is determining which side of hypocrisy they are on: The Chinese side or US side. First they weakly give an excuse about complying with Chinese law in order to do business there. But when they have a demand from the lawgivers in the USA, they now are for privacy? What happened to the thing about complying with laws?

    1. Re:Google = hypocrite. by BrianRoach · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What happened to the thing about complying with laws?

      As far as I can tell, that's exactly what they're doing in both cases.

      They are complying with Chinese law in the first case (just like, oh, I don't know ... all the other US companies that do manufacturing there ... but we won't talk about that, otherwise you wouldn't be able to buy cheap goods here in the US), and in the second case they are preventing our own government from breaking US law.

      - Brian Roach

    2. Re:Google = hypocrite. by jesseck · · Score: 1

      I seriously doubt that Google put up a fight when China asked for information on users... The only reason they do that in the US is a) it's legal to question government, b) sounds good for PR, and c) they still make money, even without the governemt. In China, however, user privacy means nothing, and to refuse compliance means no more Chinese money. Go Human Rights For The US of A, Down With Rights For China!

    3. Re:Google = hypocrite. by sethstorm · · Score: 1

      (just like, oh, I don't know ... all the other US companies that do manufacturing there ... but we won't talk about that, otherwise you wouldn't be able to buy cheap goods here in the US)

      Hrm. I'll take that option, as there are plenty of other non-slave labor countries (hint: the ones that rejected the EU constitution might be a good place to start, not the countries nearby to China). This would be an option for what cannot be done in the US - and I'd bet we'd even get better quality manufacturing for every EU/SA product that was previously made in China/TW.

      Maybe it's time the rest of the world bites the bullet and not deal with this minority in Asia. It sure beats taking the same bullet, as well as making it.

      --
      Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  55. Re:PR Stunt? by Max+Threshold · · Score: 1

    I know exactly how it works: exactly the opposite of how it should.

  56. Re:PR Stunt? by JKConsult · · Score: 1

    The employees, customers, and community should always come first. Their interests should be taken to heart, especially if a business wants to succeed long term. Without employees, there can be no product. Without customers, there can be no sales. Without the community (and I'm assuming this is the community that are not customers or prospective customers), there can be no company itself. However, there are mandates (both contractual and legislative) that determine a publicly traded company's obligations towards each of these four groups. You have no right of privacy when it comes to dealing with Google. If they feel that the government is in the wrong and that they are right to fight, then fine. However, the original poster supposed that they know that they are going to lose, and this is a marketing ploy. The responder stated (properly) that this is costing the company billions, and if they aren't actually protecting the rights of customers, then there is no benefit to the company, and they are improperly endangering the money of their shareholders, with whom they do have an obligation that they would be violating. You claim that if he were an investor, he should "shut up". That's all well and good for you to think, but investors have real money involved, and Google has real obligations towards them. In the scenario described by the original poster, they would be in the wrong, plain and simple. You can think what you want, but you're not living in the real world. This was the concern with Google going public, and we're seeing it raise its head now.

  57. But they'll turn over info in China! by adoll · · Score: 1
    Everyone remembers that Yahoo turned some dissident emailer over the Chinese authorities causing, shall we say, seriour consequences for the individuals. Why would a deal Google did in China be any different to what the US DoJ is asking?

    -AD

  58. This has nothing to do with privacy by nwbvt · · Score: 1

    The feds specifically asked that any identifiable information to be removed, and anonymous stats are already given away by Google.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  59. Search VP of MSFT's blog regarding the records by ManDrone · · Score: 1

    You may want to take a look at this blog http://blogs.msdn.com/msnsearch/archive/2006/01/20 /515606.aspx
    to read about Microsoft's reluctant handing over of the search records. User information was scrubbed out, leaving a list of queries with a count of how often they occurred as well as a random set of indexed pages. What this means is that if you searched for "my name is jim smith and I live at XYZ and would like to see child pornography" that maybe you could be concerned. If you queried for "sex with children", your query will be counted as +1 with the 128 other people who searched for that term on day Z. If you searched for your social security number, telephone number etc... the government may have a record of that now...oohhhh scary.

    1. Re:Search VP of MSFT's blog regarding the records by HeX314 · · Score: 1

      If you searched for your social security number, telephone number etc... the government may have a record of that now...oohhhh scary. Oh dear God, what would we do if the U.S. Government had THAT kind of personal information. </sarcasm> The problem here is that the Government doesn't just *want* the data, they want to *do* something with it. They would like to build "reliable statistics" about who/when/where is John Doe searching, and what can they compare that data with.

  60. Re:PR Stunt? by notque · · Score: 1

    That's all well and good for you to think, but investors have real money involved, and Google has real obligations towards them.

    And that was my point. Why are your obligations to the actual people not real? To the community not real?

    To rights. To privacy. To honest dealings.

    Those are all just as real, yet the only obligation that is paramount is to the shareholders. Which is wrong.

    --
    http://use.perl.org
  61. cunning plan.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't the DHS just look it up on Google ?

  62. Re:PR Stunt? by Crackerman111 · · Score: 4, Informative

    No. Their stock dropped because earnings were below forecasts, not because of this incident with the DoJ.

  63. Whiskey Tango Foxtrot by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

    Firstly, most often the needs of investors, employees, and customers are in alignment. In this case, complying with the court order would aversely impact the business's bottom line, waste the employees' time, marginally drive customers away from a service they've otherwise been enjoying. The community is pretty much the collective of investors, employees, and customers, so it would appear that the community is adversely affected as well. Furthermore, many people participate in the community in multiple roles. There are plenty of employees invested in Google. There are plenty of customers invested in Google. There are employees of Google who also use their tools! There's plenty of moderation built into the system as a result of this, and also explicitly placed in the prospectus of Google shares (they're non-voting, after all). The question is, if Google has lost value because they're fighting subpoenas (probably a false premise) then what has been lost? The answer is not much. Most of that fall was on the basis of high expectations for Google, which they missed (but still grew by 80 percent).

    There's also a much better argument to be had against the grandparent than "STFU" with an extreme amount of implied vitriol and hatred. If you hate the profit motive so much, why don't you go cry in a corner for a while about the oppresion of the proletariot and come back when you've got something constructive to share?

    --
    I Browse at +4 Flamebait

    Open Source Sysadmin

  64. Re:PR Stunt? by Junky191 · · Score: 1

    Nope, the investor's interests trump all others, in fact it's illegal to serve any other interests ahead of the shareholders. Anything less is Socialism, pure and simple.

  65. About face? by bitspotter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, Google launches Google.cn to comply with Chinese censorship laws, but doesn't comply with with a US DoJ subpeona?

    This is getting confusing.

    1. Re:About face? by typical · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The difference is that google.cn has a filter. You may not like it, but it's not privacy-invasive.

      The US subpeona is to turn over data that users consider private.

      I'd consider it a pretty large difference.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    2. Re:About face? by pilsner.urquell · · Score: 1
      So, Google launches Google.cn to comply with Chinese censorship laws, but doesn't comply with with a US DoJ subpeona?

      This is getting confusing.

      Rights, does that ring a bell?

    3. Re:About face? by pilsner.urquell · · Score: 1
      This is the way I see it works.

      A. If the DOJ get it's subpoena for the search of child pornography then that is all they can search for. Any information that is gathered on drug smuggling, stock fraud or any other crime can't be used as evidence. Our friends at the DOJ must get another subpoena for that and on it's own merits AND the DOJ knows this. It is there job.

      B. By standing up to the Government and for there rights Google is setting the standard. Were Google to just hand over anything the DOJ wants they might as well be saying The next time you need a B.J. Just come on over here.

      C. Last, but not least. When Google make them get a subpoena when the case is all over and nothing is found those file must be sealed and put away. So if Google does get caught up in another legal problem they can't be blindsided by the ghosts of good citizenships of the past.

    4. Re:About face? by mythz · · Score: 1

      Note: The DOJ search has nothing to do with Child Pornography - Child Pornography is already illegal. It is about 'exposing pornography' to minors - a minor but important difference.

  66. Their net worth will recover by cgenman · · Score: 1

    They've still got all the same stuff, just investor's perceptions of them changed slightly. Stocks tend to swing wildly on brash news like this, then return to their default level.

    On the other hand, if they actually did hand over all of their search data, people would lose faith in Google. People NEED their anonymity on the web... they don't want people to find out that they're searching for warez copies of Word, or pictures of Katie Holmes naked, or reading up on how Bush is evil, etc. Remember the row over Google's automatic searches of Gmail? Think of the reaction if Google search records were repeatedly handed over to the Government to read. If people can't trust Google's anonymity, they will look elsewhere for their search provider.

    And if people are driven from Google in droves to other, smaller search providers, Google's stock will take a much bigger, much more permanent hit.

  67. Just a delay by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

    They'll eveentually lose. Nice to see a little friction though.

  68. Re:PR Stunt? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    And that was my point. Why are your obligations to the actual people not real? To the community not real?

    To rights. To privacy. To honest dealings.

    Those are all just as real, yet the only obligation that is paramount is to the shareholders. Which is wrong.


    "Shareholders" is just another word for "owners". If you owned a business, website, whatever, wouldn't you feel that you should be the one to decide how to run it? Wouldn't that be a "real" obligation and the purpose of doing it? Even if you do/start/invest in something because you believe it contributes to a greater good, it still is _your_ motivation and morality behind it, as an owner.

  69. This subpoena is totally unrelated to google.cn by typical · · Score: 1

    China's social norms state that censorship is okay. There are people that don't like it, but they haven't managed to change those social norms yet. What Google did there may rile those people who live in a culture that has demanded different social norms.

    The demand for data from the US government is totally different.

    I have, an expectation and a Constitutionally-protected right to not be searched without probable cause. This is something that *our* social norms do include. A group of people in the Bush Administration wants to push for porn filters, and wants to get data about how many returned searches contain porn. There is no crime here. There is no reason whatsoever for Google to give up that data, and some damn good reason for them not to do so (their users want their data to be private, and Google probably doesn't want a prescedent of having to turn over data to anyone that asks).

    There is no probable cause here, because there is no crime. It is unfortunate that the Gonzales-led DoJ is the one demanding the data. It confuses many people (including a number of people on Slashdot, clearly), because they think that the DoJ has some kind of right to arbitrarily demand data of people. No; the people working there have no more right to demand that data than any American citizen does, which is zero, except is some specifically-enumerated cases. That generally translates to crime or national security.

    Government access to Google's search databases would be catastrophic, and the fact that a demand was even issued is reminiscent of the 1950s. We have a society designed to allow people to read, debate, and discuss things freely. It is *crucial* that the people currently in power not have the ability to prevent citizens from doing this, or they have the ability to quash dissenting ideas from forming. Government access to Google's search data would be truly appalling. It can be used as a blackmail tool ("Sir, how can you run for a district attorney? Did you or did you not search for gay porn on twenty different occasions?"). This is not a sky-is-falling scenario. We know that exactly this does happen when these powers are granted the federal government -- under Hoover, the FBI did exactly this to a number of different people. It can be used to quash the attempt to spread criticism of the government. It can be used to find out what the political opposition is planning.

    And there are people *criticizing* Google for fighting this. On Slashdot, none the less. I'm absolutely stunned by this. The only explanation I can think of is that it's low-level trolling from SEO types (who seem to harbour an inexplicable dislike of Google -- if Google didn't make it hard to cheat the system, they wouldn't have jobs).

    What kind of paint do you have to be inhaling to be bashing Google for doing this?

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
  70. Is it colder in the winter than in the city? by Wee · · Score: 1
    You are making a wildly unreasonable comparison. The one has nothing whatsoever to do with the other, by any logical stretch of the imagination.

    -B

    --

    Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

  71. Re:PR Stunt? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Suck it, hippy.

  72. MOD UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    History teaches us that our government will abuse any power we give them.

  73. Stark Declaration ::: Government's Case by edumacator · · Score: 1
    http://onward.justia.com/seo-images/20060120/Stark -Declaration.pdf (.PDF)

    This is Starks declaration. He's the expert the government hired. His declaration seems a little 'stark' (hehe) on proving he needs this information. Remember, it's the government's burden to show they need these documents.

  74. Confusing? by Stealth+Potato · · Score: 1

    Doesn't seem very confusing to me. Google is standing up for the rule of law as it currently applies in each of those two countries, respectively. I don't think the laws in China are things that should necessarily be supported, but the fact that there are different laws in the United States and China does not confuse me one bit. ;-)

  75. Re:When It's End of Year Zeitgeist... by Stealth+Potato · · Score: 1
    For example if I search for "semi-automatic rifle" (which I have a second amendment right to own), falafel recipe, and Syria, does that make me a potential terrorist?

    No, it just means you're serious about defending your falafels. Mmm... falafels.

  76. Google != hypocrite by typical · · Score: 1

    You dislike Google for their actions in China? How can I put this...

    Do you support the Iraq war?

    No?

    I don't either.

    Even if you buy into the official justification (I *think* that this is the current one) that we were trying to spread democracy, the war is still a bad idea. You can't "impose" social revolution on people -- they just get ticked off at foreigners coming in and trying to run stuff. They have to decide that they want change themselves.

    Similarly, trying to force a revolution in China by trying to directly subvert what the government wants just isn't too likely to succeed. If the people in China become unhappy enough with their lot, they'll do something. Currently, the majority are happy enough with what is going on not to do anything.

    What Google did in China was, IMHO, the correct thing to do.

    What is going on here is the federal government blatantly attempting to overstep its constitutional limits.

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    1. Re:Google != hypocrite by jesseck · · Score: 1

      Obviously, you don't know me- not only do I support the Iraq war, I am returning there a second time in the summer. I have seen what the repressive regimes have done to people, unlike you (michael moore was wrong, by the way). Further, did you forget that we (the Colonies) seeked help from Europe during our war for independence? So, wouldn't China (the people) need help? Of course not, unless you want them to succeed.

    2. Re:Google != hypocrite by narratorDan · · Score: 1

      Obviously, you don't know me- not only do I support the Iraq war, I am returning there a second time in the summer.

      I bet, you make great money that way. Regular pay, combat pay, hazardous duty pay, and deployment pay.

      I have seen what the repressive regimes have done to people, unlike you (michael moore was wrong, by the way).

      Really? Michael Moore was wrong? Oh my GOD! Are you saying he didn't get his facts straight before he went to war? Good thing our president isn't like Michael Moore.

      Further, did you forget that we (the Colonies) seeked help from Europe during our war for independence? So, wouldn't China (the people) need help? Of course not, unless you want them to succeed.

      Ok, short grammar nazi moment, "seeked" should have been "sought." The difference is that that the help from Europe was asked for, they didn't invade searching for weapons of mass distraction and claiming liberation for the American people. Now, just like Vietnam before we are fighting all sides there.

      Narratordan

      --
      "If you're not confused by quantum mechanics, you really don't understand it." - Niels Bohr
  77. Strong Smell of Hypocacy on both sides by chandip · · Score: 1

    It's funny how the "law-makers" criticize Google/Yahoo for breaching the rights of its users in China one day while expecting the same to be done in the USA because it is in the public good.

    On the other hand it's hypocritical of Google to act like the innocent babe in the woods when they accept similar government interference from counties like China as a "cost of doing business".

    This would not be a legal-problem if either, handing user data was the "cost of doing business" in the US, or the US lawmakers applied their values of privacy and individual freedom universally.

    --
    the sig
  78. If I were Google, I'd comply... by WereTiger · · Score: 1

    ... by the most inconvenient route imaginable.

    "Sure, you can have that data.  We'll have a gentleman call you and dictate the data."

    (which would, of course, be read my a full time employee of Google that just happened to have a wicked lisp and stutter.) "was that Sussex, Essex or Sex?"

    I'm sure the law doesn't say under what terms data has to be surrendered :)

    --
    If you're hearing rhetoric about Linux, open source, or Mac and everyone's bashing Microsoft, you've found Slashdot.
    1. Re:If I were Google, I'd comply... by tinkerghost · · Score: 1

      Better yet they could do what MS did & outsource this to India. Took me 45 minutes to register a copy of XP over the phone.

  79. Re:PR Stunt? by mgabrys_sf · · Score: 1

    Woah, timeout! You seriously need to relax before it affects your health - go back to beating your wife or girlfriend. You'll feel a whole lot better.

  80. Re:PR Stunt? by legirons · · Score: 1

    "Some public relations stunt. It caused their net-worth to drop billions this quarter. If I were an investor, I'd say try something else."

    How much would their share price drop if the general public found out that Google was leaking their personal information to the U.S. Governement?

    As Google mentions in this filing, the trust of their users is very valuable to Google.

  81. google.cn in perspective by mythz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Man this crowd is nasty!

    Google *adds* a local search service (google.cn) to the people of China that complies with local laws and censors it results, this service is somewhat more transparent than other search engines offerings in China as it actually shows *what was censored*. Not a whisper is heard about Yahoo and MSN's local services. Now all of a sudden Google is the new poster boy of *Evil, will sell mum for a buck*, what gives??

    Do people actually know that this is an *added service* and that the exact same google.com that was available to the Chinese people before, that was behind 'The Great Firewall', slow and unresponsive and not accessible 10% of the time - is still available?

    Does anyone know what the people of China (who are the ones affected) actually think of the new service? who finally have access to a fast, resourceful search service that we take for granted?

    God dammit people we are complaining about a *FREE* service, that people can choose to use on their own accord. If it actually gets used it's because that it provides better experience than the google.com offering.

    Since then anything good they do that benefits us all - fighting for our privacy, hell they even told AT&T and Verizon to stick their cyber extortion plan (which if enforced would benefit them in the long run), is overshadowed by one of their *FREE* services.

    I don't know about the rest of you but I haven't paid *a cent* to Google yet use their services daily. (google.com, maps.google/Google Earth, Google Talk, Gmail, Google Groups, Google Desktop). For me they are still the same *Do no evil* company that existed when they only had one *FREE* service.

    Some people need a hobby.

    1. Re:google.cn in perspective by LurkerML · · Score: 1

      I would mod you up, but i can't this week. 100% ack.

    2. Re:google.cn in perspective by Grym · · Score: 1

      I don't think you should be so quick to cast aside criticism of google's collusion with the Chinese.

      First of all, the fact that they offer a free service to consumers doesn't automatically exempt them from criticism. Even if they don't pay anything, given the obvious success of the company, google users' patronship is obviously worth something. If google were a charity your point might be valid, but given that it makes a profit from its current arrangement, they're fair game for criticism.

      Secondly, google invites this type of criticism when they advertise themselves as a beacon of corporate morality. I think most people expect a certain amount of opportunistic behavior from corporations. But when google does the same as say Yahoo or MSN while claiming it's different, it at least, on the surface, LOOKS like hypocrisy. Can you really blame people for calling them on it?

      Lastly, I really think you're missing the point. Regardless of whether a service has been added for the Chinese public, the fact remains that google, through google.cn, is willfully helping the Chinese regime censor very important and relevant information. This is a dangerous precedent and should be cause for concern.

      -Grym

    3. Re:google.cn in perspective by mythz · · Score: 1

      The reason Google.com is used is because it is blazingly fast, sometimes its so fast that you can get an answer quicker than if I asked the person next to you. So the difference between a service that is fast and one that is slow and unreliable is not just time, it is the difference between *using* the service or *not*.

      >Lastly, I really think you're missing the point. Regardless of whether a service has been
      >added for the Chinese public, the fact remains that google, through google.cn, is willfully
      >helping the Chinese regime censor very important and relevant information. This is a
      >dangerous precedent and should be cause for concern.

      google.cn is *not a precedent* as Google was the last of the major search engine offerings to offer a local service. It goes one step further than anyone else in that it shows what was censored.

      With google.cn Google is complying with local laws as it has done on numerous occaisions before. The issue should not be on google compliance og the law, but the law itself - which is not something it has any control over.

      The only reason to not offer the service would be if it would somehow have an influence in changing the local govt laws. If Google was the only search engine provider in the world this *may* be true. Time for a reality check, Google is not God or the Law and does not have any power to change the Law in China.

      So not offering a service effectively cuts them out of providing a service to 1/5 of the worlds population in one of the world's strongest economies - for no gain at all. This does not sound like *business smarts* from a company known to have a few smart people working for them.

  82. why bother by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm I'm glad they are taking a stand aginast this stupid request for people's search info. but if they are ever compelled to produce it I hope they print it out in REALLY tiny font in a random combination or elvish, dwarvish, and klingon....

  83. Re:PR Stunt? by notque · · Score: 1

    "Shareholders" is just another word for "owners". If you owned a business, website, whatever, wouldn't you feel that you should be the one to decide how to run it?

    No. The people who work at the business, website, or whatever should be the ones who decide how to run it.

    If polluting increases profit, the market dictates you pollute.

    There isn't a week that goes by when there isn't some revelation that a company has broken the rules for a profit motive.

    It happens every day, of every week, of every year. I see it in my own dealings as an employee.

    Profit is the only goal. Every action concerns itself with profit, at the expense of whatever it happens to be.

    It's not purposely to hurt us. It just doesn't matter that it does.

    --
    http://use.perl.org
  84. give it too them by lrslrslrs · · Score: 1

    I think google should comply and hand it over. Howver they should print it. On paper. With hard to OCR font http://mail.python.org/pipermail/image-sig/2004-Ap ril/002689.html

    --


    I hate people that dont have a sig

  85. I'm Torn by Lord+of+the+Fries · · Score: 1

    On the one hand, there's this Google in China thing. Totally caved to the Chinese government's demands. In the name of getting a buck. But then they try to take the moralistic high ground with the US government. Which is it? I don't want the US government poking in any of my gmail or searches or anything. But then my idealistic side kicks in thinks "hey, why should I be on Google's side in one case and not the other."

    --
    One man's pink plane is another man's blue plane.
    1. Re:I'm Torn by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      It's simple really. The best way to keep an open mind is to make judgements on a case-by-case bases.

      Because of the whole "Google China" thing, I side with the goverment. I do NOT want a US corporation providing goods and services used explicitly to prevent freedom.

      Clearly, Google is two-faced. Fuck em!

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
  86. Re:PR Stunt? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

    Well, in that case I guess Worldcom and Enron are prime examples of well-run modern corporations.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  87. hurray for Google by humbads · · Score: 1

    When I first heard this news, I wanted Google to rip DOJ's idiotic request to shreds. Thankfully, they did just that in this case. The best part is:

    "There is no showing of necessity because there is no explanation of the study itself or how a sampling of data proves any fact reliably."

    Three cheers for Google! Hip hip! Hooray! Hip hip! Hooray! Hip hip! Hooray!

  88. Re:PR Stunt? by Max+Threshold · · Score: 1

    Exactly. I am a socialist. (Watch the capitalization.)

  89. Re:PR Stunt? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    The employees, customers, and community should always come first.

    I agree with you 100%. Unfortunatly, that's not how the real world works.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  90. Re:PR Stunt? by donutello · · Score: 1

    It's an effective publicity stunt that convinced many people who understand nothing about how the stock market works that they made some kind of sacrifice.

    Their stock dropping had nothing to do with this. Their stock dropped because several analysts lowered their profit projections and basically said that their stock was overhyped.

    --
    Mmmm.. Donuts
  91. What the DOJ should have done... :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell the US Government to resubmit their request written in Chinese,
    and Google will obligingly do whatever they want!

  92. Re:PR Stunt? by jqstm · · Score: 1
    If you were an investor, I'd say shut the hell up. You have no say in the matter.

    Investors can get their say by selling their shares, which apparently they did.

    The interests of the employees, the customers, and the community come before yours.

    The interests of shareholders are not so independent from those of employees, customers and commuinity. First of all, many employees, customers and community members are also investors. Some poor guy working three minimum wage jobs could be an investor. Investors want to make money. That's the definition of investment. Seems to me, the best way to make money is to make customers happy.

  93. NSA Spy Program, is it the source? by RalphSouth · · Score: 1

    I wonder if the government knows exactly what it is looking for? Consider that the NSA data mining program has "slopped over the edge" a bit and the government already has some stuff of interest. They would not be able to use this material as it has been obtained illegally. However, if they innocently and legally obtained the same material with their requests, they could then persue legal action.

  94. Google and China by asdfjkl25 · · Score: 1

    Most people can't read between the lines on this issue. The truth is much more simple. The U.S. government wants control of the internet. That means they need to get control and leverage over big search engines. How do you get control of search engines that are abiding by U.S. law. Simple, draft laws that they are not abiding by. Currently Sen. Christopher Smith (R-NJ) is drafting legislation that will put search engines in hot water. This is all orchestrated so that the government can get leverage over the search industry. Let's also get one thing straight. Since when has the government cared what U.S. companies are doing in China? And why just Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft search? There are dozens of Fortune 500 companies that have been conforming to Chinese regulations for years. What about them? Conclusion: Google and other search engines will lose this fight and evenutually be forced to hand over key information about how they operate. Once the government has reverse engineered search ranking algorithims, they will be able to manipulate search results at their pleasure. People will then see the results that the U.S. government wants them to see. Welcome to the new world order that is controled so that people never know the truth. Don't believe me? Read all about it: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4655196.stm

  95. Re:PR Stunt? by WoodieR · · Score: 1

    no their stock dropped due to kow-towing to China and it's demands for censorship ...

    --
    Question Authority before IT questions You ...
  96. Re:PR Stunt? by Max+Threshold · · Score: 1
    "Some poor guy working three minimum wage jobs could be an investor."

    Yeah... that's one of the more insidious ways the robber barons have insulated themselves against public outcry. The poor guy working three jobs is still dirt poor, but because of his insignificant little stock portfolio, he naively believes that what's good for big business is good for him.

  97. Re:Url? Torrent? by xski · · Score: 1


    I'm guessing its something that 'an invididual inside google' wrote 'coz I can't find the damned thing anywhere.

  98. Google's Power by quantescape · · Score: 1

    If Google is going to retain all this information for data mining, why is it that the federal government can't use it for a potential investigation. Google can think it is above the law, but in the end, it will do nothing but hurt them.