EPIC Urges FTC To Investigate Google Services
snydeq writes "The Electronic Privacy Information Center filed a 15-page complaint asking the FTC to force Google to stop offering online services that collect data until the presence of adequate privacy safeguards is verified. The EPIC also wants Google to disclose all data loss or breach incidents, citing several incidents where data held by Google was at risk, the most recent of which occurred earlier this month with its Google Docs. The EPIC complaint [PDF] also listed other security flaws in Gmail and Google Desktop, a desktop indexing program, and urged Google to donate $5 million to a public fund that will support research into technologies such as encryption, data anonymization and mobile location privacy."
EPIC has raised privacy concerns about Google before, and about Windows XP as well.
...and let me guess, they will be running that fund? *rolls eyes*
Just what we need, another busy-body self-proclaimed agency trying to control private industry. WTF do these guys come from?
From TFA:
"It also would like the company to donate $5 million to a public fund that will support research into technologies such as encryption, data anonymization and mobile location privacy."
The real reason for the filing is hidden in the last paragraph.
You know, I might have taken them a bit more seriously if the summary didn't end with and urged Google to donate $5 million to a public fund. So that's what it's about then -- money. Political statements that end in requests for donation do a good job of discrediting themselves simply because it's hard to believe that someone could be walking the high road of idealism while at the same time asking for a handout.
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
You know, if you're not comfortable about Google (possibly) sharing your stuff, then DONT USE THEM.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
See, that's the part I don't get. This big, nebulous word "Privacy" doesn't mean much in the real world. I have a gmail account, for example. What specific privacy am I giving up by using gmail as opposed to hotmail, Yahoo Mail, or my own ISP's mail service? All of those services' mailboxes can be read by administrators, and your ISP has a lot more of your information than Google does. Can you give me a specific example of how some specific breach of "privacy" would be used against you? Forget about stupid user mistakes (hosting confidential information on Google Docs, for example) or conspiracy theory stuff (The FBI comes to get you without a warrant because of something you typed in a Google search), and give me a real world example of how your privacy would be violated under ordinary circumstances.