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Google Street View Wi-Fi Data Includes Passwords, Email Content

snydeq writes "The French National Commission on Computing and Liberty has found passwords and email messages among the Street View Wi-Fi data Google intercepted, InfoWorld reports. The data protection authority has been investigating Google's recording of traffic carried over unencrypted Wi-Fi networks. Google has said it collected only 'fragments' of personal web traffic as it passed by because its Wi-Fi equipment automatically changes channels five times a second. With Wi-Fi networks operating at up to 54Mbps, however, those 'fragments' may have been more than that. 'We can already state that [...] Google did indeed record email access passwords [and] extracts of the content of email messages,' CNIL said."

3 of 292 comments (clear)

  1. My hope would be by the_one_wesp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    that this would end up being less about Google getting in trouble for scraping unsecured data and more about educating the general public on how to secure their networks. Aside from the fact that Google probably shouldn't have done it in the first place, this should be wake up call to everyone with an unsecured wireless network.

  2. Re:Yikes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No. Google's had one consistent message from the beginning: this was an accident, and it's extremely unlikely that they collected more than fragments because they were DRIVING DOWN THE FUCKING STREET as they channel-hopped.

    So out of many gigabytes of accidentally-collected data, yes, it's not particularly surprising that there are a few passwords collected from people still crazy enough to send that kind of stuff unencrypted. Tell me, what exactly do you think Google's nefarious motive in all this could possibly be? What's your plan to make money by doing this deliberately?

    If you have no reasonable answer, as I'm sure you don't, then fuck off with your cutesy little insinuations.

  3. Re:Well.. by lgw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Much, if not most, of polite human society throughout history is based on pretending you didn't overhear coversations between people. Listening in on other people's conversations, even when those conversations are in a public space, is creepy and wrong. The fact that you think your argument supports your position is the kind of thinking that gives geeks a bad name for being, well, creepy and wrong.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.