Report Finds Google Supervisors Knew About Wi-Fi Data Harvesting
bonch writes "According to the FCC report, Google's collection of Street View data was not the unauthorized act of a rogue engineer, as Google had portrayed it, but an authorized program known to supervisors and at least seven other engineers. The original proposal contradicts Google's claim that there was no intent to gather payload data: 'We are logging user traffic along with sufficient data to precisely triangulate their position at a given time, along with information about what they were doing.'"
This just confirms what people were saying all along. Course will be interesting how die hard google fanbois spin it now.
Whatever happened to, "Don't be Evil"???
Is there a source to what is claimed in the article? I followed the links and find nothing to substantiate. Even the NYTimes links just references their own articles.
Just cos you can, doesn't mean you should.
^^
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
Quite apart from the code that had to be written, cars had to outfitted with specialised hardware to enable the data capture. Given this and the "limited interest" expressed by managers, it would seem that this was an intelligence gathering operation for a US government agency.
Given that the NSA could produce this data from satellite sources, it would seem it was at the request of a different agency. Perhaps CIA?
What does this matter now at all? CISPA is going to get passed into law at this point. I could care less about Google being a bit sleazy with regards to user privacy at this point.
Apple gets most of its money from hardware.
Microsoft gets most of its money from software licenses.
Amazon gets most of its money from people buying books and other stuff online.
Where does Google get most of its money from, to pay the salaries of over 30,000 employees as well as campuses around the world, data centers stocked with hundreds of thousands of servers, etc. It sells ads and search placement, yes, but that's not going to be enough unless it stays on top of the game of knowing how ads and search hits can be targeted to the right consumer at the right time. In other words, it needs to continually find new ways to invade the privacy of people who use its services for free.
Looks like Google is trying the old "Teflon Soft-shoe" in an attempt to avoid charges, fines, and other 'business costs' associated with such snooping.
Glad to see the Engineer they blamed didn't just roll over and play dead on this, or it would have been Quite Bad in the long run.
So, where does that leave "War-Drivers" who specifically snoop out WiFi?
Let's sum up the whole thing, "Google had not violated any laws". That's straight from the article and the FCC investigation report. Not one single law was broken, PERIOD. So how is this news? If the NYT really wants to do news about privacy rights why doesn't it put the bullshit CISPA on the front page instead of ignoring it.
Windows does this every time you open up your wireless network viewer. Capturing packets that were freely broadcast through the air for anyone to capture, whoopty-do, I'll keep using google.
See subject-line above: All I know, is what the 1st line of this tune states on this account (CISPA) & others like it -> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vfpgpf6QVnI&ob=av2n
* "You take a mortal man, & put him in control..."
(I hope President Obama has the "intestinal fortitude" to shut this CISPA thing down via VETO is all)
I mean, since it's much like many bills lately BEFORE it? It's got a LOT of "hidden in plain sight" b.s. packed into it...
(The REAL parts they want "in motion" are those... shows me 1 thing - the "powers-that-be" are reacting, & the only way they know how (more CONTROL))
APK
P.S.=> QUESTION: Is it ME, or is the world going a bit "nuts" lately around us? See - I've lived nearly 1/2 a century now, & have NEVER seen things as "out-of-kilter" on a hell of a lot of fronts as I have this past 1++ yr. now - makes me wonder, & worry (not so much for right now, but around December more than anything)... apk
Yes. Again--time and time again, I've preached it. Google is evil. This is only another in a long list of examples illustrating it. Do not trust this company.
For those who don't know, the unmentioned program is Kismet So what if Google engineers knew about its capabilities to write pcap files? It's not an overwhelming amount of data for each Google car when compared to everything else it's collecting, and I wouldn't be surprised if it was simply left on, since I belive that's how kismet comes out of the box. The big point is Kismet also plots access point data in easily parsable formats along with signal strength, geographical coordinances, clients connected, other computers probing for certain networks unlike anything else out there so the choice for this software for wifi location collection was, without question the smartest choice. Its method of gathering data is instead of actively probing networks that respond (like Netstumbler) it instead listens silently in rfmon, or "monitor mode", and hops channels, decodes everything from layer 2, similar in principle to how a conventional radio scanner works. It can be configured to discard the pcap data, but privacy issues aside, when you're embarking on such a massively large and expensive project, I think it would suck if you later on really wished you had collected that data, especially if you find bugs and the program crashes in mysterious ways?
Funny how those doing the most to advance human civilization in terms of evolution and technological development must be pitted against those doing the least, namely, lawyers and bureaucrats...
They spent a year and tens of thousands of dollars "investigating" Google and couldn't find any violations of the law, so the make a bogus claim that Google "didn't cooperate". Why should Google? What the Feds wanted was for Google to unilaterally admit to some crime.
Those who claim Google was "stealing data" have no clue as to how wifi's work and what it takes to collect data with a "Street View" van. Mostly they are victims of Apple's and Microsoft's anti-Google FUD campaign, since they both collect the same kinds of data.
Most wifis have a radius range of about 300 feet. Traveling at 25mph a van can pass through 600 feet in about 16 seconds. It takes several minutes to crack a WEP and even more for a WPA encrypted connection. The van won't have enough time to crack into secured access points. That leaves OPEN access points. How many packets could a van collect in 16 seconds for an 11Mb/S connection? About 10,600. A typical 1500 byte packet has a maximum of 842 bytes of payload, which would total to about 9 MB of data. That "data" will be HTML code, web page elements, LOTS of graphics and tons of trivia. It *might" contain pieces of someone's email. All from Joe and Sally Sixpack who don't have enough sense to, in affect, close their blinds when they undress for bed at night, or shout all of their telephone conversations, or leave their cars and houses unlocked and the windows down or open. So, what are folks to do when they pass by, plug their ears and close their eyes for 600 feet?
Besides, ESSIDs can and often do change without notice, so they mean nothing. MAC addresses would identify hardware and Google could connect a MAC to an IP address, but gathering that information is not illegal. Besides, names, telephone numbers and house addresses have been linked together in phone books for a100 years. I can record your license plate number and look up your name and address in our state auto registration database after paying a registration fee of $50. Ditto for your house records: year it was built, how many times it was sold and for how much, the amount of taxes you payed and what is due, even a floor plan.
IF you don't want someone eaves dropping in on your wifi traffic then use WPA and/or encrypt your email and connect only with https websites.
Running with Linux for over 20 years!
Don't be fooled by "don't be evil".
gotta get over my google addiction, one of these days.
expandfairuse.org
Slashdotters don't care, because Google can do no wrong here. It's seriously the biggest collection of fanboyism on the web.
Sniffing wi-fi, hacking into other company's networks, violating the GPL by withholding source, making anti-net neutrality deals with Verizon...it's all okay because Google.
I think you didn't even read the report. It explicitly states that there was intent to use the data. It was the whole point of the project according to the design document that management apparently approved without reading.
The seven engineers weren't just people he circulated memos to. They worked on the project--five tested it, another reviewed the code, and another helped in some unspecified way.
Let's be realistic here. It's extremely difficult to believe that seven engineers could work on a Street View project, managers could approve the proposal, yet not a single other soul in the company knew what was going on or intended to do anything with the data for the two years that the project ran.
"Sufferin' succotash."
when did corps ever pay taxes. Its called taxes the fed does the sam with the gas tax.
The report that you want people to read says they intended to use the data "for other services". You're mad that the NY Times ran a story critical of Google, so you're calling the author a "biased hack" for no reason. It's posts like yours that give the Slashdot comments section the reputation for being extremely biased and myopic.
Just because the FCC dropped it for no law being broken doesn't mean Google didn't cause a serious violation of morality and trust.
I don't think this specific event was really all that bad.
What's really troubling, though, is the attitude towards the users' data. And it's not a single "rogue" guy; he talked to other people, even asking a member of the Search team if it could be useful - why didn't he or she report it? Are they really that numb towards protecting people's privacy? Consented data mining is one thing, but this was wardriving!
I'm still a Google fan - they make a bunch of things that I really like - but I think this just strengths my decision of giving up on Gmail and not joining G+ (besides the real name policy nonsense).
By the way, before you accuse me of nonsense like being a shill, I'd like to say that Google is still the only major tech company that I actually like. The others could all burn for all I care.
Dilbert RSS feed
"Go ahead, be evil. You've earned it!"
Maybe people will consider a different, better search engine that isn't REALLY in the business of searching through YOUR life for data that's worth money to THEM. Try Duck Duck GO, for example. Just remember, when you preen in front of a mirror, if someone is watching you back through that mirror, they get to see everything you see, and usually more. Using Google to search for things lets Google know what you are interested in searching for. Dumbasses. Even if Google pretends they're letting you be private, they know what you're searching for, no matter what mode you're searching in, especially if you're using ChromX (the OS or the browser) since your computer has to send them the search if you're using Google in any form, and your computer sends out its MAC address with your search, so the server it contacts on the internet knows to whom (on the net) to send the results.
So it comes as no surprise Google lied, or it harvested information, they're in the business of buying and selling your information. Why else do you think they have a bazillion dollars, and all these services are "FREE"? As Heinlein and many others often said, there's no such thing as a free lunch.
Google it if you don't believe me. :)
Was google harvesting unencrypted wifi traffic? Probably... so what? Who has unencrypted wifi? Even the local coffee shop that gives wifi away for free still encrypts their wifi. They just tell everyone the password.
The moral of the story is encrypt your wifi... also, zip up your fly before you go out in the morning... and bring an umbrella if it's raining.
You know... basic words to the wise... like don't go swimming in sewage. Did google spy on idiots? Probably. But who cares? What exactly are we trying to protect here? The right to be a moron? Encrypt your f'ing wifi.
And given that the FBI just effectively got the power to spy on us all through our ISPs, exactly how much of a fuss do you want to make about Google sniffing unlocked wifi access points?
We need to start encrypting everything now. Phone calls. Email.... possibly proxying everything through other countries. I mean, if you don't care if the government can or is reading your email then carry on. But don't complain when a company comes along and does not even a tenth as much. Just keep it in perspective.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
There was clear evidence that Google violated laws. True, probably not USA laws, but they did the same in other countries where laws existed that made this illegal at the time.
I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
What Google wanted this information for was so that people in the area could be told about open WiFi networks and use them.
Google has no right to do that.
Just because a WiFi network is open/unencrypted does not mean someone has the right to use it.
More News at 11
Rogue engineer? Evil managers? Who cares who is the culprit in this particular case? The plausibility of both cases is just evidence of the real basic problem: a centralised database of public (or less public) information about every single individual in the planet should not exist in the first place.There's no problem if somebody comes under my house and snoops on my unencrypted wifi traffic. There's a problem if a single entity collects all unencrypted traffic from all the streets of the world. There's a huge problem if the same entity also collects all mac addresses, street addresses, personal names, phone numbers, web history of the same people, analyses all of them to dig for those people's problems, opinions, tastes, aspirations, and the only warranty of privacy they give is "hey, we promise that we won't ever misuse that data".
"Google announced that WiFi data collected in the Netherlands will be deleted. This move is being made at the behest of the Dutch Data Protection Authority, who gave an order earlier this year that all WiFi data was to be deleted." http://tech.slashdot.org/story/12/04/29/2229225/report-finds-google-supervisors-knew-about-wi-fi-data-harvesting And one more thing, lets not mix "google claims it had no intent to use that data" and "google had no intent to use that data" please.
http://www.backgroundcheck.org/can-i-trust-google/
Consider the humble wiretap: telephone conversations are unencrypted communications over semi-public networks, and yet unsophisticated callers presume them to be private. So there is a body of law designed to protect the privacy of our phone calls.
Yes, the neighborhood utility guy could tap the lines and listen in. But no company or enforcement agency could do so on a large scale without causing a huge scandal.
As tech-minded people, we all know that what happens on unecrypted wi-fi (and plain-text internet connections) is subject to interception by war-drivers, ISPs, and government-operated listening posts. And so it's hard to have any sympathy for folks who used unencrypted wi-fi and got caught by Street View's packet capture. But that doesn't mean it should be legal for organizations or governments to listen in. Just because they can, doesn't mean they should.
From the report, we know that Google started doing this in 2008, which *is* pretty late in the game for unencrypted wi-fi. Nevertheless, there was a time (say 2003ish) when it was fashionable to have unencrypted wi-fi. Not only did this ease compatibility problems, it made it easy for friends, family, and other visitors to get online quickly. It was also seen as an altruistic way to give internet to the masses. This started changing in the middle of the decade, but for whatever reasons there were clearly still quite a few unencrypted networks for gslite to sniff in 2008-2010.