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Stanford Promises Not To Use Google Money For Privacy Research

An anonymous reader writes Stanford University has pledged not to use money from Google to fund privacy research at its Center for Internet and Society — a move that critics claim poses a threat to academic freedom. The center has long been generously funded by Google but its privacy research has proved damaging to the search giant as of late. Just two years ago, a researcher at the center helped uncover Google privacy violations that led to the company paying a record $22.5 million fine. In 2011-2012, the center's privacy director helped lead a project to create a "Do Not Track" standard. The effort, not supported by Google, would have made it harder for advertisers to track what people do online, and likely would have cut into Google's ad revenue. Both Stanford and Google say the change in funding was unrelated to the previous research.

2 of 54 comments (clear)

  1. Hey Google by joelgrimes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you want us to believe that you take our privacy seriously, you would do the opposite and create an endowment exclusively for privacy research.

    An external audit is much more credible than the internal one.

  2. Hogwash. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    https://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/blog/2014/09/stanford-research-independent

    Money quotes, emphasis mine:
    "Julia Angwin's blog post today is incorrect. Stanford never promised not to use Google money for privacy research. "
    "Julia asked me how we would deal with a situation where someoneÃ(TM)s "work on net neutrality or copyright, for instance, could wind up in the field of privacy." I told Julia: "No area of CIS research is 'barred'. We are free to work on whatever we like, including privacy. That makes things easy." Unfortunately, Julia did not include my statement in the piece."