Google Says They Will Delete Personal Data Collected By Street View

Posted in information on November 22nd, 2010

Google has agreed to delete all personal data collected by its Street View cars from unsecured wireless networks. Google sparked an international outrage last month after it admitted to collecting information from unsecured Wi-Fi networks as its vehicles roamed residential streets. The company was accused of unlawfully harvesting data, including e-mails, passwords and website addresses, during the creation of its Street View maps.

British Information Commissioner Christopher Graham said Google will also introduce improved training measures on security awareness and data protection issues for all its employees worldwide, reports the Daily Mail.

Graham said: “I am very pleased to have a firm commitment from Google to work with my office to improve its handling of personal information.

“It is a significant achievement to have an undertaking from a major multinational corporation like Google Inc that extends to its global policies and not just its UK activities.”

Alan Eustace, Google’s senior vice president, signed an undertaking on behalf of Google Inc to put in place improved training measures on security awareness and data protection issues for all employees, the Information Commissioner’s Office said.

The company will also require its engineers to maintain a privacy design document for every new project before it is launched and the personal data collected in Britain will be deleted.

The decision is a victory for privacy campaigners, who were furious that Google had refused to back down over claims that it had unlawfully accessed private data, albeit accidentally.

Source: HindustanTimes

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F.C.C. Investigates Google Street View

Posted in big brother on November 12th, 2010

The Federal Communications Commission said Wednesday that it was investigating whether Google had violated laws when it collected Wi-Fi data as part of its Street View photo project.

News of the F.C.C. investigation came just two weeks after the Federal Trade Commission halted its own inquiry into the Google project without taking action.

“Last month, Google disclosed that its Street View cars collected passwords, e-mails and other personal information wirelessly from unsuspecting people across the country,” Michele Ellison, chief of the F.C.C’s enforcement bureau, said Wednesday in a statement.

Street View is a project that Google began in 2007 to add street-level pictures to its mapping service. The images are collected by cars that use cameras to capture 360-degree views and link the images with GPS data. The project has expanded across the United States and into at least 30 other countries.

More recently the cars were also recording information about Wi-Fi networks in nearby homes and businesses, data that can be used to help mobile devices determine their locations. But Google went beyond noting the existence of such networks and recorded information that was being sent over them.

Google first disclosed, on its corporate blog, its interception of such data in May and said it was inadvertent. But in October it said on the blog that it had collected more information about Internet users than it had first thought, including, in some cases, entire e-mails and passwords.

“In light of their public disclosure, we can now confirm that the Enforcement Bureau is looking into whether these actions violate the Communications Act,” Ms. Ellison said. “As the agency charged with overseeing the public airwaves, we are committed to ensuring that the consumers affected by this breach of privacy receive a full and fair accounting.”

The F.C.C. confirmed the investigation on Wednesday after The Wall Street Journal reported it on its Web site. Google also issued a statement Wednesday, apologizing again for what had happened. “As we have said before, we are profoundly sorry for having mistakenly collected payload data from unencrypted networks,” Google said. “As soon as we realized what had happened, we stopped collecting all Wi-Fi data from our Street View cars and immediately informed the authorities.

“As we assured the F.T.C., which has closed its inquiry, we did not want and have never used the payload data in any of our products and services,” Google said. “We want to delete the data as soon as possible and will continue to work with the authorities to determine the best way forward, as well as to answer their further questions and concerns.”

The F.C.C. inquiry was prompted at least in part by a complaint about Google’s actions by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a public interest research group. In a May 18 letter to the commission, Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the group, said that Google’s actions could have violated Section 705 of the Communications Act, which forbids the interception of radio communications without authorization, and the federal Wiretap Act.

A trade commission official said in an Oct. 27 letter that its decision to halt its inquiry had been based in part on Google’s assurances that it was improving privacy protections and its vows that it would not use any data it collected. The trade commission’s decision angered privacy advocates, who have pushed for Google to disclose how and why it collected the information.

Several European countries have investigated or are investigating Google’s actions.

Source: NY Times

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Google Street View Logs WiFi Networks, Mac Addresses

Posted in big brother on May 14th, 2010

Google’s roving Street View spycam may blur your face, but it’s got your number. The Street View service is under fire in Germany for scanning private WLAN networks, and recording users’ unique Mac (Media Access Control) addresses, as the car trundles along.

Germany’s Federal Commissioner for Data Protection Peter Schaar says he’s “horrified” by the discovery.

“I am appalled… I call upon Google to delete previously unlawfully collected personal data on the wireless network immediately and stop the rides for Street View,” according to German broadcaster ARD.

Spooks have long desired the ability to cross reference the Mac address of a user’s connection with their real identity and virtual identity, such as their Gmail or Facebook account.

Other companies have logged broadcasting WLAN networks and published the information. By contrast Google has not published the WLAN map, or Street View in Germany; Google hopes to launch the service by the end of the year.

But Google’s uniquely cavalier approach to privacy, and its potential ability to cross reference the information raises additional concerns. Google CEO Eric Schmidt recently said internet users shouldn’t worry about privacy unless they have something to hide. And when there’s nowhere left to hide…?

Source: The Register UK

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