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Google defies US over search data
The internet search engine Google is resisting efforts by the US Department of Justice to force it to hand over data about what people are looking for.
Google was asked for information on the types of query submitted over a week, and the websites included in its index.
The department wants the data to try to show in court it has the right approach in enforcing an online pornography law.
It says the order will not violate personal privacy, but Google says it is too broad and threatens trade secrets.
Privacy groups say any sample could reveal the identities of Google users indirectly. And they say the demand is a worrying precedent, because the government also wants to make more use of internet data for fighting crime and terrorism.
However, the Department of Justice has said that several of Google's main competitors have already complied.
Act blocked
The department first issued a request for the data last August.
It wants:
* A list of terms entered into the search engine during an unspecified single week, potentially tens of millions of queries
* A million randomly selected web addresses from various Google databases.
The US government is seeking to defend the 1998 Child Online Protection Act, which has been blocked by the Supreme Court because of legal challenges over how it is enforced.
More
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/4630694.stm
The department wants the data to try to show in court it has the right approach in enforcing an online pornography law.
It says the order will not violate personal privacy, but Google says it is too broad and threatens trade secrets.
Privacy groups say any sample could reveal the identities of Google users indirectly. And they say the demand is a worrying precedent, because the government also wants to make more use of internet data for fighting crime and terrorism.
However, the Department of Justice has said that several of Google's main competitors have already complied.
Act blocked
The department first issued a request for the data last August.
It wants:
* A list of terms entered into the search engine during an unspecified single week, potentially tens of millions of queries
* A million randomly selected web addresses from various Google databases.
The US government is seeking to defend the 1998 Child Online Protection Act, which has been blocked by the Supreme Court because of legal challenges over how it is enforced.
More
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/4630694.stm
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Recently, an indymedia tech person was very prescient about the dangers of this after it was discovered that one IMC site was allowing Google to track its sites visitors, as well as allowing Google to set and read cookies on users' machines:
"Just think of what would happen if Google got subponaed right now because of an article published on sf.indy which the government of the country Google happens to have their company central in dislikes the articles' contents... they would probably be asked to give away their IP logs."
http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/01/1796785.php
companies all over are handing over info, allowing phones to be tapped, without even so much as a warrant, just a secret request from BushCo
and our congresspeople have known about much of this for years and dared not to say anything to the public (i.e secret NSA wiretaps)