From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
As the world's biggest search and ad-broker company,
Google has drawn its share of criticism and concern about
the privacy of its users. Its privacy policy was revised on
October 14,
2005.
Additionally, privacy info about various Google services was
made also available.
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Contents
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1
Information collected by
Google
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2
Google's stated policies
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3
Criticism
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4
Legal disputes
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5
See also
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6
External links
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Information collected by Google
Google uses a unique
cookie for each browser used by an individual user on a
computer. This cookie contains information which allows Google
to identify records about that user on its database. This cookie
is submitted every time a user does a Google
search, visits a site using
AdSense etc. The information stored in Google's database,
which is identified by the cookie, includes
- Everything you search for using Google
- Every web page you visit that has Google Adsense ads on
it
- Every Blogger page you visit
If you have an Adsense account, the following will also be
stored
- Your full name, address and bank account details
- The IP address of everyone who visits your pages with
Adsense ads on them
- The number of visitors to each of your pages with
Adsense ads on them
If you use a
Gmail
account
- Content and addresses of emails and
Usenet posts you send or receive in an
Gmail account
If you're a member of orkut
- Your online social network, interests and groups
As well as
- Purchases in
Froogle
- Posts through
Blogger
- Which news groups you read through
Google Groups
- Locations you visit in
Google Earth and
Google Maps
Other information is submitted by Google's utilities, such as
Google Bar.
Google's stated policies
Some say that Google explicitly states it does not share
individual users' information with third parties. The whole
privacy statement can be read online
[1].
Google's Information Rights clause (see paragraph #6) says
Google may retain and use, and with good faith belief, access,
preserve, or disclose any information deemed reasonably
necessary to protect the "safety of Google".
Criticism
The main criticisms concerning privacy are:
- The cookie's expiration date is set to
January 17, 2038, 2:14:05 PM
- There is no way a user can access or delete her/his user
information kept by Google
- There is no expiration/deletion policy for user
information
- There is no disclosure what the information is used for,
e.g.
target ads, targeted offers in affiliated
shopping sites or targeted
search results.
Google maintains that
- We use cookies to improve the quality of our service
and to better understand how people interact with us. Google
does this by storing user preferences in cookies and by
tracking user trends and patterns of how people search.
It is possible to delete the Google cookie at any time;
however a new cookie and new records will be created the next
time you visit Google or use a Google affiliated service. For
each web-browser, on each computer you use, a different copy of
the cookie will be stored, possibly referring to different
records in the Google database.
Legal disputes
In early 2006, the US Department of Justice filed a motion in
federal court to force Google to comply with a subpoena for "the
text of each search string entered onto Google's search engine
over a one-week period (absent any information identifying the
person who entered such query)."
[2] Google resisted the subpoena and fought the motion,
partially due to concerns about users' privacy.
[3] In March 2006, the court ruled partially in Google's
favor, recognizing the privacy implications of turning over
search terms.
[4]
See also
-
History of Google: Criticism and controversy
-
Googlezon
External links
-
Google's own Privacy Center
- Conti, G;
Googling Considered Harmful; New Security Paradigms
Workshop, October 2006.
Chairman/CEO -
Eric E. Schmidt |
Technology President -
Sergey Brin |
Products President -
Larry E. Page |
CFO -
George Reyes
Major
products
Search:
Books
Finance
Froogle
Images
Maps
News
Scholar
Video
Web
Advertising:
AdSense
AdWords
Analytics
Communication & Publishing:
Blogger
Calendar
Docs & Spreadsheets
Gmail
Groups
JotSpot
Page Creator
Orkut
YouTube
Computer Applications:
Desktop
Earth
Pack
Picasa
SketchUp
Talk
Toolbar
Corporate information
Google acquisitions
History of Google Privacy
Issues
Google China
Google.org
Stock Symbol: (NASDAQ:
GOOG), (LSE:
GGEA) Annual Revenue:
$7.14
billion
USD (2006)
Employees: 9,378 (September 30, 2006)
Website:
www.google.com
Categories:
Cleanup from March 2006 |
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