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Google caves on privacy

By Sylvie Barak
10 September 2008 01:52PM
Tags: google | caves | privacy

Google said yesterday it would cut its data anonymisaton deadline in half, from 18 to nine months, but said that, by doing so, it will be leaving people at greater risk from fraud.

Feeling the mounting pressure from the US department of Justice, the EU and privacy campaigners, Google, the giant of Internet search, has apparently been forced to cave in, according to a blog post on the company site.

But despite “significantly shortening our previous 18-month retention policy to address regulatory concerns and to take another step to improve privacy for our users", Google’s global privacy counsel, Peter Fleischer, senior privacy counsel Jane Horvath and software engineer Alma Whitten solemnly warned the move could do more harm than good and "would degrade the utility of the data too much and outweigh the incremental privacy benefit for users".

Google said the whole reason behind clutching onto data for a year and-a-half in the first place was not to ‘invade’ people’s privacy and spy on them, but to have enough time to go through data and pick out fraudsters and scammers.

theinquirer.net (c) 2008 Incisive Media

   


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