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Bush administration wants details of what users search for with Google

by peeper
This should not suprise anyone. Be careful what you do with search engines or any online behavior for that matter. In this case Google is resisting, but who knows about others or even where this one will lead?
Feds seek Google records in pornography probe
Bush administration wants details of what users look for with search engine

(AP) Updated: 11:32 a.m. ET Jan. 19, 2006

SAN JOSE, Calif. - The Bush administration, seeking to revive an online pornography law struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court, has subpoenaed Google Inc. for details on what its users have been looking for through its popular search engine.

Google has refused to comply with the subpoena, issued last year, for a broad range of material from its databases, including a request for 1 million random Web addresses and records of all Google searches from any one-week period, lawyers for the U.S. Justice Department said in papers filed Wednesday in federal court in San Jose.

Privacy advocates have been increasingly scrutinizing Google’s practices as the company expands its offerings to include e-mail, driving directions, photo-sharing, instant messaging and Web journals.

Although Google pledges to protect personal information, the company’s privacy policy says it complies with legal and government requests. Google also has no stated guidelines on how long it keeps data, leading critics to warn that retention is potentially forever given cheap storage costs.

The government contends it needs the data to determine how often pornography shows up in online searches as part of an effort to revive an Internet child protection law that was struck down two years ago by the U.S. Supreme Court on free-speech grounds.

The 1998 Child Online Protection Act would have required adults to use access codes or other ways of registering before they could see objectionable material online, and it would have punished violators with fines up to $50,000 or jail time. The high court ruled that technology such as filtering software may better protect children.

The matter is now before a federal court in Pennsylvania, and the government wants the Google data to help argue that the law is more effective than software in protecting children from porn.

The Mountain View-based company told The San Jose Mercury News that it opposes releasing the information because it would violate the privacy rights of its users and would reveal company trade secrets.

Nicole Wong, an associate general counsel for Google, said the company will fight the government’s efforts “vigorously.”

“Google is not a party to this lawsuit, and the demand for the information is overreaching,” Wong said.
by fair warning
Keep your ears peeled for so-called radical websites that would carelessly allow corporate giants to run their own tracking code on your computer.

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."
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