Google rolls out new privacy policy amid howls
Google rolled out a new privacy policy Thursday allowing the firm to
track users across various services to develop targeted advertising,
despite sharp criticism from US and European consumer advocacy groups.
Google contends the move simplifies and unifies its policies across
its various services such as Gmail, YouTube, Android mobile systems,
social networks and Internet search.
“The new policy doesn't change any existing privacy settings or how
any personal information is shared outside of Google,” Google privacy
chief Alma Whitten said on the Google Blog Thursday.
But critics including European privacy agencies and US consumer
watchdogs argued the new policy, which offers no ability to opt out
aside from refraining from signing into Google services, gives the
Internet giant unprecedented ability to monitor its users. And some say
it violates EU privacy protections.
“Calling this a 'privacy policy' is Orwellian doublespeak,” said John
Simpson of the US advocacy group Consumer Watchdog.
“Google isn't telling you about protecting your privacy.Google is
telling you how they will gather information about you on all its
services, combine it in new ways and use the fat new digital dossiers to
sell more ads. They're telling you how they plan to spy on you. It's a
spy policy.” A coalition of European and US consumer advocacy groups
made a last-ditch appeal to Internet search and advertising giant Google
on Wednesday to delay the changes.
In a joint letter to Google chief executive Larry Page, the Trans
Atlantic Consumer Dialogue urged Google to delay implementation of the
changes, saying it would “combine data from all of your services... into
a single profile without user consent and without any meaningful
opportunity for users to opt-out.” The French consumer data protection
agency CNIL warned this week that Google may be in violation of European
privacy norms.
US Federal Trade Commission chairman Jon Leibowitz has said Google is
forcing users to make a “brutal choice” -- ending its use of the service
or complying with the new monitoring scheme.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center said it is appealing a
judge's ruling that dismissed its legal challenge to Google's privacy
policy. The group says Google is violating a settlement it reached with
the FTC requiring the company to protect user data.
Technology analyst Shelly Palmer said Google had gone too far.
“I don't think any single thought about the aggregation of data or
the use of technology has ever made me as uncomfortable as (Google's)
announcement,” Palmer said in a blog post.
“On its best day, with every ounce of technology the US government
could muster, it could not know a fraction as much about any of us as
Google does now.” Google announced in January it was revising its
privacy policies and changing how it uses data from users of its
services to provide more personalized search results and advertisements.
The Mountain View, California-based firm said the changes are
designed to improve the user experience across the various Google
products, and give the firm a more integrated view of its users, an
advantage enjoyed by Apple and Facebook.
“Our new privacy policy gets rid of those inconsistencies so we can
make more of your information available to you when using Google,”
Whitten said.
“So in the future, if you do frequent searches for Jamie Oliver, we
could recommend Jamie Oliver videos when you're looking for recipes on
YouTube -- or we might suggest ads for his cookbooks when you're on
other Google properties.” Digital media analyst Rebecca Lieb said the
move is important for Google's business plans.
“Google needs a 360 degree view of the customer now more than ever,”
she said. “Why? Because Facebook's already got it. Or is at least a lot
closer to having it than Google is if all Google's information is
separately warehoused. Facebook is currently better positioned than
Google to ‘know’ what videos you’re watching on YouTube, which Google
owns!”
AFP
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