Google coughs up $8.5 million to settle Buzz privacy suit

The fallout from Google’s Buzz social networking aggregator continues: the company has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit over concerns that the service’s original configuration violated users’ privacy. While Google has made numerous changes to the service since its February launch and maintains that it did no wrong, the company has agreed to pay out $8.5 million to end the litigation.

Buzz launched in early February to a lukewarm reception, which was quickly followed by an enormous controversy over concerns that the default settings revealed private information. At the heart of the problem was an auto-follow feature meant to facilitate quick adoption. Users quickly found, however, that it could reveal their Google accounts to people they’d like to avoid. Journalists were concerned that confidential sources could be revealed to the public, while one woman noted that her private Google account was auto-followed by her abusive ex-husband.

via Google coughs up $8.5 million to settle Buzz privacy suit.

Microsoft Researchers Launch ‘Spindex’ Aggregator Site | News & Opinion | PCMag.com

Image representing Lili Cheng as depicted in C...
Image by Joi Ito/ Flickr via CrunchBase

On Tuesday at the Web 2.0 conference, Microsoft took the wraps off of what it called the “Impossible Project”: a Web site, spindex.me, that will serve as a sort of personal Web aggregator.

Spindex.me is live, but Microsoft is requiring users to sign up and be approved. A Windows Live account is also required.

Lili Cheng, general manager of Microsoft’s Future Social Experiences (FUSE) Labs, characterized Spindex as “one-size-fits-all search for everyone on the planet”.

“Today we have one index for everyone in the world,” Cheng said. “If you want to delete something you can't; if you want to mark something up it’s really difficult.”

Spindex appears to be an aggregation of RSS and Twitter feeds and other social networks, something akin to, well, most sites with social aspirations.

via Microsoft Researchers Launch ‘Spindex’ Aggregator Site | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.