After Google incident, Wi-Fi data collection goes on – Computerworld

Four months ago, amidst a backlash from government regulators and privacy advocates, Google stopped collecting Wi-Fi data with its Street View cars. But that doesn’t mean Google has stopped collecting wireless data altogether, and neither have other companies such as Apple.

Instead of sending out cars to sniff out wireless networks, Google is now crowdsourcing the operation, with users of its Android phones and location-aware mobile applications doing the reconnaissance work for it. In the past few months, Apple has quietly started building a similar database, leveraging its large base of users to log basic Wi-Fi data.

There are others: A Boston company, Skyhook Wireless, has been logging wireless access points for years, as has its competitor, Navizon of Miami Beach, Florida.

It’s a trend that’s been spurred by the intense interest in applications such as FourSquare and Facebook Places. As it becomes increasingly important for programs that run on your phone to know exactly where you are — to be location-aware in industry parlance — having a way of figuring out exactly where you are becomes critical. But the companies collecting this data haven’t come under much scrutiny, many users do not understand how the data is being collected or why, and security experts are just now starting to discover some of the ways that this information could be misused.

via After Google incident, Wi-Fi data collection goes on – Computerworld.

Privacy worries inspire a new wave of startups | SFGate

Amid the recent public backlash to the way some of the titans of the Internet handle users' personal data, a slate of ambitious online startups are aiming to squeeze into the fields of social networking and search by touting a stronger focus on privacy.

Four New York University students, for instance, set out in April to create Diaspora, an “anti-Facebook” of sorts. Their platform will aim to provide the same functionality as the popular social network, but will run on open-source software and won’t depend on centralized servers, effectively giving users control of their information.

The four friends used fundraising Web site Kickstarter with the purpose of collecting $10,000 to cover their summer expenses while they program and prepare Diaspora for a fall release. To their surprise, not only did they gather the amount in less than two weeks, but also the money kept pouring in. They have now collected close to $190,000 from several thousand donors (including Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg).

Other privacy-oriented projects like Appleseed and OneSocialWeb also have been working on alternatives to Facebook since the king of social networking angered many of its users with recent changes to its privacy policies.

Many criticized Facebook's myriad privacy settings as a maze of screens that actually made it more difficult for users to control their data. As a result, many discontented users pledged to quit the social networking service.

via Privacy worries inspire a new wave of startups.