The federal government has ended an inquiry into a privacy breach involving Google’s Street View service, satisfied with the company’s pledge to stop gathering e-mail, passwords and other information from residential WiFi networks as it rolls through neighborhoods.
Wednesday’s decision by the Federal Trade Commission is a sharp contrast with the reaction of regulators in Europe. The United Kingdom has launched a new investigation into Google’s collection of unencrypted WiFi data, exposing the company to potential fines. Germany told Google to mark its Street View cars that take pictures of neighborhoods and homes. The Czech Republic banned Google from expanding its mapping software program.
The differences highlight an increasing gap between regulators in the United States, where the freewheeling Internet culture has birthed many of the social networking sites and search engines used worldwide, and governments in Europe and Canada, which tend to be much more aggressive about privacy.
“Part of it is cultural, and part of it is that the U.S. and Europe have radically different privacy regimes,” said Chris Calabrese, legislative counsel for the ACLU. “The European model is extensive data protection in private information, and the U.S. model is piecemeal.”
The result is a rising number of trans-Atlantic conflicts. The Obama administration has been criticized for its efforts to allow law enforcement to surveil Internet networks, for instance. In addition, the European Union is pushing back against U.S. demands to share data about U.S.-bound air passengers.
via Post Tech – Google Street View privacy flap shows growing rift between U.S., E.U..




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