Post Tech – Google Street View privacy flap shows growing rift between U.S., E.U.

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..

Google Street View: No more privacy for penguins as Antarctica gets mapped | Technology | guardian.co.uk

A big bone of contention in many countries, Google’s Street View mapping service today goes live in Brazil, Ireland and Antarctica, meaning Street View now has a presence in all seven continents.

Launched in May 2007 in five US cities, the panoramic imaging service has gone on to map cities on every corner of the planet, attracting ire and admiration along the way.

Brian McClendon, vice-president of engineering at Google Earth and Maps, wrote on the company’s blog: “We often consider Street View to be the last zoom layer on the map, and a way to show you what a place looks like as if you were there in person – whether you’re checking out a coffee shop across town or planning a vacation across the globe. We hope this new imagery will help people in Ireland, Brazil, and even the penguins of Antarctica to navigate nearby, as well as enable people around the world to learn more about these areas.”

via Google Street View: No more privacy for penguins as Antarctica gets mapped | Technology | guardian.co.uk.

Google Street View Car Inspected by French Regulator – BusinessWeek

A car used by Google Inc. to collect data for its Street View mapping service was inspected yesterday, less than a week after France’s privacy regulator criticized the program’s resumption.

The inspection was a result of Google’s decision to begin photographing French streets before officials decided whether the company complied with orders to limit Street View’s data collection, said Yann Padova, secretary general of the National Commission for Computing and Civil Liberties.

The inspection “was done especially to verify that they stopped collecting Wi-Fi data,” Padova, 43, said in an interview today.

via Google Street View Car Inspected by French Regulator – BusinessWeek.

Germany to keep close eye on Google Street View | Reuters

The German government said on Wednesday it will scrutinize Google’s promise to respect privacy requests by letting people opt out of its “Street View” mapping system and that it would be ready to intervene if necessary.

In a country wary of surveillance due to the Nazis’ Gestapo and East Germany’s Stasi secret police, the response to Street View has been overwhelmingly negative even though Germans got assurances they can have images of their homes kept out.

Google’s announcement on Tuesday that it would allow Germans to stay out of Street View failed to allay fears that privacy would be compromised by the navigation system.

via Germany to keep close eye on Google Street View | Reuters.

Google Street View ‘single biggest breach of privacy in history’ – Telegraph

Earlier this month, Google announced it had discovered that the roving cars it uses to create its online mapping services were inadvertently gathering data on people's website use over unsecured wireless networks.

Google apologised, but the admission caused alarm across the globe.

Germany’s consumer protection said that Google had acted “illegally” and failed to show respect for the privacy of its citizens. The UK Information Commissioner has asked Google to delete information gathered on British citizens as soon as possible.

Now Stephen Conroy, Australia’s minister for broadband, communications and the digital economy, has told a senate committee that Google deliberately decided to collect the private information.

Mr Conroy, whose plan to implement an internet filter in Australia has been strongly criticised by Google, blamed the company’s CEO Eric Schmidt.

“I think the approach taken by Mr Schmidt is a bit creepy frankly,” Mr Conroy said.

“When it comes to their attitude to their own censorship, their response is simply, ‘trust us’. That is what they actually state on their website: ‘Trust us&’.”

Mr Conroy said that the search engine considered itself above government.

“They consider that they are the appropriate people to make the decisions about people’s privacy data and that they are perfectly entitled to drive the streets and collect as much private informatio

via Google Street View ‘single biggest breach of privacy in history’ – Telegraph.

Google hit with class-action lawsuit over Wi-Fi snooping – Computerworld

HANNOVER, GERMANY - MARCH 03:  A German Google...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

Google‘s secret Wi-Fi sniffing has prompted a class-action lawsuit that could force the company to pay up to $10,000 for each time it snatched data from unprotected hotspots, court documents show.

The lawsuit, which was filed by an Oregon woman and a Washington man in a Portland, Ore. federal court on Monday, accused Google of violating Federal privacy and data acquisition laws.

“When Google created its data collection systems on its GSV [Google Street View] vehicles, it included wireless packet sniffers that, in addition to collecting the user’s unique or chosen Wi-Fi network name (SSID information), the unique number given to the user’s hardware used to broadcast a user’s Wi-Fi signal (MAC address, the GSV data collection systems also collected data consisting of all or part of any documents, e-mails, video, audio, and VoIP information being sent over the network by the user [payload data],” the lawsuit stated.

On Tuesday, the same plaintiffs filed a motion for a temporary restraining order to prevent Google from deleting the data, a move the company has said it would make “as soon possible.” Oral arguments on the restraining order are scheduled for Monday before U.S. District Court Judge Janice Stewart.

via Google hit with class-action lawsuit over Wi-Fi snooping – Computerworld.

Czech Privacy Data Watchdog Probes Google Street View Acts – WSJ.com

HANNOVER, GERMANY - MARCH 02:  The camera of a...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

The Czech Office for Personal Data Protection, or UOOU, has launched a probe of an alleged breach of privacy protection regulations in the Czech Republic by Google Inc (GOOG), an UOOU spokeswoman said Thursday.

“We initiated the administrative action Apr. 21 by sending Google a formal notice and the procedure began three days ago when Google received the letter in the U.S.,” Hana Stepankova told Dow Jones Newswires.

UOOU is investigating Google for failing to notify Czech authorities with its intentions to collect personal data used for the U.S. company’s ‘Street View‘ photo imaging service for the Google Maps program.

Google officials didn't immediately return phone calls by Dow Jones Newswires requesting comments on the UOOU probe.

via Czech Privacy Data Watchdog Probes Google Street View Acts – WSJ.com.

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Italy investigates Google’s Street View | Reuters

Google Street View Car in Southampton, Hampshi...
Image via Wikipedia

Italy has started an investigation into Google Inc’s Street View web service, a local watchdog said on Wednesday following the U.S. group’s announcement it had accidentally collected personal data over wireless networks.

Google said last week its fleets of cars which have been photographing streets around the world had for several years accidentally collected personal information — which a security expert said could include e-mail messages and passwords.

Italy’s privacy regulator said it would verify whether Google treated correctly the data acquired by Street View, which allows users to navigate around a 360-degree view of city streets using pictures taken by Google’s camera vehicles.

The regulator said Google Italy had admitted it collected pictures but also “data regarding the presence of wireless networks … as well as electronic communications, eventually transmitted by users via unprotected wireless networks.”

via Italy investigates Google’s Street View | Reuters.

Google Opens Up on What Its ‘Street View’ Cars Collect – Digits – WSJ

By now, Google’s cars have driven down roads around the world — and in some places, they’re sparking concerns about just what information they are collecting.

So the Internet-search giant is opening up a bit about the data it compiles. Google is trying to address criticisms that have been leveled against it in European countries in particular and provided details about Street View cars in a post on its European Public Policy Blog on Tuesday. The company said it had discussed the information before but that it wanted to make it more easily accessible.

Privacy officials from 10 countries, including seven in Europe, sent Google a letter earlier this month outlining several concerns. The letter said Google’s Street View service was “launched in some countries without due consideration of privacy and data protection laws and cultural norms” and said “there is continued concern about the adequacy of the information you provide before the images are captured.”

So what does Google get with those cars? As anyone who has used Google Street View knows, cameras on the cars collect photos that are used in Google’s maps, and people who are out and about when the car passes can appear in images. Google reduced the amount of time it retains unblurred images in Europe, bowing to pressure from European privacy authorities. But the company has been urged to cut the time further. Google also allows people to request that images of them be removed, and a Google Germany spokeswoman told Bloomberg in March that the company would announce when it was driving by to take photos in that country.

In addition to photos, the cars gather information about Wi-Fi networks they encounter. This feature isn’t as well known, and it sparked a new round of criticism in Germany last week, with Germany’s federal commissioner for data protection saying he was “horrified” by the discovery. That’s why Google’s recent blog post devotes a considerable amount of time to explaining what Google is doing with Wi-Fi data.

Wi-Fi networks broadcast information such as the name of the network and a number given to the Wi-Fi device. In its post, Google explains that it collects this data to improve location-based services where GPS is slow or unavailable or for devices that aren’t GPS-enabled. Those devices can still triangulate location using transmissions from things like Wi-Fi networks and cellphone towers that Google has identified.

via Google Opens Up on What Its ‘Street View’ Cars Collect – Digits – WSJ.