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.

International Arbitration: The Wild West of Ethics? : International Business Law Advisor

International Arbitration has made great advances in the past several decades in becoming the mechanism of choice to resolve international disputes. Give me any court system in the world and nothing approaches the dynamic pragmatism of international arbitration. The relative costs, speed and predictability of this dispute resolution regime are unbeatable.

While international arbitration does it best to bridge the cultural, legal and even ideological gap among parties from opposite sides of the globe, there’s still a lot of work to be done to address conflicting national ethical rules.

At least that’s the argument raised in a compelling book chapter I just read, The Ethics of Advocacy in International Arbitration by Catherine A. Rogers, Professor of Law at Penn State University, & Università Commerciale Luigi Bocconi, Milan, Italy.

via International Arbitration: The Wild West of Ethics? : International Business Law Advisor.

Google bosses convicted in Italy – BBC News

An Italian court has convicted three Google executives in a trial over a video showing an autistic teenager being bullied.

The Google employees were accused of breaking Italian law by allowing the video to be posted online.

Judge Oscar Magi absolved the three of defamation but convicted them of privacy violations.

The UK's former Information Commissioner Richard Thomas said the case gave privacy laws a “bad name”.

The three employees, Peter Fleischer, David Drummond and George De Los Reyes, received suspended six-month sentences, while a fourth defendant, product manager Arvind Desikan, was acquitted.

David Drummond, chief legal officer at Google and one of those convicted, said he was “outraged” by the decision.

via BBC News – Google bosses convicted in Italy.