Archive for the ‘Privacy’ category

Google Buzz gets a Legal Hit

February 18th, 2010

The punches keep on rolling. Google Buzz now has a local class action complaint filed over it.

A class action complaint filed in San Jose federal court alleges that Google Inc. broke the law when its controversial Google Buzz service shared personal data without the consent of users.

The case was filed on Wednesday on behalf of Eva Hibnick, a Florida woman, by law firms in San Francisco and Washington, D.C. William Audet of Audet & Partners LLP in San Francisco declined to comment.

The filing is the latest in a string of criticisms generated by the Mountain View Internet giant’s social networking tool, since it launched last week.

Read Full Article: Local class action complaint filed over Google Buzz

Canada Reprimands Google on Privacy Issued with Buzz

February 17th, 2010

Google didn’t just piss off the entire net with Google Buzz, but also some government officials:

Canada’s privacy commissioner has chastised Google for not consulting with her before launching its Buzz social-networking service.

“We have seen a storm of protest and outrage over alleged privacy violations and my office also has questions about how Google Buzz has met the requirements of privacy law in Canada,” Jennifer Stoddart said in a statement Wednesday.

Read full article: Privacy watchdog rebukes Google for Buzz

Buzz Off, Google!

February 10th, 2010

It’s hard to understand Google’s hysteria when it comes to social media. True, Twitter gives Google a good fight when it comes to real-time search, and people spend more time on Facebook than on any other site. So what do they do on Google? They try to fight back. And it looks ludicrous.

Gmail is one of the net’s most useful services. It’s the best webmail around and it has tons of useful features. My Gmail tab on Firefox is always open. In fact, by far, it’s the site I spend most of my time on. And I am not the only one.

Some of us don’t want many distractions to interrupt our work. I mean, web games, Twitter and porn are distracting enough. But Google doesn’t seem to care. First was the annoying, blipping Google Talk, which you can only disconnect from, but not disable entirely, and now there’s Google Buzz.

Without asking for it, I got the Buzz icon in the left sidebar of my Gmail. The icon looks familiar… Wait a minute… Is that a Microsoft service? Ah, no. Just another Google annoyance. So, I click on the Buzz in order to disable it, and I am horified to see that I already have followers. Worst of all – these aren’t my friends. They are not even my online friends. They are a random bunch of people I once mailed or contacted, mostly in business-related matters. I sure don’t want THEM to follow me anywhere. I also don’t want to follow them, but it appears I am doing just that.

Where’s the Block?!

It seems that Google Buzz is a Twitter/Facebook wannabe – it encourages you to share thoughts, clips and links. Only here, for some reason, you can’t choose your friends that easily. For example, if you access the list of your followers, you only get an option to follow them back. You can’t block them or prevent them from following you. At least, not that easily. In order to block a person on Google Buzz, you need to click on their icon and block them from there. I hope you don’t have too many followers at this point.

Where’s the Privacy?

If you are concerned about your privacy, Google Buzz is definitely not for you. The message that appears on the Buzz’s main page is: “Your Google Reader shared items, Picasa Web public albums, and Google Chat status messages will automatically appear as posts in Buzz”. This is the default, unless you change it.

Also, activity on the sites listed on your Google Webmaster account will also be made public, unless you prevent Google Buzz from spreading around your every move.

Best Feature of Google Buzz?

Clearly, Google Buzz is a noise-making, privacy-damaging, redundant service. If you have Twitter, Facebook or both, you really don’t need the Buzz. I don’t even want to THINK what this does to the well-known Gmail-Firefox memory leak.

The best feature on Google Buzz is clearly the option to disable it entirely. This option hides as a little, tiny link on the bottom of your Gmail screen.

Google, do us all a favor. Stick to worthwhile services, like Gmail, RSS Readers and, um,  that little thing called “Search Engine”. When I want a bunch of strangers to follow me around, I’ll open a Twitter account and announce that I am Ashton Kutcher.

The FBI Wants to Know What You Do Online

February 6th, 2010

The FBI wants Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to save your browsing history. FBI Director Robert Mueller wants ISPs to track “origin and destination information” about their customers’ browsing habits and store them for authorities’ use for two full years.

If the FBI has its way, it would mean that clearing your browser history and erasing cookies from your computer won’t be enough to protect your privacy. Though the FBI would only be able to access the information if they have a warrant, the amount of data ISPs would have to save is going to be huge.

Recording what Web sites are visited is likely to draw both practical and privacy objections. Still, no details are currently available on the exact information the FBI is calling for.

Google Toolbar Ignores Your Privacy

January 26th, 2010

Toolbars are rarely worth the effort. They mostly interrupt work, weigh heavy on your browser and are relatively useless. To date, I haven’t seen a good toolbar.

Unfortunately, a lot of free software comes bundled with annoyances such as the Google toolbar. Users rarely pay attention to what they are installing, and find themselves with a bad addition to their browser, that to top it all, also infringes on their privacy.

Now it’s revealed that Google toolbar ignores your privacy and keeps tracking you even if you disabled that option:

…even when users specifically instruct that the Google Toolbar be “disable[d]”, and even when the Google Toolbar seems to be disabled (e.g., because it disappears from view), Google Toolbar continues tracking users’ browsing.

And another annoying feature:

The Google Toolbar also added a “Google” button to my Taskbar, immediately adjacent to the Start button. The Toolbar installer added this button without any disclosure whatsoever in the installation sequence – not on the toolbar.google.com web page, not in the installer EXE, not anywhere else.

Pay attention to what you are inserting into your computer. Most of the time, toolbars aren’t needed and are more harmful than beneficial.