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Google's Privacy Policy Changes Prompt EU Probe

Google Privacy Policy

By GABRIELE STEINHAUSER   02/ 3/12 11:53 AM ET  AP

BRUSSELS -- The European Union's data protection authorities have asked Google to delay the rollout of its new privacy policy until they have verified that it doesn't break the bloc's data protection laws.

Google publicized its new privacy rules – which regulate how the Web giant uses the enormous amounts of personal data its collects through its search engine, email and other services – with much fanfare last week.

Since then, it has launched a huge publicity campaign informing its users around the globe of the new policy, which is set to come into force on March 1.

But that launch date may now be under threat.

In a letter to Google Chief Executive Larry Page, Jacob Kohnstamm, the chairman of the group of 27 national privacy regulators in the EU, said the French data protection agency has started a probe of the new rules and how they will affect Google users in the EU.

"We call for a pause (in the rollout of the new rules) in the interests of ensuring that there can be no misunderstanding about Google's commitments to information rights of their users and EU citizens, until we have completed our analysis," Kohnstamm wrote in the letter, which was sent Thursday and published on Friday.

Google's search engine has a market share of more than 90 percent in the EU, with rival services like Microsoft's Bing gaining little traction. The EU's competition authorities are already examining whether Google uses this dominance to stop other search engines from entering the market.

The new policy makes it easier for Google to combine the data of one person using different services such as the search engine, YouTube or Gmail if he is logged into his Google account. That allows Google to create a broader profile of that user and thus target advertising based on that person's interests and search history more accurately. Advertising is the main way Google makes its money.

But the company argues that combining the data into one profile also makes search results more relevant and allows a user to cross-navigate between different services more easily.

Google said in a statement Friday that it had briefed data protection agencies before making its new policy announcement and that none of them had had substantial concerns at the time.

"Delaying the policy would cause significant confusion," it said in the emailed note.

The company also published a letter by Global Privacy Counsel Peter Fleischer in response to Kohnstamm. Fleischer said the main purpose of the new policy is to combine the more than 70 different rules for Google's wide-ranging services into one, that is simpler and more readable.

"Our updated privacy policy makes it clear in one comprehensive document that if a user is signed in we may combine information she has provided from one service with information from other services," Fleischer wrote. He added that people can continue to use Google services without being logged into an account or create different profiles for different services.

Koosje Verhaar, a spokeswoman for Kohnstamm, who is also the head of the Dutch data protection agency, said she couldn't comment on how long the analysis of the new policy will take.

She declined to say whether there were specific parts of the new rules that triggered the probe, but added that the data protection authorities of several nations, including France, Ireland and Germany, had already publicly expressed concerns over the policy just days after it was announced.

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BRUSSELS -- The European Union's data protection authorities have asked Google to delay the rollout of its new privacy policy until they have verified that it doesn't break the bloc's data protection ...
BRUSSELS -- The European Union's data protection authorities have asked Google to delay the rollout of its new privacy policy until they have verified that it doesn't break the bloc's data protection ...
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flashfyre
Honore de Balzac
11:17 AM on 02/05/2012
I feel a bit sorry for google, they have to respond to User Data / Profile activity LE requests, it's part of doing business.

So they publish the countries and the number of requests processed. I think it's around 13,000 per year in the USA.

That's pretty transparent. Some companies don't tell their users much of anything.
10:00 AM on 02/05/2012
Ummmm....Does anybody else feel their intelligence has been insulted? This new policy to aggregate everything about you is a PRIVACY policy?

lol. Don't even know what to make of the fact that they call it a "privacy policy".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mrhandyman3105
Independent Voting Democrat This Year
11:16 PM on 02/04/2012
Why is everyone is surprised? What better way to collect information on people to be used for whatever profit making motive that they want, and selling to the Advertisers, Collections Agencies, and Law Enforcement.
04:18 PM on 02/04/2012
Reading their policy it is really not much different than the policies you get when using most service providers (some are web based and others are not), and the differences are minor. A few of the ones I checked are Apple (iCloud, iPhone, etc...), Microsoft (Hotmail, MSN, Bing if you are logged in, online storage, etc...), Facebook, Twitter, Sprint, AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile (if you use their cell service) even several isp providers.

So is this beef really all about google or the state of privacy and data mining in general?

My other question is we usually hear about privacy policy changes the day the occur, at least this time we get some warning about it.
03:49 PM on 02/04/2012
So much for do no evil...
03:09 PM on 02/04/2012
GOOGLE IS "WATCHING YOU". Hey you get something for FREE then you give Google the right to data-mine, data-correlate and do data analytic's on everything you do. Another reason I sold my Google Android phone and went back to the Blackberry. At least RIM (Blackberry) isn't looking at everything I do. The U.S. Government needs to investigate GOOGLE, but then again if they do, we all would find out that huge amount of government monies have been going to GOOGLE for years to spy on Americans.
10:08 AM on 02/04/2012
The United States is WORLD LEADER in implementing BIG BROTHER SYNDROME.

We have Homeland Security, Cameras at every street corner, cameras in every store and mall, "ON STAR" tracking, every fitted vehicle, every second EVERYWHERE and ANYWHERE IT GOES (when was the last time you read of car theft...) "ONSTAR" can also be turned on from the "Other End", and listen to every conversation in the fitted vehicle. The "EZ PASS" tags are picked up by every 2nd. or 3rd streetlanp on the thruway for further exact locations. The government (and parents who want to pay the fee) can triangulate the exact location of every cell phone in the country, along with it's past history,m anytime, EVERY noverseas telephone call is monitored, no exceptions. And that's just a start....
06:40 AM on 02/04/2012
See This funny Google privacy pic :
http://pankajdoharey-wvof.posterous.com/googles-new-unified-funny-privacy-policy-5357
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Areyoukiddingg
We need a Reset
10:34 PM on 02/03/2012
Sounds to me like the Europeans aren't as "captured" by big biz as their American counterparts.
nishioka
uɐıןɐɹʇsnɐ sı oıq-oɹɔıɯ sıɥʇ
03:46 AM on 02/04/2012
Here we call that "burdening the job creators with harsh regulations", and members of a certain faction in Washington would be falling over each other in the race to see who could call for defunding and dismantling of that privacy group.
09:58 PM on 02/03/2012
Thank you, EU! I am glad someone is taking data privacy seriously, and protecting competition between search engines/’Net companies. What happened to the U.S.A.? Why have we fallen down on the job and put corporate interests first? I see the ideals with which I grew uphonored more in the breach than in observation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
08:16 PM on 02/03/2012
They better think REAL hard about it. I'm all ready to give up on them altogether--and I have been using Google almost every day. I imagine millions of others feel the same way. Bye-bye!

^ ^
08:38 PM on 02/03/2012
I'm with ya. Privacy, in this Interwebby Thing World, is a rapidly fading concept. This Google Trick is hastening the process by quantum leaps.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptainRenault
Here to keep an eye on the rascals.
03:30 PM on 02/06/2012
And in today's NY Times, there is this..

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/05/opinion/sunday/facebook-is-using-you.html?_r=1&src=me&ref=general

^ ^
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:28 PM on 02/03/2012
If users always opt in rather than opt out, then I don't see a problem provided the verbal agreement is easy to comprehend so the user knows what to expect. Google should use all that brainpower to provide demos in youtube in order to buttress their case.
08:34 PM on 02/03/2012
That would clear up an otherwise muddy proposition. The clearer the picture, the more likely people will not like what they see. Kinda like asking a snake oil salesman to list all the ingredients on the bottle label. Light of day shows the dark side.
07:14 PM on 02/03/2012
Another reason I am glad I stopped using "the google".
08:36 PM on 02/03/2012
I think I'm not far behind ya.
05:57 PM on 02/03/2012
I am so done with Google they jumped the shark with their new privacy policy
08:36 PM on 02/03/2012
Unlike The Fonz, I think Google has landed squarely in the tank -- and the shark is gaining ground.