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Experts divided on value of Google's new privacy policies

Experts divided on value of Google's new privacy policies

By:  Nestor E Arellano  On: 15 Mar 2007 For: ITWorldCanada.com Creator

Canadian analysts are divided on the value and impact of Google's recently announced privacy measures. While one observer says they are inadequate, another welcomes them, saying they will bolster user confidence in the search company

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Canadian analysts are divided on the value and impact of Google's recently announced privacy measures.

While one observer says they are inadequate, another welcomes them, saying they will bolster user confidence in the search company.

Mountain View, Calif-based Google Inc. announced, on Wednesday that the new privacy measures it's adopting would make it difficult to connect online search requests with the people making them.

Google said it would provide its search engine users greater privacy by removing from its system – every 18 to 24 months – key elements that could lead to users' being identified.

The schedule is designed to comply with an assortment of regulations around the world that stipulate how long search engines are supposed to retain user information.

A Canadian privacy advocate called Google's recent measures unsatisfactory.

"In my view two years is still a long time to keep this sort of information," said Philippa Lawson, director, Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic in Ottawa.

Noting that Google is "still way off the mark", Lawson said the company could have been "trying to get good press and appease both sides."

She said the timetable proposed by Google coincides with demands by some European Union governments seeking greater access to Internet users' data, but could also be seen as bolstering privacy rights.

Commercial companies, Lawson said, might need to hang onto customer data for marketing purposes but there is not such need for search engines to retain this sort of information for two years.

Lawson said there have been numerous reports of security agencies using people's Web habits to link them with certain terrorist groups.

Indeed, she said, law enforcement agencies in the U.S. have been given an almost carte-blanche access private sector databases to for counterterrorism investigation.

"The more power you give governments the more potential there is for abuse." She said putting a two-year limit on data retention is akin to "basically treating everyone as a suspect."

Another Canadian observer, however, took a very different stand from Lawson.

"These [measures] are going to boost user confidence in Google," according to Joe Greene, vice-president, IT research, IDC Canada Ltd.

He said the company's move is "a step and the right direction" and expects other search engine companies to follow suit. "Certainly other search engines will have to respond in some form to match or exceed this move."

He said the "big question" is whether this development will generate a "backlash" from pro-law enforcement organizations.


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Nestor E Arellano Nestor E Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more

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