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Yawn.
If you don't want Google having your mother's maiden name, don't give them it.
Its already got most people's, either from database data leaked on the Internet or when it drove past houses....
Seems you are in the no-harm-camp, better stay there to be safe!
The move marks a U-turn for the ICO which originally ruled that no data breach had occurred.
I also thought of the former World Chess Champion Wilhelm Steinitz who, when repeatedly given chess advice by an amateur, turned to him and asked "Sir, have you ever seen a monkey examine a watch?"
Steve
DEFINE_bool(discard_encrypted_body, true, "Discard bodies of encrypted 802.11 frames");
DEFINE_bool(discard_control_frame, false, "Discard 802.11 control frames");
DEFINE_bool(discard_data_frame, false, "Discard all 802.11 data frames");
DEFINE_bool(discard_management_frame, false, "Discard all 802.11 management frames");
I do not agree. I actually think that commercially there is.There is no upside to having it....
I do not agree. I actually think that commercially there is.
LOCAL services/searches is going to be big business, having such data could help profile cites/areas/streets/houses and keep fat-old-G ahead of the rest so giving them an unfair advantage.
Its not right at all.
The point is, Google never intended it to be that way. They have nothing to gain from that information .
Do you think that Google still has a stellar reputation?...stellar reputation...
Do you think that Google still has a stellar reputation?
My view remains that for an organisation of Google's size to blame this on someone who was having a play with some software is not really believeable. It would have been incredibly stupid of Google to allow this to happen unintentionally.
http://www.thinq.co.uk/2010/10/27/google-tries-explain-street-view-mistake/
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I can assure you that I fully understand how Google operates. I know all about their 20% time. I am now in my tenth year in this business and I have not had my eyes shut for all of this time.Then you clearly don't understand how Google operates.
Well it sure as hell should! They are now one of the World's largest companies and they need to behave appropriately. I can just see a judge shaking his head as they tell him, "Sorry your honour, but we are geeks. It is not really our fault." (which is effectively what they have done).Whether or not some folks in Germany will take offense to you mapping their WiFi won't enter your head.
I think in this case it may be you who does not understand how Google operates. They are not at all geeky in their taking over of the technologies developed by hundreds of small companies. Don't make the mistake of thinking that they invented all of these revolutionary products during their 20% time.Google's virtue and their issue is that they don't wait around to do things. They get 5 guys excited about it and let them do it. It brings us some of the most revolutionary products on the web and sometimes, they miss something.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/11/17/google_facebook_wiretapping/Top officials from the FBI traveled to Silicon Valley on Tuesday to persuade Facebook and Google executives to support a proposal that would make it easier for law enforcement to wiretap the companies' users.
A Google official declined to comment to the NYT, while a Facebook spokesman said it would be premature for executives of the social network to take a position.
Compelling (and interesting) evidence that Google is manually pushing its own services to the top of the SERPs.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/11/15/google_accused_of_hard_coding_own_results_into_search/
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Earl started a thread about this a few days ago.
I'd suggest you read the blog post that story is based on and marvel at its ignorance.
Steve
Can't you say what you mean for a change instead of hiding behind your snide remarks?
Dupe post ...
I see you are still trying to as "clever" and aggressive as ever? Well done, I have to concede that you are good at it.![]()
Here's what I actually said in my original remarks...My statement was pretty clear. It was linking back to my original remarks that you are on a personal vendetta against Google, for whatever reason, and that you'll post any old tripe to try and "win" your case; even if that tripe has absolutely no basis or fact.
This has turned into nothing but a *****ing thread. I have Unsubscribed thankfully.
Sorry about that Seiretto.
I am also very disappointed in how this has turned out and I must admit that I have been taken aback by the bile and vitriol that it has generated. I have been involved in similar discussions in other more Internet dedicated forums. I have also read quite a lot about this situation and this is the only place where people have been dismissing Google's transgressions - quite unusual!
Sorry about that Seiretto.
I am also very disappointed in how this has turned out and I must admit that I have been taken aback by the bile and vitriol that it has generated. I have been involved in similar discussions in other more Internet dedicated forums. I have also read quite a lot about this situation and this is the only place where people have been dismissing Google's transgressions - quite unusual!
The ICO ruled in July that the company was unlikely to have collected "significant amounts" of personal data with its Street View cars only to decide in the first week of November that the company had in fact committed a "significant breach" of the DPA.
http://www.ico.gov.uk/~/media/documents/pressreleases/2010/google_undertaking_press_release_19112010.ashxAlan Eustace, Google's vice-president of engineering and research, has signed an undertaking committing the company to put in place improved training measures on security and data protection. Google will also now require product engineers to maintain a privacy design document for every new project before it is launched.
Fortunately (IMO of course) people who class this as irrelevant are very much in the minority.
But well done in linking to a press release and then a Guardian report of the press release.