Google isn't being 'forthcoming' with Congress on privacy

By Brendan Sasso         - 02/02/12 04:54 PM ET

http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/208385-google-not-forthcoming-during-congressional-questioning

House lawmakers grilled Google officials for two hours on Thursday about the 
company's recent privacy changes, but Rep. Mary Bono Mack (R-Calif.) said she 
wasn't satisfied with their answers.

"At the end of the day, I don't think their answers to us were very forthcoming 
necessarily in what this really means for the safety of our families and our 
children," Bono Mack told reporters after the closed-door briefing. 

Bono Mack is the chairwoman of the Energy and Commerce Committee's Commerce, 
Manufacturing and Trade subcommittee, which has jurisdiction over data privacy 
issues. 
Pablo Chavez, Google's director of public policy, and Michael Yang, a Google 
senior counsel, answered questions from Energy and Commerce lawmakers, 
including Reps. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), Joe Barton (R-Texas), G.K. Butterfield 
(D-N.C.) and Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.).

Google has come under fire since it announced last week it will consolidate the 
privacy policies of its  various services into a single document. 

The change allows Google to share user information between its services. Words 
in private emails could influence search results on YouTube, for example. 

The company says the change makes its privacy policy easier to understand and 
will help it tailor search results to individual users. Google officials note 
that users can still adjust their privacy settings.

"By being more simple, [the privacy policy] is actually more complicated," Bono 
Mack said.

She said the Google officials gave lawmakers a "thorough walkthrough of the 
technology that exists" to control privacy settings, but that she remains 
concerned about users' ability to control the information they share with 
Google. 

"The concern of Congress is how much active participation does a user have to 
do to protect their own privacy," she said. 

Butterfield emphasized he wants Google to provide a "one-stop" site where users 
can opt out of tracking across the company's platforms.

Bono Mack said she uses Gmail but is considering switching to a different email 
service in light of the privacy changes.

Google's officials did not fully explain whether users can delete data that the 
company has collected about them and how long the company keeps the data, Bono 
Mack said.

When asked what she thinks lawmakers should do, she said Congress might not be 
the answer. But she suggested users might switch to new services "if Google 
goes too far."

She said Google's privacy settlement with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) 
over its Buzz social network did not come up during the briefing, but her aides 
plan to speak to FTC staffers to determine whether the privacy changes violate 
the company's agreement. 

Bono Mack said she plans to hold more hearings on privacy issues this year, 
some of which could focus specifically on Google's changes.

"There's a growing angst in the Congress about privacy — there's no question," 
she said.


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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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