Google Rejects EU Request On Privacy Policy Consolidation

EU regulators want Google to delay its plan to combine privacy policies. But 
Google doesn't like that idea.

By Thomas Claburn,  InformationWeek 
February 03, 2012
URL: http://www.informationweek.com/news/government/policy/232600239 

A European regulatory group focused on data protection has asked Google to 
delay its planned privacy policy consolidation, which is scheduled to take 
effect on March 1, 2012.

In a letter sent on Thursday to Google CEO Larry Page, Jacob Kohnstamm, 
Chairman of the Article 29 Working Party, asked for "a pause" before Google 
implements its privacy policy adjustments "in the interests of ensuring that 
there can be no misunderstanding about Google's commitments to information 
rights of their users and EU citizens."

Having insisted repeatedly over the past week that its commitment to user 
privacy remains unchanged, Google on Friday declined to alter its schedule.

In a reply to the Article 29 Working Party, Google global privacy counsel Peter 
Fleischer explains that EU data protection officials were briefed prior to 
Google's policy change announcement on January 24 and that none of the 
officials suggested a delay would appropriate.

[ Could cloud computing be constrained by copyright law? Read Google: Digital 
Music Case Has Cloud Law Implications. ]

Google last week said it would be replacing some 60 privacy policies and terms 
of service documents with a single set of rules governing its handling of 
personal data and usage of its products. Alma Whitten, Google's director of 
privacy, product, and engineering, explained that Google wants to make its 
policies easier to understand and to update its policies to reflect its 
intention to combine user data across products as a way to improve user 
personalization.

Already under fire for integrating content from its Google+ social network into 
its search results and for alleged abuse of its search dominance, the company's 
policy shift prompted a backlash. U.S. lawmakers expressed concern over the 
inability of Google users to opt-out of Google-wide data profiles, and 
Microsoft--which has been vocal in urging regulators to restrain Google--took 
the opportunity to claim that Google's planned changes will make it more 
difficult for people to control their information.

Google last week attempted to "set the record straight" about its privacy 
policy changes. And on Wednesday, the company took to "busting myths about our 
approach to privacy."

The damage control continued on Thursday, with Google executives answering 
lawmakers' questions at a closed-door hearing before the House Subcommittee on 
Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade. It looks like Google may yet have further 
work to do: According to political news site The Hill, Rep. Mary Bono Mack 
(R-Calif.), chairman of the subcommittee, was dissatisfied with Google's 
response.



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

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