Your Life as an Open Book

By TOM ZELLER Jr.
August 12, 2006
The New York Times

Privacy advocates and search industry watchers have long warned that 
the vast and valuable stores of data collected by search engine 
companies could be vulnerable to thieves, rogue employees, mishaps or 
even government subpoenas.

Four major search companies were served with government subpoenas 
for their search data last year, and now once again, privacy 
advocates can say, "We told you so."

AOL's misstep last week in briefly posting some 19 million Internet 
search queries made by more than 600,000 of its unwitting customers 
has reminded many Americans that their private searches - for 
solutions to debt or bunions or loneliness - are not entirely their 
own.

So, as one privacy group has asserted, is AOL's blunder likely to be 
the search industry's "Data Valdez," like the 1989 Exxon oil spill 
that became the rallying cry for the environmental movement?

Maybe. But in an era when powerful commercial and legal forces ally 
in favor of holding on to data, and where the surrender of one's 
digital soul happens almost imperceptibly, change is not likely to 
come swiftly.

Most of the major search engines like Google, Yahoo and MSN 
collect and store information on what terms are searched, when they 
were queried and what computer and browser was used. And to the 
extent that the information can be used to match historic search 
behavior emanating from a specific computer, it is a hot commodity.

As it stands now, little with regard to search queries is private. No 
laws clearly place search requests off-limits to advertisers, law 
enforcement agencies or academic researchers, beyond the terms that 
companies set themselves.

...


http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/12/technology/12privacy.html



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