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    The Week

    Google's new privacy policy: 'Evil'?

    The search giant will soon begin sharing your personal data across almost all of its services — a violation, critics say, of Google's "don't be evil" ethos

    Google is changing its privacy policies to allow the sharing of a user's data across 60 of its web services, including Gmail, YouTube, and personalized search (but not Google Wallet, Google Books, or the Chrome browser). For example, says Brent Rose at Gizmodo, "if you searched for 'Furbies' on Google's homepage (for some freaky reason) and then later went to YouTube, you might see Furbies videos pop up. That's new. Previously, data was compartmentalized between applications." Privacy advocates and many tech commentators aren't happy, especially because there's no way to opt out of the cross-Google data sharing. Does this change violate Google's "don't be evil" philosophy?

    Yes. Google is turning evil: Google claims that this change better serves its users, but really, but I think it's really all about selling more targeted ads, says Mat Honan at Gizmodo. Come March 1, "things you could do in relative anonymity today will be explicitly associated with your name, your face, your phone number," and everything else you put in Google's hands. I'm "calling this evil" because Google is violating the core promise of respecting its users — a promise that Google used to "get us all under its feel-good tent."
    "Google's broken promise: The end of 'don't be evil'"

    C'mon. People are overreacting: This "internet freakout" mostly shows that "no one actually reads privacy policies," says Kashmir Hill at Forbes. We have all given Google permission to share our information among Google services since 2005. The only change is that now it will actually use all that stuff it knows about you to, say, recommend YouTube videos. "When Google starts bundling everyting it knows about its users and selling that to insurance companies, background check companies, and the Department of Homeland Security, that's when I'll trot out the 'evil label.'" For now, "kudos to them for being so explicit" about their privacy tweaks.
    "Internet freakout over Google's new privacy policy proves..."

    The real issue is Google's ambitions: Of course Google isn't evil, says Adam Pash at Lifehacker. "But it's never been harder to take their famous 'Don't be evil' motto seriously." Google started out wanting to give us the web, then get out of the way. Now it "wants to grab every piece of the internet you use," trying for "world domination" like Facebook or, more damningly, 1990s-era AOL. That's not the Google we came to love, and it's "a fantastic bummer" for anyone who likes a free, innovative web.
    "Google is Facebook is AOL: What happens when a Good Google goes bad"

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    13 comments

    • Bubba  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      Shame on you, Google! You sold us out!
    • Bobby  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  4 mths ago
      Good liberal policy, along the lines that freedom is evil, and obeying the government is good.
      • truth hurts 4 mths ago
        Hey Bobby - who wrote the Freedom Act again? Liberals?
    • JOHN  •  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  •  4 mths ago
      The start of getting into your personal life. Whats next? We will all be monitored before long on everything. It's comming folks. One small step at a time is all they need. Can't do it all at once. Thats how this stuff creeps in. A little at a time so we get used to it a little at a time.
    • MDE  •  Decatur, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      It is beyond scary out there. Total information awareness is what they are after. I wish Orwell would have been wrong. But he wasn't. He was a genius who saw the future long before it happened.
    • flyswatter  •  Gainesville, Georgia  •  4 mths ago
      Dont use GOOGLE, people. Case Closed.
    • Mark  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  4 mths ago
      Quit FB yesterday and switched my search engine to bing
    • Yard Dog Mazurka  •  4 mths ago
      Hey, it was "Don't *be* evil," okay? Didn't say anything about *doing* evil, did it?
    • Rasser  •  4 mths ago
      I've actually been using the Altavista search engine lately to avoid Google. I really don't miss Google at all. They have gotten so big they have lost respect for their users and their privacy.
    • TheDevilzAdvocate  •  Detroit, Michigan  •  4 mths ago
      Many unhappy facebook users were sure to migrate to a more user-friendly and secure Google+ before something like this happened. Why don't companies learn from other's mistakes?
    • Topkick  •  4 mths ago
      Google claims that their actions will make things easier and more efficient. And I agree. It will make it much EASIER for GOOGLE to sell our user profiles to marketing agencies etc., and will make them MUCH more money, VERY EFFICIENTLY!
    • Kirara  •  Salt Lake City, Utah  •  4 mths ago
      While you shouldn't HAVE to do this, there is a simple fix. Go into your browser settings and set it up so that your browsing history, cookies and internet files are cleared everytime you log off your computed. Do a disk clean up and defrag once a week and have good anti virus software. It is annoying , but that is the price we pay for privacy anymore
    • Dave  •  Rockwood, Michigan  •  4 mths ago
      Watch GBTV. He spelled this out really well.
    • Appletree  •  4 mths ago
      What would you expect? Typical liberal business practices.
      • JOHN 4 mths ago
        They want total controll. A Conservetive doesn't like meat then they don't eat meat. A liberal doesn't like meat so no one should eat meat. Lord have mercy if you disagree with one of them. Freedom of speech only applys if you agree with them. Just try to disagree and watch them foam at the mouth and the spit flying out of their mouth. They are like rabid dogs.
      • jg 4 mths ago
        Typical conservative business practices. Dergulate deregulate deregulate, the business is always right regardeless of what they want to do because they are only trying to maximise profits. Liberals want consumers to have the liberty to make their own choices and be able to opt out. Conservatives nowadays are always trying to regulate your personal choices and to give business full accesss to them (regardeless of your objections)
      • Caliban 4 mths ago
        So, John, when are conservatives are going to stop opposing gay marriage?