DoJ search requests: Yahoo, AOL, MSN said "Yes" 629
d2viant writes "Elaborating on a previous article on Slashdot, it appears that the search engines which complied for Department of Justice requests for logs were apparently AOL, MSN, and Yahoo. According to the article, Justice is not requesting this data in the course of a criminal investigation, but in order to defend its argument that the Child Online Protection Act is constitutionally sound."
Sore Thumb (Score:3, Interesting)
If DoJ is truly interested in porn, especially child porn, will Google surrender all releated searches?
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:4, Insightful)
HornySpiderV1.0 (Score:4, Insightful)
I hope not. I hate child porn and all that, but that doesn't mean that big brother should be watching everything.
Agreed.
But if they're gonna be watching me (I personally like Yahoo for the combination of search and headlines), I can assure them that they're going to get a hell of a show. I'll go so far as to create a spider which hunts for kitty porn ("MmMMMmm... Next we have Fluffy the Persian. She's an 8-year-old who can lick her own ass and likes it when her 30-year-old master rubs her stomach.") and then pipes keywords and sentences from that directly into Yahoo and then uses the search results to find more sites to spider.
Naturally, being my first real programming project since University, it will be released open-source in case the community happens to have suggestions on how I can improve its efficiency.
Re:HornySpiderV1.0 (Score:3, Informative)
Thus, any such spider should be 'clicking' those redirect links to inflate the stats somewhat
Incidentally, if you want a starting point, have a look at http://www.coofercat.com/wiki/EuropeanElectronicSu rveillance [coofercat.com]
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:3, Insightful)
Legally speaking, U.S. people under 18 aren't supposed to be looking at any kind of porn. They aren't legally allowed to drink, smoke, or vote, either.
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:3, Informative)
I just looked at the Budget for 1999 and 2005. 1998's actual spending on everything education-like was ~ 46,700,000,000. 2004's actual spending on everything education-like was ~ 52,542,000,000. That's not an increase of 86%. 46.7b is around 86% of 52.5b, true. But that isn't an 86% increase. Sorry.
Source: http://www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/fy06/browse.htm
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:2, Interesting)
Why not search google for child porn and bust the sites you can find? I doubt that anywhere near 10% of all child porn is on websites, indexed by google. And of that 10% of it, 9% is
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:3, Insightful)
categorize the terms
aggregate the terms via cookie data
profile the cookie owner
correlate the search terms against profiles
and then make inferences that profile A has a X% chance of being a male aged 10-12 and that Y% of people with profile A search for porn
Once they have found politically suitable figures for X and Y for N child like profiles they will announce that this is proof that Something Must Be Done and oh look,, this Bill here will do nicely
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:2, Insightful)
Good Morning America ! (Score:5, Funny)
Sesame Street is the first to react with the DVD (thought lost) title "Frogs'n Sow - Peggy Gets It !"
On other news, the pope died of a heart attack while watching what he thought were Sesame Streets Re-run, and GW Bush commited seppuku with a preztel on seeing the show.
Now the Dow-Jones, with the barrel @ 199$, the Emirates decided to buy the US of A..."
Do I really need to put a "/laugh, it's funny" marker ? 8p
not only that (Score:5, Interesting)
The thumbnails are stored at a google location.
Does that mean that Google itself is hosting illegal files?
Re:not only that (Score:5, Interesting)
Yep, and so do you in your cache. Whats really fun is a 17 year old with a webcam that doesnt like you and knows you have {autoaccept | web based upload stuff | ftp | whatever}.
Kiddieporn laws badly need reformed. Why is legal to jerk it to movies of 18 year olds that are late bloomers+made up to look even younger, being simulated-kidnap and raped.. Yet its illegal for your beach vacation pictures to have a 16 year old topless in the background?
It makes about as much sense as chewbakka living on endor.
Re:not only that (Score:5, Insightful)
Hell, it's a lot easier than that. If you have an email account, anyone can make you a criminal by emailing you some kiddie porn and then calling the authorities to report its presence on your computer. Even if you delete it as soon as you realize what it is, you stilled viewed it, you still posessed it, and the incriminating evidence is still on your hard drive...
Re:not only that (Score:5, Insightful)
Cool eh?
Re:not only that (Score:3, Funny)
I believe that's what got us into this mess in the first place!
Re:not only that (Score:3, Insightful)
Criminals, yes, but it doesn't make them adults. What kind of message does that send, when the only way to be treated as an adult is to do something extremely bad?
If they're mature enough to take full responsibility for their choices, then let them choose a candidate in elections. Let them choose to put their ow
Re:not only that (Score:3, Informative)
No sexual acts + no nudity = child pr0n
It's a lot worse than you think.
You're misrepresenting the Knox case (Score:5, Informative)
I think that speaks for itself. Child pornography laws are not just about exposed skin; they're around to prevent the exploitation of children in which Knox was very obviously (and self-admittedly) involved.
Re:You're misrepresenting the Knox case (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:not only that (Score:5, Funny)
Oh please, your question is purely hypothetical, and has no real bearing on reality. I mean, if you or I had a chance in hell of doing either of those things, would we be posting on /.?
A related story (Score:5, Funny)
A friend of mine is a chef and found out the hard way...do NOT google for a "loose meat sandwich"!!!
Re:A related story (Score:3, Funny)
I hear you. I once tried to find out the answer to the age-old Monty Python question. Do not google for "speed swallow".
Re:A related story (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sore Thumb -- Google Sued! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:4, Insightful)
Hummmmm.
Re:Sore Thumb (Score:3, Interesting)
Meanwhile, Google is in full compliance with the law, and believes that certain lawyers are overstepping their constitutional boundries by requesting data that they believe is not only a trade secret, but also an infringment of privacy. Sure, lawyers can sue them all they like, but Google has a very good shot at winning the case.
This
What did they find? (Score:5, Funny)
Giraffes. Who couldn't appreciate those long necks? So slender
Why confront me? It's obvious.
She's stalling until the police arrive.
"Nothing you saw was illegal - in the countries it was filmed. "
So appropriate [penny-arcade.com].
If not in size... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:If not in size... (Score:5, Funny)
Amen
Re:If not in size... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:If not in size... (Score:3, Interesting)
I usually don't like to debate the Second amendment with people on the Internet, but sometimes I just feel like sayin' stuff, you know? :-P
Let's disregard for the moment the fact that the Second Amendment does not explicitly restrict the right to bear arms to members of the militia. Let's forget the fact that the Department of Justice has specifically asserted that the Second Amendment secures an individual right, not a collective one. Let's as
Re:If not in size... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:If not in size... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:If not in size... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, not entirely. The US can veto anything voted on at the Security Council, but the Security Council isn't the only bit of the UN with teeth. To take a concrete example, when the UN was set up, the Republic of China (controlled by the Kuomintang/Guomindang party)
Re:If not in size... (Score:3, Informative)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/22/1
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=98/08/31/1
Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:5, Insightful)
While I personally don't like what the US goverment has done in the name of "security" , this has nothing to do with this particular case.
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:5, Insightful)
Regardless! There is no need for the government to monitor search logs. None. Whether they're aggregated, impersonal, or not.
It may be simple aggregation now
Maybe I'm overreacting
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:3, Interesting)
More to the point, if this were some grad student doing 'serious' research as opposed to the Justice Dept trying to, horrors of horrors, obtain some actual numbers to support a position in court I seriously doubt there would be all this hullaballoo. Of course I doubt Google would have assisted a grad student either, but Yahoo! or MSN might have. Google didn't help he
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:3, Interesting)
If they are trying to prove it, hook up a computer in front of the SCOTUS and show them. Then show them with filters in place. If the filters aren't doing the job, then the SCOTUS might reopen the case.
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't speak for anyone else, but with a lot of the stuff the U.S. government is doing lately, I'm more scared of it than I am of any terrorists.
I would never support a lot of the stuff they're doing, but it would seem a bit more legitimate if they could show any of this stuff was actually having an effect. So far they've cut back our freedom quite a bit, but to my knowledge they haven't prevented a single attack. It reminds me of the Simpsons episode where Lisa tells Homer she has a rock that keeps tigers away.
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:5, Insightful)
To me, that's the scary part. Perceived legitimacy means that we'll be saddled with more and more BS like we've been getting.
I don't want to see effectiveness -- I want to see CLEAR and PRESENT DANGER.
Until then, get out and stay out, Uncle Sam.
The UK isn't much better (Score:3, Informative)
It's not just you guys. We have this sort of crap in the UK, too.
One of my favourite political comments of recent times came from Lord Hoffman, a Law Lord (our highest judicial authority). In the conclusion of a review of our recent "anti-terrorist" legislation, he stated:
I take some small comfort in the fact that the
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why not set up a method in Slasdhot whereby YRO and related articles have a link that allows a registered user to forward his forum comments to his/her appropriate representative(s) in their district? Non-profits are doing this now with great effect. Instead of preaching to the choir, shouldn't our +5 Insightful comments be forwarded to our representatives and news agencies. Can you just imagine the effect we could have by Slashdotting Congress!!!
A lot of people will say that nobody in Congress reads email, but that's not entirely true. Your opinions are put in For and Against piles and some are even read; I know this from personal experience. By hitting Congress and the news agencies we also generate awareness for many issues that go largely unreported like black box voting, DMCA, and so on.
So Slashdot editors, how about it?
X
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:5, Funny)
One of citizens of your state, x_man, would like you to inform you about an important issue regarding "EU Sofware Patent Argument to Reopen"
http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=174228&ci
Please note that we consider this post important becuase it was voted by at least 5 people who may or may not be American citizens, may or may not vote in your state and may or may not be some 12-year old kid who should really be studying for his test tomorrow.
Thank you for your attention.
Nope. (Score:5, Insightful)
In fact, I feel less safe. WAY less safe. Now I have to worry about all the people in the world who are pissed at me for being an American, the new people in the world who hate me because W has pissed them off, and now I have to worry about my own government spying on me and throwing me in jail if I type something into a search engine that returns something naughty.
And that can happen without you doing anything wrong. Ever type in a search that returned a few surprises? How about your wireless access point. Are you SURE it can't be hacked? You BETTER be.
Devil's Advocate (Score:3, Insightful)
At least, they feel a lot safer than they did on September 12, 2001. Americans were pretty spastic then, and that's why PATRIOT Act I was passed pretty quietly. They were scared. I was scared. It was pretty frickin' scary.
Today, they feel a lot safer. The follow-up attack that everybody expected never materialized. They're not glued to CNN. They're not kissing their wives perhaps a final good-bye on the way o
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:3, Interesting)
This very same oil-dependent country whose regime currently in power has never brought to justice those persons who engaged in an anthrax attack (domestic WMD attack) against the liberal press and libera
Re:Do any Americans actually feel safer? (Score:5, Informative)
Why do they need to give that information? (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean are the users of google search that much different than AOL / MSN / Yahoo???
Does the DoJ need a complete analysis? If so, let's hand this over to the US Census bureau.
Re:Why do they need to give that information? (Score:5, Insightful)
That is, of course, entirely beside the point. Constitutional restrictions on the government, both state and federal, were put in place because government powers, no matter how seemingly innocuous they appear to the general public (such as, for example, demanding search logs from a private enterprise), are prone to abuse to the point that, in the long run, abuse is the rule rather than the exception. That is specifically why the federal government was so severely restricted when it was actually bound by the constitution (no government can be restricted to respecting civil liberties in the long run, as all forms of government are subject to corruption, but that is an entirely different discussion).
This isn't news! (Score:5, Interesting)
The ONLY way to protect against this sort of information being used by law enforcement is to never collect it in the first place. Only collect statistical obfuscated data and you won't have these problems - how valid and accurate your statistics based on aggregate data will be is another matter though.
Re:This isn't news! (Score:3, Insightful)
People. Get a grip.
The grip-losing isn't about primarily about companies... if George Bush knocked on my door and demanded something, I don't think anybody would hold it against me if I gave him what he wanted. The issue is still the knocking on the door and demanding stuff, that should never have happened.Re:This isn't news! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This isn't news! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This isn't news! (Score:3, Informative)
The Mercury News article explictly says that DOJ is asking for a court order because Google declined to comply with a subpoena.
Re:This isn't news! (Score:5, Interesting)
IANAL, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:IANAL, but... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:IANAL, but... (Score:5, Informative)
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
So, in this case I would think Google has a good leg to stand on. They are being asked to hand over information with no probable cause.
But I guess it's up to the courts to decide.
Re:IANAL, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a slight problem with your logic: The DoJ isn't monitoring Google's upstream service provider. Instead, they're asking Google for log files, stored on Google servers, which are Google's private property.
Scariest part (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Scariest part (Score:3, Interesting)
I'll see your God, not another one! and raise you one!
Outside of the ban were all sorts of guns just as devastating, just as able to be used by a crazy in the pursuit of mayhem, and only off the list because of absurd cosmetic differences. The people who go out to procure an auto-loading gun expressly to then go and shoot people with it are already beyond the reach of our ethics or regulations. If they did want to make a purchase within the ban's rules, all they had to do was purc
an example of "doing no evil"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:an example of "doing no evil"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:an example of "doing no evil"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:an example of "doing no evil"? (Score:5, Insightful)
If they came to me and told me that they needed my tape, but they didn't have a reason why, I wouldn't give it over.
If I didn't, is that not doing evil?
It is not. They aren't asking for the tape to solve a crime. They are asking for it to see if maybe a crime could have been committed. That is evil. Failing to turn over your tape, when it is known that they know of no crime committed, can not be an evil action. This isn't an issue of them investigating a crime. This is a case of them looking to find if there might be a crime. It is no different than them asking to mount a camera in your bedroom, and another in your bathroom to watch 24/7 just in case someone breaks in, but they'll keep all the tape of you anyway beacause they can. The government is not allowed to subpoena companies on fishing expeditions when they don't know of a crime. Google is the only one to recognize that and spend the money to fight the government to remind them.
Thats my only point.
I believe your point was understood and, well, presumed to be irrelevant because it isn't a close enough analogy. You presume they are investigating a crime. They are not. They are just apparently randomly collecting data they have no legal right to demand.
Useless information (Score:4, Interesting)
Unless they're planning on using this data to push anti-porn decency laws (which would be an abuse of power to say the least) the data doesn't suggest in the slightest the context in which the searches were made.
It's also unclear as to whether or not they were after information about percent of porn results in a non-porn search (for example: "breast cancer" as two unquoted words) or just the searches explicitly for porn or child pornography. What about people researching child pornography for a class? It's all so useless that this entire exercise is a waste of money and time at every level.
Re:Useless information (Score:3, Insightful)
Indeed. This is a point that true conservatives should pick up on. I'm not talking about Republican conservatives, of course. I'm talking about the truly patriotic conservatives, who love America with all of their heart. They're the kind of people who have a true respect for responsibility, especially fiscal responsibility.
As unlikely as it may sound now, it may be time for those true conservatives to realize that thei
Re:Useless information (Score:5, Interesting)
From the Google has been sued [bloomberg.com] link in a previous comment [slashdot.org]:
The Feds are not after this data in the matter of a criminal case. They are not after the data because they want to know how many people are searching for porn. They're after the data because they want to use it to bolster their case for the Child Online Protection Act [wikipedia.org], an act which is a thinly veiled attempt to push anti-porn decency laws.
So, yeah, you might want to think of it as an abuse of power. Whether it's a legitimate abuse of power or not will probably become a matter for the courts very soon.
Big Brother (Score:5, Insightful)
And if we go back a few years, we can see all of this COINTELPRO data wasn't to stop foreigners, or even people doing illegal things, but to harrass people like Martin Luther King, or breakins to the Watergate hotel to bug the Democrats. Not like the Democrats have rolled this stuff back when they got into office, Clinton's staff was over-requesting FBI files of people during "filegate".
And we're told it's because of the "War on Terror", which is a war which they never say when it will end. It reminds me of Orwell's 1984, when the government is in a state of permanent war, or war preparation anyhow. I may be older than some Slashdotters, but when I grew up I was told the US only had foreign military bases because of the USSR, and if they weren't targets of attack by Moscow, we wouldn't have them there. A decade and a half after the fall of the Berlin wall, I'm now told we are in a new state of permanent war - the cold war has become the war on terror. American military bases still circle the globe - in fact they've expanded, especially in countries south of Russia and west of China. The Russians used to say America had bases all over the world not because of Russia, but because of American imperialism. I was always told this was false, the bases were there because of the possibility of Russian attack. A decade and a half later, what the Russians used to say rings truer than what the US used to say. In fact, the government has now changed its story, and wants us to forget they used to say that, and have us all concentrate on their new permanent war.
Re:Big Brother (Score:5, Interesting)
You know what I'm starting to think more and more?
Fuck this!
The Republic I grew up loving is on life support, at best.
Is this really worth sticking around for? I didn't create all of these problems. Why should I pick up the tab? Plenty of very nice countries would love to have me (and my skills) and my wife (and her skills) and our kids (they can write essays and do math.) I'm keeping my passport current. If a majority of the American people are crazy and stupid enough to keep these nutjobs in power in November, I may just take my marbles and move on.
everything was better back then, right? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the Republic you thought you grew up loving was an illusion. Today, the US government probably has fewer ways of getting away with screwing you, screwing other nations, or restricting your speech than ever before. That doesn't keep them from trying, but that's what governments always do--it's part of the package. Furthermore, you have more ready access to education and information and more social mobility than ever before.
The debt is real,
wrong people, bad law (Score:3, Insightful)
The DOJ is trying to go after child pornographers, but they are making laws for service providers.
This discrepancy is typical of old-school thinking. Stop the profitablility of such activity by going after the people making money in the process, but, especially on the internet, this only servers to inhibit legal providers of porn.
AOL/Yahoo Misinformation... (Score:5, Informative)
AOL response...
AOL spokesman Andrew Weinstein confirmed that the company received a subpoena from the DOJ but said the information from the ACLU was not accurate.
"We did not and would not comply with such a subpoena. We gave (the DOJ) a generic list of aggregate and anonymous search terms, and not results, from a roughly one day period. There were absolutely no privacy implications," Weinstein said. "There was no way to tie those search terms to individuals or to search results." He declined to elaborate.
Yahoo response...
Yahoo acknowledged on Thursday that it complied with the Justice Department's request but said no personally identifiable information was handed over. "We are vigorous defenders of our users' privacy," said Yahoo spokeswoman Mary Osako. "We did not provide any personal information in response to the Justice Department's subpoena. In our opinion this is not a privacy issue."
MSN response.... ?????
Please don't let the details hit you in the ass in reguards to AOL/Yahoo.
Enjoy,
Re:AOL/Yahoo Misinformation... (Score:5, Informative)
A Microsoft representative said: "MSN works closely with law enforcement officials worldwide to assist them when requested....It is our policy to respond to legal requests in a very responsive and timely manner, in full compliance with applicable law." The company would not confirm or deny whether it complied with the Justice Department's subpoena.
Re:AOL/Yahoo Misinformation... (Score:4, Insightful)
Your search strings never contain personal info? (Score:5, Insightful)
So now a block of searches associates the name Geekotourist with rockets and with one or two addresses. Does this affect my privacy if these searches are clumped together?
Did Yahoo/AOL include any white pages or yellow pages searches while doing the government's homework? Does the government expect Google to keep all Google Local searches out of the "1 week of searches"? The white page and local style searches leak personal info like mad.
Or what if a search was designed to check on one's personal privacy, for example:
And while Y/AHOOL didn't provide "the results of the searches" to the gov't, I assume the gov't will be re-running them. The searches 'Cameras near 742 Evergreen Terrace' combined with 'photographing children' may have just been me helping with photos at a birthday party or finding a portrait studio. But its going to be analyzed by people who think 15-degrees-of-separation is a reasonable search.
From the prescient (and unfortunately being used as an anti-guidebook) best essay this century on Why Privacy is a Fundamental Human Right [privcom.gc.ca] [just substitute 'Porn' for 'September 11' as the excuse the gov't gives, it comes out the same]:
"But though we tend to take it for granted, privacy - the right to control access to ourselves and to personal information about us - is at the very core of our lives. It is a fundamental human right precisely because it is an innate human need, an essential condition of our freedom, our dignity and our sense of well-being.
"If someone intrudes on our privacy - by peering into our home, going through the personal things in our office desk, reading over our shoulder on a bus or airplane, or eavesdropping on our conversation - we feel uncomfortable, even violated.
"Imagine, then, how we will feel if it becomes routine for bureaucrats, police officers and other agents of the state to paw through all the details of our lives: where and when we travel, and with whom; who are the friends and acquaintances with whom we have telephone conversations or e-mail correspondence; what we are interested in reading or researching; where we like to go and what we like to do.
"If we allow the state to sweep away the normal walls of privacy that protect the details of our lives, we will consign ourselves psychologically to living in a fishbowl. Even if we suffered no other specific harm as a result, that alone would profoundly change how we feel. Anyone who has lived in a totalitarian society can attest that what often felt most oppressive was precisely the lack of privacy.
But there also will be tangible, specific harm.
"The more information government compiles about us, the more of it will be wrong. That's simply a fact of life.
"...But if our privacy becomes ever more systematically invaded by the state for purposes of assessing our behavior and making judgments about us, wrong information and
Constitutionally sound? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Constitutionally sound? (Score:5, Insightful)
Apparently the better Google is at filtering out porn from search results that didn't request porn, the more constitutional rights we have.
(That was a bit tongue-in-cheek, but I think it is essentially the argument that the DoJ wants to use: if they can show evidence that the Internet is more like, say, broadcast TV, in that anything broadcast goes to everyone, then they will have a better chance of being able to censor the Internet than if the Internet is shown to be more like a collection of bookstores, where the only people who see porn are those who actively look for porn. Personally, I don't think they have a case on those grounds, but you never know)
I hate children. (Score:5, Interesting)
Ok, I dont really hate children, but you can see my frustration with this and the arguement "its for the good of the children"
People dont even use the V-chip, and those same people will lobby our government with hopes of ridding the planet of porn.
Microsoft and Apple should just build in a complete censorship layer into their OS that can be attributed to a certain user level account.
That way if your child searches breast... and finds a sweet pair of titties... its your own dam fault and not googles.
Re:I hate children. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I hate children. (Score:5, Insightful)
Why is it that humanity once, when we were sitting around nude in caves, had the maturity to see breasts, but no longer does?
Re:I hate children. (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, the people panicking over sex aren't the kids. They could see it, snicker at how gross and icky it all is, and oh my god that's sure to give him cooties, eww - but at the end of the day they probably care a whole lot more about football. It's the adults who are going nuts here. Or at least, people who ought to be adults.
If you didn't vote Libertarian, you ASKED for this (Score:4, Interesting)
You've already demonstrated that you want an intrusive, activist government, you have no room to complain now. You ASKED FOR THIS.
______________________________________
A vote against a Libertarian candidate is
a vote to abolish the Constitution itself
About time! (Score:5, Insightful)
After reading up about the other companies quietly folding under White House pressure, I am honestly relieved to see SOMEONE finally standing up for the rights of our citizens. Rights are NEVER erroded all at once. The day will never come when we wake up and the amendment about free speech is removed from the Consitution. The day WILL come, however, when we wake up and the free speech amendment means nothing because several iterations of the "Patriot Act" have erroded what it really means.
People in this country need to seriously wake the fuck up. We've been through several iterations of errosion of our rights under this white house. Allow me to sum up: 1) Plame's identity leaked (treason according to the law - I eagerly await the hangings), 2) The Patriot Act (need I say more?), 3) CIA spying on US citizens (notice how quickly W. moved on catching the traitors that leaked that), and 4) This request for search records. The day is rapidly approaching when we wake up and our rights will not mean anything ALL IN THE NAME OF PROTECTING US FROM [insert irrational fear here].
Today, I for one, take my hat off to Google. At the least, even if they are required to acquiese in the end, it garned media attention on the shifty White House request. It will be a long time before I doubt "Don't be evil." again.
Re:About time! (Score:5, Funny)
Rapidly approaching? I thought that day was a couple years ago.
Re:About time! (Score:3, Insightful)
When you will people educate yourselves that there is a very strong republican voting block that:
a) Are agnostic/atheist.
b) Believe very strongly in personal freedom and privacy.
Our rights will never be restricted beyond reason because this voting block (libertarians mainly), will not stand for it. The US still has virtually unlimited freed
Ummm...right. (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure they aren't. And NSA is only wiretapping terrorists.
I think Google should comply with the request... (Score:5, Funny)
-- Terry
And do you really think this is going to help? (Score:3, Insightful)
What do they think, that we criminals are stupid? Anyone heard of proxies, remembering/bookmarking URL's, non-USA search engines?
This is really a stupid thing going on. This government and laws passing in the "great" United States of America makes me remember of the witchhunt for "communists" about 50y ago. It's happening all over again but now you just have to accuse that neighbour you don't like of filesharing, terrorism or kiddie-porn-searches. And anyone remembers those commies from half a decade ago? No, media, government and agency's are all trying to cover it up as if it never happened or that 'it wasn't that bad'.
Violation of the 4th Amendment (Score:3, Insightful)
not "child porography" but "children seeing porn" (Score:4, Insightful)
The purpose of this law is to increase censorship on all porn, even legal porn, and it's driven by the Christian Right Wing, supposedly to protect children from viewing it.
That's why it's initially a 1st amendment issue (freedom of speech) which is now becoming a 4th amendment issue (unreasonable search and seizures) as the admin asks for private records. But make no mistake, the dispute is not a "child porn" issue, it's a censorship issue, supposedly to protect children. Big difference.
Child porn is already aggressively investigated by the DOJ, and it's an entirely separate thing. In those investigations, the DOJ has no trouble getting warrants which all the major companies including Google are happy to comply with to catch child pornographers.
It's also a pretty sneaky move by the admin, because obviously nobody likes the words "child" and "porn" anywhere near each other, which distorts and misrepresents the whole issue. So to anyone who took the bait, congrats, you've been had by the Bush admin and their clever spinners.
=P
Lets Google Bomb them! (Score:5, Insightful)
The following are quick links for each popular search engine to perform the search:
Google [google.com]
Yahoo [yahoo.com]
MSN [msn.com]
AOL [aol.com]
If a lot of people did it every day, it would eventually skew popular queries, and send a little message, should Google loose the fight.
It's on my blog already. If a ton of people do the same, and get a big campaign going, it could be interesting.
Re:whats the usage (Score:5, Informative)
Google: 36.5%
Yahoo: 30.5%
MSN: 15.5%
AOL: 9.9%
Ask: 6.1%
InfoSpace: 0.9%
Others: 0.6%
Soure: http://searchenginewatch.com/reports/article.php/
Probably more recent numbers around, but I doubt anything's changed dramatically in the past 6 months.