EFF Warns Not to Use Google Desktop 562
neelm writes "The EFF is asking users not to use the new version of Google Desktop that has a 'search across computers' option. The option will store copies of documents on your hard drive on Google servers, where the government or anyone who wants to may subpoena (i.e. no search warrants) the information. Google says it is not yet scanning the files for advertising, but it hasn't ruled out the possibility."
EFF, Shmeff (Score:3, Interesting)
Meanwhile, Chinese users please click here [imoou.com].
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:5, Insightful)
Red herring.
This issue is a completely nonsense issue. Even if Google "wins" it's a mock trial. The government can already get whatever data it wants from Google using the Patriot Act and force them to keep completely mum about it. Who knows where that data goes aftwerwards. Everyone keeps saying "trust me" then you find out you were lied to afterwards... over and over again.
I have yet to hear a persuasive argument that the US government doesn't already have complete access. This is just an attempt at post-NSA leak damage control. The "brilliant" idea is to lure terrrorist email bombers everywhere to annouce their plans using gmail.
- the work of a pure rocket scientist who's quick thinking saved "liberty" tower
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:4, Insightful)
I have yet to hear a persuasive argument that the Illuminati don't really control the whole shebang, including our very thoughts.
My point: It's pretty much impossible to prove some negatives.
Nevertheless, I agree somewhat with the thrust of your (over)statement, "Everyone keeps saying "trust me" then you find out you were lied to afterwards... over and over again."
There's a balance point to be found somewhere between naïve and paranoid.
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:5, Funny)
There's a balance point to be found somewhere between naïve and paranoid.
And we shall call it "naïvanoid".
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorry, but if you believe TOR is going to give you any anonymity protection, you are living in a fantasy world. Sure, intermediate packets may protected but there is no protection at either the source, your ISP, or the destination
Do you want to go into more detail on this? The EFF certainly seem quite confidant in TOR's security and as I understand the technology, the concept is sound. Encrypted connection to a TOR peer, onion routing to your destination through an unknown number of intermediate peers (
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:5, Insightful)
But what happens when they lose their fight? All that data they are collecting for their 'marketing' gets turned over without any personal subpoena, giving any government agency the ability to subpoena one company and collect the personal data of almost everyone in the country.
Sad day when MS looks like the good guys, they don't store information from their desktop search, or use it for marketing, so even if they get a subpoena, all they can provide is generalized search data from MSN Search.
BTW did you ever stop to think the reason Google didn't want to turn over the information to the Government regarding searches was maybe not to protect their users, but to protect themselves? Could it be so far fetched that they don't want to disclose the information they are collecting from users.
Don't put faith in any company to champion your rights, and don't let them have access to your information even if you do trust them. I have people I work with I don't let know what documents are on my desktop and I like and trust these people, why on earth would I let Google collect this information?
Can you really trust a company, made up on individuals, that all it would take is one person getting $20 bucks and hour to take the information the company has collected and dump it into public domain?
Let me state this a little more clearly...
GOOGLE SHOULD NOT BE COLLECTING DETAILED DATA FROM YOUR COMPUTER, NOR DETAILED DATA FROM YOUR SEARCHES THAT LINK BACK TO WHO YOU ARE. With the government inquires on this aside, collecting this information for any reason is wrong, and especially when they are admitting that it is for future marketing.
People are scared about Bill Gates running the world, yet Google has more specific data on every individual that uses their Desktop and Online Search engines.
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:5, Interesting)
I agree, however the average joe blow that is buying a new dell that has Google desktop installed when it arrives, don't get the option to choose, nor are very many people informed about the data collection they perform.
This is kind of like the tiny fine print on a contract. Also there isn't an 'I Agree' button on the Google Search website, people think they are just looking up information.
We definately have the right and responsibility to not use a service if we don't agree with it, but we also owe it to others to alert them to facts about the service when the company offering the service fails to MAKE IT CLEAR.
Google is legally borderlining on misuse, non-disclosure and many other avenues that could eventually put them in the hot seat with a lot of people. It could also be the basis that the government uses to rip Google apart and get the information they requested.
Everyone on
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:5, Insightful)
I [slashdot.org] can [slashdot.org] assure [slashdot.org] you, everyone [slashdot.org] on [slashdot.org]
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually it is pretty much hidden from the user, I know people that didn't even know the Google crap was on their system. In theory, I'm sure they did 'opt-in' by placing the Dell order or some other item, but that is different than them know it is there and also knowing what is is doing with the information.
So google is different from every? other search engine how?
If you can't answer this yourself, ma
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:4, Insightful)
Assuming you mean the fact that they keep a history of what terms you search for on google.com, then can you please point out where I go to opt out? I've had a look in the preferences, and there's nothing there for it.
Also, defaulting to on but allowing you to opt out is not the same as opt-in.
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:4, Informative)
It's not that hard!
Re:Default option? (Score:3, Insightful)
"Do no harm" to "Anything if it makes money"? (Score:5, Interesting)
Now Google seems to be becoming one of those amoral companies. The new Google Desktop takes advantage of people who don't understand what is happening. Is Google going from "Do no harm" to "Anything if it makes money"?
Unfortunately, the U.S. government believes that it can perform surveillance anywhere and can keep the reasons secret. The U.S. government often forces companies not to disclose that they have given information to the government. So, maybe no company can be trusted.
--
Before, Saddam got Iraq oil profits & paid part to kill Iraqis. Now a few Americans share Iraq oil profits, & you pay to kill Iraqis. Improvement?
Re:"Do no harm" to "Anything if it makes money"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"Do no harm" to "Anything if it makes money"? (Score:3, Insightful)
When you work with computers every day, it is extremely easy to overestimate the level of comprehension of the average person.
Re:"Do no harm" to "Anything if it makes money"? (Score:3, Insightful)
A corporation with morals is like a coathanger with a conscience.
Corporations have one purpose: making money for the people in charge.
However, they are also useful contraptions that, overall, tend to increase everbody's standard of living. As long as we construct secure legal cages to limit
Re:EFF, Shmeff (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How do you protect your intellectual property? (Score:3, Insightful)
If you hadn't thought about it I assume you'd be keeping those records on your computer, where Google gets access to them almost as fast as you write them.
If you had thought about it and decided it was a serious risk you'd probably go for the simpler and more sensible option; remove google desktop search completely.
Another misleading Slashdot headline (Score:5, Insightful)
The EFF isn't advising people to avoid Google Desktop, just not to enable the feature, which IMHO makes complete sense. Google can't prevent the files from being taken if they're subpoenaed and a court orders them to make them available, now can they? It's not up to Google and the EFF knows this. They're not saying anything against Google here, just that people should be careful who they let have access to their files.
Re:Another misleading Slashdot headline (Score:5, Insightful)
How can we trust that the Mozilla foundation isn't doing the same during it's update checks - especially if you downloaded the binary version and didn't download the source, personally audit it and then compile it using a compiler and tool chain you've similarly audited?
How can we trust that ANY piece of software isn't spyware?
You can check these things be monitoring the traffic going out. It's not that hard if you're that paranoid, and even if you're not, it's pretty likely someone else has. Google's reputation would be slaughtered if they sent this kind of information from a PC that's specifically had this turned off.
Come on, people! (Score:3, Funny)
store copies? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:store copies? (Score:2, Informative)
From Google site [google.com]: In order to share your indexed files between your computers, we first copy this content to Google Desktop servers located at Google. This is necessary, for example, if one of your computers is turned off or otherwise offline when new or updated items are indexed o
Re:store copies? (Score:5, Informative)
Search Across Computers also has the following preferences, found on the Desktop Preferences page:
* Name this computer: This name will be displayed on remote computers that are part of the same Google account group.
* My other computers can search this computer's:
o Documents and web history
o Documents only
o Web history only
* Clear my files from Google: In order to share your indexed files between your computers, we first copy this content to Google Desktop servers located at Google. This is necessary, for example, if one of your computers is turned off or otherwise offline when new or updated items are indexed on another of your machines. We store this data temporarily on Google Desktop servers and automatically delete older flies, and your data is never accessible by anyone doing a Google search. You can learn more by reading the Google Desktop privacy policy.
While your data is automatically deleted from our servers, you can use the Clear my Files from Google button to manually remove all your files from Google Desktop servers. Note that if these files haven't yet been copied to your other computers, clicking this button will prevent you from finding them when you search from your other computers. The files will, of course, still be searchable from their computer of origin.
So it appears that your data will be on a Google Server temporarily. Also, is it really feasible that Google would even want to maintain a SAN Array capable of storing EVERY document for EVERY user of this thing? Why would they want to waste their money collecting everybody's garbage?
--
Want to share a file across the network between your computers? Just use FTP or PCAnywhere. I wish that VNC software would allow file transfers (hint, hint)
Re:store copies? (Score:3, Insightful)
If they could "monitize" your ass for 50 cents worth of disk space, why not? It would only take one AdSense clickthrough to make a profit of the endeavor.
Re:store copies? (Score:3, Funny)
One Sentence:
Largest Pr0n collection EVAR!!!!11111
file names (Score:3, Funny)
Re:file names (Score:2)
Re:file names (Score:2, Insightful)
Regards,
Steve
Re:file names (Score:3, Insightful)
In Soviet Russia, Documents Find You. (Score:5, Funny)
Double-plus good!
Copernic (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Copernic (Score:2)
Re:Copernic (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Copernic (Score:5, Informative)
Have you tried the windows search? OMG its so slow. You are talking 10+ mins to search all my hard drives/folders.
You know why?
It's actually "searching". It's not a background process or daemon or whatever sitting in your memory, taking note of everything you're editing, changing, adding to or deleting from your file system. It doesn't take 6 hours to find the time to create its searchable database like Google desktop does. It just searches. It's find / -name 'filename'. That's all it does.
When I heard how fast google search was, I thought "how perfect". At the time, I worked at a local computer shop who did lots of backups. We'd pull a hard drive out of a client's computer and search for the requested data (i.e. jpegs, doc files, address book, etc). Google Desktop search was going to revolutionize our task. Damn kludgey MS Search.
When you install GDS, it informs you that it may take a few hours to fully index the HDD. That's *slower* than MS search. Not to mention, utterly useless when you're attaching 50GB of data to the host computer 3 times a day, digging through it, and removing it.
Know why MS's search is slow? Because that's actually how long it takes.
~W
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Copernic (Score:5, Informative)
It does name searches, it does text searches, it does regular expressions etc.
As for windows search I agree it's a piece of shit. Why they couldn't just put something like locate into place I'll never know.
Of course unless you are forced to use windows I would reccomend a switch to mac. The amazing spotlight search is worth the extra money by itself.
Re:Copernic (Score:3, Informative)
EFF It (Score:4, Insightful)
"Google, is this painful?" you might ask. Not anymore! Thanks to GooLube Beta you won't feel a thing.
Folks, I'm not overly inclined to paranoia, but be careful. Unique application identifiers? Uploading information for across-machine search? Google never deletes anything. Ever. They might not be doing anything insidious with it now. But in five years, ten years? Who can say.
Warrants? Damn. (Score:2)
Wow, wow, wow.. let me get this straight.. (Score:2, Insightful)
That's scary. What happened to "do no evil"?
Either Google is dropping that premise, or the EFF is overreacting. I wouldn't rule out the latter, in the least..
Re:Wow, wow, wow.. let me get this straight.. (Score:5, Insightful)
By that logic fdisk and format are evil programs because they delete stuff.
Re:Wow, wow, wow.. let me get this straight.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wow, wow, wow.. let me get this straight.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Wow, wow, wow.. let me get this straight.. (Score:5, Insightful)
That's scary. What happened to "do no evil"?
It's necessary for a feature they're offering (searching your files across multiple computers). If you disable the feature, no harm done. If you want the future, then you kinda have to give them the ability to store the stuff on their computer.
I'd say that Google has meet their "do no evil" requirement in this (I do believe they have broken it though by deciding to go against their morals to enter the Chinese market. They've gone from "do no evil" to "do nothing unlawful"). They haven't placed files on their servers for no reason at all. Instead they have done it and offered additional functionality as a result. Are they doing it to gain a profile on their users? Of course (even if they are waiting at the moment). But everything Google does is aimed at creating a profile on their customers in order to send them ads. You have to decide for yourself whether or not you consider that evil. I personally don't. Now if they decide to sell that profile to another company, THEN I would consider them even more evil, and will boycott all google products.
Re:Wow, wow, wow.. let me get this straight.. (Score:3, Insightful)
No it isn't. They could store the data encrypted (index data and documents), using a private key known only to the user. Not only would it work, it would be easy to implement. And you could toss in a compression algorithm to reduce bandwidth and storage overhead. And Google has far more than enough sharp minds to have thought of this. Assuming the EFF's report is accurate, Google chose to keep the data in accessib
Re:Wow, wow, wow.. let me get this straight.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Wow, wow, wow.. let me get this straight.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Wow, wow, wow.. let me get this straight.. (Score:3, Informative)
a) the data is only sent if the user says so,
b) the data is apparently encrypted,
c) it is deleted after 30 days.
there need be no privacy concern, if you don't like the idea of handy convenient storage, don't enable it.
Storage -- A Fleeting Concern? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Storage -- A Fleeting Concern? (Score:5, Interesting)
Most of us have simply accepted that websites will leave cookies on our computer. But we, of course, have learned to manage these; we only keep the ones we want, and probably not for very long.
We don't seem to mind that every website gets our IP address, but the very private can uses proxies (plenty of FF extensions) if they wish.
There are countless examples like this, where we have these privacy invasions, but we've simply accepted them, and learned to manage them. Now, whether this is a good thing or bad thing might be an entirely separate discussion. So I think that we will accept our documents being stored anywhere, but we'll learn to be careful, still. You might use an online text editor to make your resume, but maybe you'll leave your contact information off it, and only when you're ready to print will you temp-save it locally, add that info, and then print it.
I just really think we'll all get used to not knowing exactly where our stuff is, but we'll know what to do if we really need to be careful about it. For a little while, at least.
Re:Storage -- A Fleeting Concern? (Score:3, Interesting)
Double standards? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Double standards? (Score:2)
Re:Double standards? (Score:5, Informative)
And can someone please explain to parent why it's a good idea to RTFA? It specifically says, "If a consumer chooses to use it, the new "Search Across Computers" feature will store copies of the user's Word documents, PDFs, spreadsheets and other text-based documents on Google's own servers".
If you don't want Google searching your files, quit your bitching and select "No, thanks, don't upload my files" or whatever.
Re:Double standards? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Double standards? (Score:3, Insightful)
Please feel free to explain to me how gmail is bad and hotmail is not. And while you're at it, does your "other than original owner" comment mean to imply random people? If so, I'd like to know how you think this happens. If instead you are noting that moving personal data to servers owned and controlled by others might be a bad idea... wasn't that the point of this article? And with that criticism in mind, where is this
Re:Double standards? (Score:3, Insightful)
It knows too much. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It knows too much. (Score:3, Insightful)
When little Billy comes over and sneezes on them, like he always does.
And then procedes to cut you, rape your mother and steal your cards. This is also why I think MS is a good investment, especially right now (buy low, sell high!). I guess when they steal Googles capitol their stock should rise about 200% or so...sad story but hey, it works for me!
(yes, yes, I know Google has all the "talent" and "new ideas" and technologically "cool" things. I know another compan
Ironic thing about this (Score:2)
Or as an alternative (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Or as an alternative (Score:3, Informative)
Index and search my documents and viewed web pages from across all my computers.
(This feature stores your indexed files on Google Desktop servers for copying to your other computers. Learn more about this feature or our Privacy Policy.)
They provide links to both. Much more upfront than say, Bonzai Buddy.
Nani? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nani? (Score:3, Funny)
offline hacking (Score:2)
Can do! (Score:2)
FTFY Google (Score:5, Funny)
There, fixed that for ya.
Feature must be enabled first (Score:5, Informative)
What about copyright? (Score:5, Informative)
Alternative filename search suggestions anyone? (Score:3, Interesting)
For instance if I had a file names "my family pics from vacation to hawaii in 2006 2314.jpg"
I'd like to be able to find that with a search of keywords like:
family pics
hawaii vacation
2006 pics
etc. Currently google desktop turns up way too many hits, when all I want are files with those words in the filename.
So I want more of a filename (and foldername!) searcher than anything else. Bonus if it can only search
Oh shut up (Score:5, Insightful)
Who are they blameing? (Score:3, Interesting)
People should be looking at the government. In my opinion, if US Government uses Google to watch what people do on the internet, they aren't much better than China.
This is not Google's fault. Stop blaming them.
As for this statement:
"...while providing a convenient one-stop-shop for hackers who've obtained a user's Google password."
Google is pretty good about passwords. If someone gets your password, it's your fault. Second, I'm not convinced you can search your records remotely. The Google Desktop search runs directly from your computer, you can't access or search your files remotely using this feature. Proof: If you have it installed, what IP does it go to when you search your files? 127.0.0.1:4664 Oh snap, what a concept!
It's all bullshit. People need to start giving people the facts and stop praying on their ignorance.
The end.
The Business Environment (Score:3, Insightful)
Can you imagine the kind of trouble employees and companies could get in if confidential data is being stored on Google's servers?
God help the company that accidentally gets medical or financial data stored on Google's servers.
This is a huge gaping security hole for companies. Google's Desktop Search is going to end up on the list of unnaceptable software... even if the feature is disabled by default.
Campaign:Break up with Google this Valentine's Day (Score:3, Informative)
It is easy to forget that by agreeing to censor its search engine in cahoots with the Chinese dictatorship, Google is now also helping repress millions of Tibetans who have suffered under harsh military occupation by the Chinese since 1950.
Since people tend to be more familiar with the horrors of the Jewish Holocaust or Stalin's invasions and gulags, what if Google had made a business pact with the Nazis or Stalin providing their ignorant populations with entertainment and "harmless legitimate-looking facts" while suppressing all knowledge of the horrors those regimes caused to the people they oppressed?
This is what Google (and Microsoft and Yahoo) are doing in China today. All knowledge of the Chinese crimes against the Tibetan nation or the Tibetan people's struggle to regain their independence are systematically wiped out from their search results as if none of it ever happened, at the behest of the ruling Chinese Communist Party dictatorship.
What is the point of having an "information service" which covers up the most crucial information relating to massive human rights violations? A glorified pacifier to placate the ignorant masses while their ruling regime is busy carrying out genocide to its horrible conclusion?
An estimated 1,500,000 Tibetans (!!) have already perished under the Chinese occupation (nearly a fifth of total population), Tibetan language, buddhist religion, identity and history are systematically suppressed while the CCP is promoting Chinese settlers to overrun Tibet demographically. Not to mention Tibetan natural resources being stolen, nuclear waste dumped there and more nuclear missile sites being built to threaten all democracies south of the Himalayas. Or the brutality of the CCP's paramilitary police against the large number of Tibetan political prisoners being held in secret camps across Tibet. The Chinese population should be allowed to compare these facts to the current feed of Communist Party-driven anti-Japanese propaganda over that brutal, if partial invasion that ceased to take place over sixty years ago. Which invasion is supposed to be less evil and why?
Google's [phayul.com] Chinese (dis)service will compliantly keep any of this information from reaching the Chinese or the Tibetans under Chinese occupation because an unelected and expansionist regime wanted them to collaborate.
This shouldn't be only about self-centered westerners worrying about their god-given personal privacy, although privacy is of course extremely important even in democracies with other safety mechanisms against abuse. No, it is far more sinister when corporations from the "democratic world" are helping cover up a holocaust or genocide being committed by their business partners!
What we need is search, webmail etc. services which are guaranteed to remain neutral and safe without turning evil at the first profit-motive. Or which are not subject to American "shareholders uber alles" mentality which corrupted Google. Could/should such services be based in Switzerland or Sweden, both historically neutral territories without track record of collaborating with dictatorial regimes? Would they need massive financing, thereby potentially subjecting them to the whims of the moral-free financial markets, or could enough of their functions (CPU load, distributed and encrypted storage) be offloaded, a la bittorrent, to contributing users and neutral, respectable institutions?
How could the OSS communities help build safe alternatives to Google's morality and privacy-compromised offerings?
In the meanwhile some Tibetan support groups [studentsfo...etibet.org] are promoting
Re:Campaign:Break up with Google this Valentine's (Score:3, Interesting)
Firstly the chinese specific portal was created because the experience delivered by their worldwide portal was less than adequate (whether this is the result of filtering thanks to the great firewall of china I don't know). As a result people in china now have a se
Re:Campaign:Break up with Google this Valentine's (Score:3, Informative)
>Tibetans who have suffered under harsh military
>occupation by the Chinese since 1950.
man I'm giving up my moderator points but what the heck.
http://www.google.cn/search?hl=zh-CN&q=free+tibet
Re:Campaign:Break up with Google this Valentine's (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, if your point was to show how "google.cn" will proudly display honest search results for queries forbidden by the Chinese regime, you'd be better off (well actually worse off but hey...) trying that search from the other side of the Chinese Communist Party's fancy censorship filters, built with the courteous help by certain Cisco Corp.
Not only would do you fail to get uncensored results but the Party's own "Public Security" parami
What about China? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why is desktop search necessary? (Score:5, Funny)
A Google love affair (Score:3, Insightful)
I can't understand why people spring to Google's defence as if they are employees or shareholders whenever issues regarding the search giant pop up here. There are two issues here that people seem to be upset about:
As has been mentioned here, Google, while a large influential company that makes our lives simpler, is still bound by the laws of the countries in which they operate. The company is run by individuals who are open to corruption (since nobody's perfect). Most people would think twice before leaving their PCs unlocked if they walk away from their desks (rather than trusting their colleagues), but a disturbing majority of people here seem to have blind faith in a company simply because they have a "Don't be evil" motto.
And how big is *your* cpu? (Score:3, Interesting)
Troll-o-riffic! (Score:2)
Re:Convenience vs. "privacy" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Convenience vs. "privacy" (Score:3, Insightful)
Because you have never been refered to as "The Defendant."
Oh, but you will be. You will be!
KFG
Jesus, come on! (Score:3, Insightful)
Are you serious? The only reason Bush is in hot water is because he didn't get a warrant, but had he asked, some judge would have given it to him anyway... Judges almost always rubber stamp warrants, after all, if "Law Enforcement" asks, they must need it, right?
Re: Jesus, come on! (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know if that's true in general, but it is the track record of the FISA court Bush is skipping around.
The law also allows that court to give post hoc warrants, up to 72 hours after the unwarranted spying took place. The bit about needing to work without warrants in order to track immediate threats is pure bunkum.
Re: Don't Jump the Gun (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, that's what they said about street-light cams and automobile black boxes.
Re:You can always not check it.. (Score:4, Informative)
San Francisco - Google today announced a new "feature" of its Google Desktop software that greatly increases the risk to consumer privacy. If a consumer chooses to use it, the new "Search Across Computers" feature will store copies of the user's Word documents, PDFs, spreadsheets and other text-based documents on Google's own servers, to enable searching from any one of the user's computers. EFF urges consumers not to use this feature, because it will make their personal data more vulnerable to subpoenas from the government and possibly private litigants, while providing a convenient one-stop-shop for hackers who've obtained a user's Google password.
EFF *is* doing something about it (Score:4, Interesting)
EFF is concentrating on this: they've announced a major lawsuit [eff.org] against AT&T for participating in the government's illegal wiretapping program.
But the surveillance powers of the state have expanded many times through the Bush Administration (and Clinton was hardly a friend of privacy, for that matter). So while it's important to put corporations on notice that their participation in surveillance might land them in hot water, it's likewise important to let the public know that corporations are often left with no choice, and required to surveil them secretly (e.g., because of FISA warrants, or through CALEA wiretapping).
EFF isn't pursuing a monotonic "stop sharing your information" strategy. It's approaching this on many prongs: lobbying the government to sunset the PATRIOT Act, asking the Supreme Court to strike it down, suing companies that participate in surveillance, publishing best-practices documents for privacy-friendly server-logging, and warning the public about the potential for privacy ruptures arising from law and practice.
It's unfair to characterize EFF as merely wagging its fingers at the public. The organization is pursuing this on every possible front.
(Disclosure: I am a former EFF employee)
Just need to be better than the next guy (Score:3, Insightful)
The idea that you can defend your privacy on your own just doesn't work. If everyone you correspond with puts stuff on servers you lose privacy anyway. Even if my suggestion is a slim chance it is the only chance we have.
Also hiring a lobbyist,
Re:Just need a desktop search that . . . (Score:3)
GDS doesn't display ads ever. Not once have I ever seen an ad using GDS.
Simply don't enable the feature (which is disabled by default, but try telling that to the tards running this site) and don't enable Advanced Features. Done, no problems.
Re:holy bandwidth batman! (Score:3)
Re:Sigh. Another EFF overreaction... (Score:5, Insightful)
As Google's power grows, that power starts corrupting Google. It's inevitable. Those idealistic founders may still hug trees and wear heart-warming slogans on their shirts, but seasoned business executives know better how to milk the cash cow. And they are in charge now.
Yet, have they really ever betrayed us?
You are assuming a dichotomy [wikipedia.org] where none exists. Hardly ever betrayals are so clear-cut. Your local politician may promise $foo, but after one month on the job he says $bar is better - did he betray you, or he simply knows better now? If in a war a soldier tells his girlfriend that his unit is short on ammo, and the GF is with resistance, is it a betrayal? I would expect a smooth, gentle slide from "do no evil" to "do no evil unless you don't mind, and we give you a candy for that" to then "do no evil unless you fail to enter a 26-digit prime number here and now to opt out" to ... you see my point. And that's what is happening.
I, for one, believe that Google is on the side of the users.
You are personifying a company - a collective organism who does not think as humans do, and does not behave as humans do. It is genetically hardwired to get as much money out of you, me and everyone as it legally can. I would be wary of such an animal.
By going from nothing to superstar based almost entirely on word-of-mouth, Google demonstrated how powerful cultivating user trust can be
Mixing the "Google as a startup in a garage" with the "Google as a billion dollar publicly owned business" here. They are not the same, and different people are at the helm now. They don't care what the founders thought back then. They are not the founders.
Re:Sigh. Another EFF overreaction... (Score:4, Insightful)
Newsflash: Google != God ; faith is highly inappropriate here.
Why should anyone have faith in a company that has as its sole purpose to make money for its shareholders? (They may have had high ideals in the past, but those went out the window with the IPO, such is the nature of publicly owned companies. Any loyalty toward their users, which by the way are NOT their customers just "eyeballs" to sell to the advertisers, has gotten transferred to the shareholders.)
The correct attitude towards big companies, even the cool ones, is a healthy skepicism, not blind faith, for they will screw you over the moment you turn your back.
Re:These privacy concerns are getting stupid (Score:3, Insightful)
Well what this does, is bypasses both our security measures, and our legal measures that our company has
Re:Your Searches Are Logged (Score:3, Informative)