Connecticut AG Blumenthal to spearhead Google privacy probe

Security

google-street-view-car

Last week, the French National Commission on Computing and Liberty announced that Wi-Fi data sniffed and collected by Google Inc.’s Street View cyborg car contained “fragments” of personal information. This week, the Wall Street Journal is reporting that Connecticut Attorney General, Richard Blumenthal, “will seek additional information from Google and determine whether laws may have been broken.” The paper goes onto write, “As many as 30 U.S. states could join forces to look into how Google Inc.’s Street View vehicles came to collect Internet user’s personal data from unsecured wireless networks.” Blumenthal, who is a candidate to replace the retiring Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT), did not say whether charges would be filed, but rather explained that he wanted a “comprehensive explanation of how this unauthorized data collection happened, why the information was kept if collection was inadvertent, and what action will prevent a recurrence.”Read

6 Comments
  • B

    About damn time..

  • http://www.facebook.com/Drummer85 Creamy Tuna Casserole

    WPA encryption, people. Cover your own ass!

  • webby

    In Hollywood, stars and starlets have a saying, “There is no such thing as bad publicity. There is only publicity.”

    Given how this issue first hit the news in Europe and has since then snowballed from there with investigations, then “me too” investigations by more politicians worldwide … methinks Goog might disagree with Hollywood’s traditional statement about publicity being all good …

  • big daddy

    who cares

  • Bobomo

    “As many as 30 other states could come sniffing at the trough, looking to squeeze some free money out of Google because they can’t balance their own budgets.”

  • protrex

    and this is why I want Blumenthal out…. He can’t even remember that he didn’t serve in Vietnam. Now he wants to go after Google for collecting data flying unencrypted through the air, by accident.

    Go die in a fire..

    P.S: If you don’t encrypt your $#@! then you obviously are asking for your data to be sniffed…

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