subject: Privacy fears hit Google search posted: Fri, 10 Feb 2006 18:06:49 -0000
[Well, no surprises here - I wondered exactly this, will the desktop
search upload the data. Now it turns out it does. I am now acutely
concerned that a single employee at a company can install this on a
machine with a mapped network drive, and Google will have a copy of
every file on the company file server. Please tell me I'm wrong.
Google is increasingly in the spotlight over the issue of privacy
A leading US digital rights campaign group has warned against using
Google software which lets people organise and find information on
their computers.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation said the latest version of Google
Desktop posed a risk to privacy.
This is because a feature in the software lets Google keep personal
data on its servers for up to 30 days.
Google says it plans to encrypt all data transferred from users' hard
drives and restrict access.
Government snooping
The new version of its desktop search software comes as Google is
battling efforts by the US Department of Justice to force it to hand
over data about what people are looking for.
We think this will be a very useful tool, but you will have to give
up some of your privacy
Marissa Mayer, Google
Google data request fears
Some of Google's main competitors have already complied with the
request for details about people's search habits.
The case has focused attention on the issue of personal information
held by internet companies.
"Coming on the heels of serious consumer concern about government
snooping into Google's search logs, it's shocking that Google expects
its users to now trust it with the contents of their personal
computers," said EFF staff attorney Kevin Bankston.
"Unless you configure Google Desktop very carefully, and few people
will, Google will have copies of your tax returns, love letters,
business records, financial and medical files, and whatever other
text-based documents the desktop software can index.
"The government could then demand these personal files with only a
subpoena rather than the search warrant it would need to seize the
same things from your home or business," he said.
'Useful tool'
The EFF is concerned about a feature in Google Desktop 3 that lets
users search their content on multiple computers.
To do this, people have to let Google transfer the files to its own
servers.
The feature is optional and only works with certain types of files,
such as Microsoft Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, PowerPoint
presentations and PDF files.
The search giant has sought to reassure privacy advocates, saying it
will not keep the information for more than 30 days and strictly
limit who has access to the data.
"We think this will be a very useful tool, but you will have to give
up some of your privacy," said Marissa Mayer, Google's vice president
of search products and user experience.
"For many of us, that trade off will make a lot of sense."
The software package is widely seen as posing a challenge to
Microsoft's dominance of the way people interact with computers.
It is not known how many users there are of Google Desktop but it is
thought to be a fraction of the hundreds of millions that use the
search engine every day.
As well as making data on a hard drive accessible on any computer,
the software also lets people set up mini programs to keep track of
information such as weather or news stories.
Google Desktop 3 is currently only available for Windows XP or
Windows 2000.