Do you really believe a high tech company that collected information on private citizens home WiFi was a mistake?
We have given our right to privacy away. We have become sheep allowing our rights to privacy to be abused. $7 Million dollars to Google can be equated to a grain of sand on a beach.
Google pays $7 million to settle 'Wi-Spy' case filed by states
Paul J. Richards / AFP/Getty Images
A Google street view mapping and camera car cruises the streets of Washington, D.C.
Between 2008 and 2010, Google's Street View cars, designed to take detailed block-by-block pictures, had an added feature -- they collected data broadcast out of users' homes from unsecured Wi-Fi networks. At the time, most home routers didn't come equipped with encryption by default, so the data haul was enormous, and raised numerous privacy issues.
The most disturbing part of the Wi-Spy scandal is that Google blames it on a rogue engineer, though according to an investigation conducted by the Federal Communications Commission, the engineer told others at the company about the data collection. It's alarming to think about the privacy disasters that could be created by a rogue employee or group of employees who work inside a company with massive data collection power, like Google. The FCC fined Google $25,000 for allegedly obstructing its investigation, but took no further action against the company.
“Consumers have a right to protect their vital personal and financial information from improper and unwanted use by corporations like Google,” said New York Attorney General Schneiderman in a statement about the attorneys general settlement. “This settlement addresses privacy issues and protects the rights of people whose information was collected without their permission. My office will continue to hold corporations accountable for violating the rights of New Yorkers.”
Google agreed to destroy the data as part of the settlement and to launch an employee privacy training program that it must continue for 10 years.
"We work hard to get privacy right at Google. But in this case we didn't, which is why we quickly tightened up our systems to address the issue," Google said in a statement to NBC News. "The project leaders never wanted this data, and didn't use it or even look at it. We're pleased to have worked with Connecticut Attorney General George Jepsen and the other state attorneys general to reach this agreement."
The Electronic Privacy Information Center maintains a detailed list of legal actions in the Wi-Spy scandal, including links to details on ongoing investigations around the globe.
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