Texas 37 States Resolve Lengthy Google Street Views Unlawful Collection of Personal Information Investigation

Google must pay $7 million abbott-22Texas Insider Report: AUSTIN Texas  For two years Google violated Texans privacy rights and secretly collected personal information from their wireless routers said Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott about the agreement negotiated by Texas 37 other states and the District of Columbia today after a lengthy investigation into Google Inc.s collection of personal information including e-mail and search histories from unsecured wireless routers at private residences and businesses. Although Google initially denied that its Street View vehicles were retrieving this private information the Mountain View Calif.-based conglomerate subsequently acknowledged that it had mistakenly" engaged in this practice. Todays agreement requires Google to destroy any personal data that was improperly collected and imposes important new privacy protections that govern the Street View program going forward" said Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott after the agreement had been negotiated by the states. Googles data collection effort was tied to its Street View project which sought to enhance its Google Maps platform by deploying a fleet of vehicles nationwide to photograph residences businesses and other improvements in Googlemunicipal neighborhoods. Unbeknownst to the residents and business owners whose properties were photographed Googles Street View vehicles were outfitted with specialized data collection devices that also scanned and stored payload data from wireless networks that were not password protected. Initially Google maintained that no emails Web search histories or other personal information was being collected by Street View vehicles and that the collected information was limited to data that merely identified the existence and location of a wireless network. The States investigation subsequently revealed that despite assertions to the contrary Google collected private information that was transmitted over unencrypted WiFi networks for two years. Although information transmitted on these wireless networks was collected from 2010 to 2012 Google represented that it had not intended to collect and store network users private payload data. Under todays agreement Google must pay $7 million and comply with following requirements:
  • Destroy the payload data" it collected;
  • Notify network users and obtain their consent before using its Street View vehicles to collect any additional payload data";
  • Implement an employee training program that highlights network users privacy and maintain the training program for the next 10 years; and
  • Develop a public service campaign to educate network users about how to better secure their personal information while they are using wireless networks.
Attorney General Abbott urged Texans to protect their privacy by securing their home computer systems and activating encryption features to make sure that transmitted information is scrambled.
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