June, 2007
Is Google peeping on you? Google's cavalier attitude towards privacy
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Fri, 2007-06-01 13:02The New York Times article today by Miguel Helft, "Google photos stir a debate over privacy" provides a great public service in highlighting yet another example of Google's cavalier approach to guarding peoples' privacy.
- This section of the NYT article captures the creepiness of Google's new "Street View "photo service" and what it says about Google's storied culture of "innovation without permission" (or supervision):
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“The issue that I have ultimately is about where you draw the line between taking public photos and zooming in on people’s lives,� Ms. Kalin-Casey said in an interview Thursday on the front steps of the building. “The next step might be seeing books on my shelf. If the government was doing this, people would be outraged.�
Google buys "Feedburner" blog ad network, as it further Googleopolizes the Internet
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Sun, 2007-06-03 21:55For anyone watching Google closely, they are cleverly locking up all the leading segments of the Internet which control the monetization access points to Internet content.
- Per MediaWeek, June 1st Google bought Feedburner, the largest feed and blog advertising network, which also happens to have the best quality and quantity of major content providers who subscribe to blog feeds.
- It's a shrewd and brilliant move, if the antitrust authorities allow it.
- This comes on the heels of its April proposed merger with DoubleClick, the largest adserving company on the Internet, which is estimated to serve 80-85% of Internet users with display ads per EPIC.
- That came on the heels of the closing of Google's YouTube acquisition, which makes Google the owner of the largest user-created video content network and one of the most popular destinations on the web.
Anyone else see a pattern here?
On what basis does Google dismiss privacy in DoubleClick merger?
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2007-06-04 18:09An Associated Press article, "Google Chairman dismisses privacy issue" could turn out to be like waving a red cape in front of a bull.
- Relevant parts of the AP story:
- "Google Chairman Eric Schmidt said Wednesday that U.S. regulatory approval of his company's proposed acquisition of DoubleClick will not be hindered by concerns over privacy."
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"Schmidt said that Google, when considering the acquisition, "looked very carefully" at privacy and other issues that would come under legal review "because we knew competitors would raise those issues, as indeed they have."
Markey-like Net Neutrality bill fizzles out in Maine Senate
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Tue, 2007-06-05 18:26Yet another state legislature has rejected passing a law mandating net neutrality -- this time in Maine, the home state of Senator Olympia Snowe, one of net neutrality's primary sponsors and highest profile proponents in the US Senate.
- Moveon.org/SaveTheInternet are now 0-3 in their hand-picked states where they thought they had the best chance of passing a version of the Senate Snowe-Dorgan bill or the House Markey bill from last year -- and where they focused their efforts.
- Previously, Moveon.org?SaveTheInternet failed to pass net neutrality legislation in Michigan, and Maryland.
To let the net neutrality proponents save face, the Maine Senate passed a resolution, not legislation, that asks for a study on net neutrality to be completed next year.
No shadowy spectrum earmarks for Dotcom Billionaires!
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Wed, 2007-06-06 10:33Like the discredited and shameful congressional practice of fleecing the American taxpayer with "earmarking" public funds for special interests, Frontline-Google and eBay-Skype are asking for the equivalent of special interest commercial "earmarks" from the FCC.
It is outrageous that the FCC is actually entertaining these proposed special interest scams against the American taxpayer.
- The FCC should keep the auction free of the corrupting influence of spectrum or policy "earmarks" for the obvious benefit of only one company lobbying the process for permission to pick the American taxpayers' pocket.
What am I talking about specifically? Two special interest spectrum/policy "earmarks" are getting a lot of press attention lately.
FCC Commissioner McDowell debunks OECD broadband rankings
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Thu, 2007-06-07 17:20FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell gave an outstanding speech today at the Broadband Policy Summit in which he did the single best job I have seen totally debunking the OECD rankings that purportedly indicate the US is falling behind on broadband.
Commissioner McDowell explains with example after example -- how skewed the OECD methodology is.
- My personal favorite line in the speech was on how the OECD methodology is skewed against the US:
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"...even if every existing broadband subscriber in America had a fiber-fed 100 mbps broadband connection, we would only rank 12th."
Why Privacy is a competitive issue in FTC's Google-DoubleClick merger review
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Sun, 2007-06-10 21:54Just after Google's CEO Eric Schmidt summarily dismissed privacy concerns as an issue in the FTC's review of the Google-DoubleClick merger, a privacy watchdog group said "Google inc.'s privacy practices are the worst among the Internet's top destinations," according to an AP article "Watchdog group slams Google on privacy."
- "...London-based Privacy International assigned Google its lowest possible grade. The category is reserved for companies with "comprehensive consumer surveilance and entrenched hostility to privacy."
American privacy groups are petitioning the FTC (EPIC, CDD, and US PIRG) to address the privacy issue in the context of the Google-DoubleClick merger.
Note to Google: Those in glass houses should not throw stones
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Mon, 2007-06-11 09:55Google, in making a high-profile complaint to the Justice Department and State Attorney Generals, about Microsoft's latest operating system Vista, appears to be naively unaware of its own antitrust vulnerabilities in its pending Google-DoubleClick antitrust review at the FTC.
- The NY Times made Google's complaint a top right cover story on Sunday and the Wall Street Journal featured Google's complaint as its top business story Monday.
It has always been unwise for those in "glass houses to throw stones."
Spin can't magically turn the Maine net neutrality defeat into a win
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Tue, 2007-06-12 16:53Public interest groups supportive of net neutrality like Common Cause and The Maine Civil Liberties Union are trying to "spin" the press that the non-binding net neutrality resolution passed by the Maine Senate is somehow an important first for a state.
- The reality is that supporters of net neutrality thought that the support of net neutrality by Dorgan-Snowe co-sponsor and Maine Senator Olympia Snowe would somehow increase the chances of passing net neutrality legislation for the first time in the state of Maine.
- They were wrong.
- This legislative effort in Maine failed just like it did in Michigan and Maryland, and just like it did in every Federal forum it was raised in.
- This Maine Senate "non-binding resolution" is simply hortatory puffery, akin to naming a state insect or a state weed.
- The reality is that the Maine legislature did not pass legislation and that it clearly acknowledged in its resolution its understanding that the Internet is exclusively Federal jurisdiction.
- There is nothing that could be more Federal or "interstate" than the "INTERnet!"
This episode in Maine really is emblematic of the whole net neutrality movement.
NY Times "gets" that Google is "Watching your every move"
Submitted by Scott Cleland on Wed, 2007-06-13 09:48It is very rare when I feel compelled to praise the liberal New York Times editorial board for one of its editorial positions, but to be fair, I must when they get an issue dead right.
- Please read the New York Times' outstanding editorial today called "Watching your every move."
- The NY Times appropriately sees Google's new "Street View" public surveilance feature as a "Big Brother"-like threat to everyone's privacy.
- They also connected-the-dots that Google is collecting more personal information on Americans than any other entity in the world. Which is particularly disturbing because Google reportedly has the world's worst privacy policies and an "entrenched hostility to privacy."
George Orwell's seminal book "1984" ingrained the totalitarian metaphorical threat of "Big Brother" in the world's thinking and lexicon.

