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July 09th, 2009

Google's new OS raises privacy, antitrust concerns

Google's announcement Tuesday that it is developing an open-source operating system raised questions among privacy advocates about the amount of personal data Google will be able to collect.

Google already collects private data through products like its search engine and its Gmail e-mail service, as well as its AdSense advertising service. The Chrome operating system, to be rolled out on netbook computers next year, gives the company another avenue to collect and monetize personal information, privacy advocates said Wednesday.

"Competition in the OS market should always be welcome, but Google is the special case," said Marc Rotenberg, president of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a privacy advocacy group. "It has become dominant across many essential Internet services -- search, mail, video, online apps and advertising."

Google has a growing profile of Web users and has been reluctant to support some privacy safeguards, Rotenberg added. For example, Google has been cool to proposals to require that online vendors get opt-in permission before collecting customers' personal data.

Rotenberg called on antitrust officials in the U.S. and Europe to "view Google's entry into the OS market with enormous skepticism."

Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, another privacy advocate, agreed. "I think the new OS has to be placed under the data collection x-ray by U.S. and E.U. privacy regulators and advocates," he said. "Any expansion into the marketplace by either Google or Microsoft should generate intense scrutiny, especially for the privacy implications."

Google's entrance into the OS market "clearly" raises some privacy concerns, said Ari Schwartz, vice president at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a privacy and civil liberties advocacy group. While Google does a good job protecting privacy within individual products or services, the company has challenges with guarding privacy across its suite of offerings as a whole, Schwartz said.

Google has recently worked on giving users control of their privacy settings for targeted online advertising, but Schwartz said he's unsure how more user privacy controls would work in an operating system environment. "We'd like to see them innovate in that area, but that remains to be seen," he said.

Google spokesman Adam Kovacevich said user privacy will be among the top priorities as the company develops the new operating system.

"The product is still being developed ... but we'll consider privacy protections when we build the product, as we do with all our other products," he said. "We always build privacy into our products from the very beginning, and this will be no exception."

Google's expanding online empire creates not only privacy questions, but antitrust ones as well, said Steve Pociask, president of the American Consumer Institute Center for Citizen Research, a think tank that has been critical of Google in the past. Google's Chrome operating system would run on top of the Linux kernel and be primarily Web-based, Google said.

"Given Google's dominance and near-monopoly position in a number of markets, when it leverages its power to other markets like this new one, policymakers and regulators need to take note," Pociask said. "They should be concerned."

On the surface, it may appear that Google has not violated antitrust law, Pociask added. "But there are real anticompetitive risks," he said. "Not from the operating system per se as much as it is from the whole online dominance we're seeing."

Other antitrust experts disagreed, saying Google's entrance into the OS market would benefit consumers by creating a legitimate competitor to Microsoft's Windows.

Google has recently faced other antitrust probes, with the U.S. Department of Justice looking into its digital book settlement with publishers, and ties between the Google and Apple boards. The DOJ has also opposed an advertising deal with rival Yahoo. But Google's entrance into the OS market is the "opposite of something raising antitrust concerns," said Evan Stewart, a partner with the Zuckerman Spaeder law firm. "This looks like extremely healthy, competitive, consumer-benefiting innovation."

"More competition in the operating system market has got to be viewed as a good thing," said Keith Hylton, a professor at the Boston University School of Law.

If anything, Google's move may give Microsoft an argument before antitrust regulators in Europe and the Far East that there is strong competition for OSes, Hylton said. However, it also raises questions about whether Google acted fairly when it complained to antitrust authorities in recent years about some Microsoft OS decisions, and when it worked to prevent Microsoft from acquiring Yahoo, he said.

"All that stuff looks a little bit stranger now that Google has entered the operating system market," he said. "Now it looks like the classic business of fending off rivals from your own markets when you're trying to enter theirs. I guess that's taking advantage of everything you can, but that doesn't appear to be honorable behavior."


Source: ComputerWorld




All news for September 18th, 2009:
20:13Microsoft Internet Explorer SSL security hole lingers
20:11Conservatives call for DNA databases to be reduced
20:09McAfee warns of bogus security suite
20:08Security market remains buoyant in choppy waters
20:07The good and bad of government in the cloud
20:05Vista, Windows 7 Are More Secure than Snow Leopard
20:04Will Google's Buy of reCAPTCHA Hurt Internet Security?
20:01HHS guts health-care breach notification law, groups warn
20:00Man gets 15 months for E-Trade skimming scam
19:59Sophisticated botnet causing a surge in click fraud
19:59Microsoft sues scareware scammers
19:58Software company fined for trading with the enemy
19:58Misdirected spyware infects Ohio hospital
19:57Firefox's Flash check drives 10M to Adobe's download
19:55Microsoft, Yahoo in informal talks with EU over search deal

All news for September 17th, 2009:
19:59Wireless Intrusion Detection and Prevention Systems: Selection Criteria
19:58How to Compare and Use Wireless Intrusion Detection and Prevention Systems
19:54Social Networking a Tool for More Secure ID Management?
19:521.8 million UK postcodes available online
19:51Batman 'glide' disabled in anti-piracy measure
19:47Study: eBay, Yahoo among most trusted companies
19:45One in eight Brits hit by identity theft
19:44Attack E-mails Use Fake Shipping Confirmation Ruse
19:44An Amazing Laptop Recovery Story
19:41Has Conroy's dept received filter report?
19:39Will security concerns darken Google's government cloud?
19:35New phishing attack chats up victims
19:34Report: Skype founders sue Skype
19:34Google buys reCAPTCHA to boost book scanning efforts
19:33Microsoft offers tools for secure application development



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September 18th, 2009

Microsoft Internet Explorer SSL security hole lingers

Conservatives call for DNA databases to be reduced

McAfee warns of bogus security suite

Security market remains buoyant in choppy waters

The good and bad of government in the cloud

Vista, Windows 7 Are More Secure than Snow Leopard

Will Google's Buy of reCAPTCHA Hurt Internet Security?

HHS guts health-care breach notification law, groups warn

Man gets 15 months for E-Trade skimming scam

Sophisticated botnet causing a surge in click fraud

Microsoft sues scareware scammers

Software company fined for trading with the enemy

Misdirected spyware infects Ohio hospital

Firefox's Flash check drives 10M to Adobe's download

Microsoft, Yahoo in informal talks with EU over search deal

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