The
lesson seems to be, if it's important don't do it online – and use
encryption. If they want to snoop on you they will.
Google
accused of spying on Gmail users
Google
isn’t exactly a stranger to allegations that they invade the
privacy of their customers, but now the search engine is being asked
to explain itself in court over accusations that they snoop through
messages sent through its Gmail service.
RT,
12
October, 2012
Representatives
from Google are asking a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit waged at
the company’s Gmail platform because the plaintiffs in the case
cannot explicitly prove that their correspondence is being unlawfully
monitored by the email service.
Brad
Scott and Todd Harrington are the lead plaintiffs in a case that
attempts to call-out the Silicon Valley search engine company as
being in violation of California’s Invasion of Privacy Act (CIPA)
because they believe Gmail conducts clandestine scans of emails for
words and content, intentionally intercepting private communiqué as
a result without obtaining the user’s permission. Google, on the
other hand, maintains that only computers complete all the legwork
and that no humans actually have their eyes on any emails, also
insisting that neither Mr. Scott nor Mr. Harrington can back up their
claims that any action from Gmail has led to injury.
Google
condemned the case this week, Courthouse News reports, arguing by way
of a 25-page motion that Gmail scans data sent over its servers using
its "fully automated processes involve no human review of any
kind" that they insist exists to screen out viruses and spam
"for the protection of its users." Now they are asking US
District Judge Lucy Koh to dismiss the complaint with prejudice.
The
plaintiffs say that Google’s actions are enough to land them in
court because that conduct constitutes wiretapping and eavesdropping
in their eyes, a claim which Google says is “contorting” state
law "in ways the California Legislature never intended.”
"In
the context of emails, multiple courts have recognized that no one
can reasonably expect that the emails they send to others will be
free from the automated processing that is normally associated with
delivering emails," Google responds to the case with this week’s
motion.
"Plaintiffs
fail to articulate a single concrete injury stemming from the
automated processing of emails sent to Gmail users," Google
adds. "Plaintiffs instead rely on conclusory allegations that
their privacy rights were infringed in the abstract."
Additionally,
Google charges that no state statues being called into question
applies to the plaintiffs’ allegations, writing in their motion
that the terms "electronic communication," "email,"
"Internet" and "computer" are not included.
"Even
if the court were to accept plaintiffs' invitation to judicially
rewrite the statute to reach electronic communications, choice of law
rules would still preclude applying CIPA to this case," Google’s
motion states.
"CIPA
makes clear on its face that it is intended to protect California
residents and not to regulate California businesses," Google
adds.
Judge
Koh is now expected to hear the motion on March 21, 2013. Meanwhile,
congressional Republicans wrote to the White House this week to
attack a planned cybersecurity executive order that would allow
third-party companies, such as Google, to openly share
customer-inputted information with the federal government.
“An
executive order exerting influence over critical infrastructure is
not just a step in the wrong substantive direction,” the letter
reads. “It will almost certainly be exploited by other nations to
justify their efforts to regulate the Internet. This is a most
critical time, and we cannot afford a hasty, unilateral action that
will only serve to bolster the efforts of less democratic nations to
stifle the very free exchange of ideas and expression that has
allowed the Internet to flourish across the globe. For these reasons,
we urge you to rethink the wisdom of an executive order.”
The
letter to US President Barack Obama was signed by 11 GOP members of
Congress, including US Rep. Fred Upton (R-Michigan), Senator Kelly
Ayotte (R-New Hampshire), Senator Marco Rubio (R-Florida) and Senator
Mike Lee (R-Utah).

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