MJ Martin (21
Apr 2009)
"Google is BIG BROTHER"
Google Stands To Gain From
Capital Connections
Privacy Groups And Small Web Companies Are Raising
Concerns About The Company's Ubiquity On Government Sitesby Neil
Munro
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Executives at
online-advertising giant Google are helping President Obama and Capitol
Hill legislators get their messages out to the public, but they're facing
nascent opposition from privacy advocates and small competitors who say Google
is inappropriately using its presence on government Web sites to track
users' political activities online.
These critics say that Google, aided by
the White House, is using "cookie" software and the popular goal of government
transparency to boost its own revenues and to build a vast database of citizens'
political attitudes.
Google's expanding role in government is
illustrated by the deals that Google struck with the Democratic-controlled
Congress and with President Obama's White House. Both allow Google's
data-collecting cookies -- compact files automatically downloaded onto
Web-surfers' computers when they visit a site -- to be placed on citizens'
computers when they view politicians' video speeches, or even when they merely
view the pages where the speeches can be watched.
In a short statement to National Journal,
a White House spokesman said "we aren't using [Internet] data for political
purposes, nor do we have any plans to.
"
But it is clear that the
administration's use of cookies blurs traditional distinctions between
government and corporate information, and between public outreach and political
campaigning. It's also clear that the White House's use of cookies is very
different from the administrations of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, both
of whom minimized tracking of citizens' online activities by sharply limiting
the use of federal and corporate cookies.
The current system "allows one company to
collect huge amounts of data.... The idea that the government would be endorsing
any corporation having access to citizens' political concerns... is a concern,"
said Jeff Chester, founder of the D.C.-based Center for Digital Democracy. The
data collected from government Web sites, he said, "can then feed into the very
sophisticated political campaign-ads products that Google is peddling to
legislators all across the country.
"
Even without any role for Google, the
government's use of data-collecting cookie software on its Web sites and
those of its affiliates is questionable, said David Sohn, a
privacy-advocate at the left-leaning Center for Democracy & Technology.
"It's something we're going to be looking at... there will be, and there should
be, scrutiny.
"
From their first day in office, White
House officials used Google's YouTube software to display videos of Obama's
speeches on WhiteHouse.gov. Because of this choice, some pages on
the site inserted Google's cookies onto visitors' computers, even if the visitor
did not watch the YouTube videos.
After a spurt of protests from privacy
advocates, White House officials and Google officials modified the system so
that YouTube cookies were inserted only if visitors watched the videos, said
Christopher Soghoian, a computer expert at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet
& Society, who discovered the YouTube cookies on the White House Web
site.
Next, the
White House began using commercial software made by Akamai to display the
videos. But this service is expensive, and it too inserted cookies into each
browser that displayed the Web page, even when the visitor did not watch the
video. By March 10, White House officials stopped the transfer of those cookies
and restarted use of YouTube software -- and YouTube cookies -- after National
Journal asked for details about the White House's policies.
The cookies on
these sites are intended only for basic tasks, Google officials say, and do not
collect the extensive information recorded by company's advertising cookies. "It
is not the same cookie that we would set on [advertising-supported
YouTube] channels," company spokesman Scott Rubin said. The basic cookie counts
visitors, keeps the volume steady and "tells us what other videos you've seen,"
he said.
But the
Google privacy notice on the White House videos is more open-ended, and it's
hard to tell exactly how the information is being used. "Google is keeping this
cookie information, we know that," said Soghoian. "What Google is doing with it
is a secret.
"
One clue came in March, when the White
House's YouTube videos began displaying a small warning to prospective viewers.
The warnings linked to a Google Web site which says, "We may record information
about your usage, such as when you use YouTube, the channels, groups and
favorites you subscribe to, the contacts you communicate with, the videos you
watch and the frequency and size of data transfers, as well as information you
display or click on... [and] track which e-mails are opened by recipients.
"
To verify the
transfer of cookies, National Journal used a Firefox browser and two additional
software tools, dubbed Firebug and Firecookie, as well as a Web site operated by
Adobe Systems Inc. In several tests on March 16, the Firecookie software showed
how the YouTube software downloaded a cookie onto National Journal's computer
when it was used to view a video speech by Obama displayed at WhiteHouse.gov and at MyBarackObama.com, which houses the reconstituted
Obama election campaign organization. Different cookies were inserted when
National Journal watched videos from other agencies.
Other YouTube cookies were downloaded
when the browser was used to visit the "Senate Hub" and the "House Hub" sites
established by YouTube for members of Congress. The cookie-detecting
software also showed that the congressional pages carried additional data files
that can be used by tracking and analytical software owned by Google's
subsidiary DoubleClick.
The use of cookies on agency sites is
sharply restricted by guidelines set at the end of the Clinton
administration, by the E-Government Act of 2002 and by regulations issued
by the Bush administration in 2003. "'Cookies' should not be used at Federal Web
sites... unless, in addition to clear and conspicuous notice, the following
conditions are met: a compelling need to gather the data on the site;
appropriate and publicly disclosed privacy safeguards for handling of
information derived from 'cookies'; and personal approval by the head of the
agency," according to a memo issued in June 2000 by Jacob J. Lew, then director
of the Office of Management and Budget.
Still, the rules allow agency sites to
use "session cookies," which are deleted when a visitor leaves, and basic
traffic-measuring software. Agency sites appear to be following those
rules.
But the
Executive Office of the President is not an agency and is exempt from the 2002
law. The White House's online privacy statement says the cookies are "used by
some third-party providers to help maintain the integrity of video statistics. A
waiver has been issued by the White House Counsel's office to allow for the use
of this persistent cookie." (Persistent cookies, unlike session cookies, remain
on users' computers after they leave and can track their visits to other
sites.
)
A White
House statement on Monday said that "the only persistent cookie that the White
House allows is a cookie to ensure that users don't artificially drive up view
count," but the White House acknowledged on another occasion that YouTube
cookies could appear on .gov sites. The statement also said the White House
officials "don't provide Google access to any personal information about our
users." But the data in Google's YouTube cookies can be combined with other
databases, such as the database that stores the personal data provided by
YouTube account holders. This data-compilation could allow Google to learn
much about the people who watch Obama's speech at the White House site or at My.BarackObama.com.
According to the White House's online
privacy declaration, software on agency Web sites records "IP addresses, which
are the locations of computers or networks on the Internet, and analyze them in
order to improve the value of our site." The electronic address of each surfer's
computer, the IP addresses, are "only looked at to note the geographies of our
users and view count," said the statement.
Congress operates under a different set
of rules than the White House, but the use by House members of YouTube's "House
Hub" does not violate the gift-ban because the free service is "offered on an
equal basis to others," said Kyle Anderson, the press director at the Committee
on House Administration.
Yet the site is not offered on the same
basis, because Google has promised not to sell advertisements on the House and
Senate sites. That's led small vendors to complain that they've lost sales to
Google's free advertising-supported services. The companies try to sign
traditional fee-for-service contracts with individual legislators, but
they're business was undercut by Google's provision of the free House and Senate
hubs to the legislators.
Drawing The Line
In general,
federal laws bar the use of government assets for political campaigning. But the
much-lawyered distinctions between government services and political campaigning
are being blurred as politicians use Internet technology to extend their
advocacy.
During
the 2008 campaign, the White House collected the e-mail addresses and allied
data about the concerns of roughly 13 million supporters and raised more than
$500 million online, including tens of millions from donors whose identity the
campaign was not required to announce. This data is valuable in part because it
will help Obama's re-election campaign quickly raise donations and mobilize
volunteers. On March 16, administration officials announced plans to mobilize
its supporters, via the Organizing for America site, to help pass Obama's
proposed $3.55 trillion budget for 2010.
White House officials declined to be
interviewed on the rules governing the separation of campaign and state data.
"There are
indications that the administration wants to revise some of these laws,
particularly with respect to the Internet, and we're waiting to see if we can
play a role," said Peter Greenberger, a former regional campaign manager for Al
Gore's presidential bid who now heads Google's Elections and Issues Advocacy
team. "The real question that people are trying to answer is what can the White
House do now that they're the White House as opposed to a [political]
campaign.
"
Finding that line will mean answering
questions about rules that bar the use of government assets for political
campaigning, contracting rules that limit the ability of officials to hire one
company rather than another and laws that bar government officials from favoring
contractors, said Google officials. Also, added Greenberger, "There would be
issues providing some services to an elected official that is not provided to
somebody else," such as a political opponent. But, he added, "in some cases, you
know, incumbency is a powerful thing.
"
Over the last year, Google has expanded
its sale force in D.C., in two business areas, said Greenberger. For example,
Google is selling advertising services to legislators and advocacy groups on
both sides of the political divide, who value Google's ability to displays ads
to people who are likely to vote for a candidate, to donate, sign a petition or
volunteer for a cause.
Google is also working with federal
officials to map out government data so that Google's most valuable property,
the Google search page, can better direct citizens to sought-after government
information. Any increased traffic through the Google Web page to federal sites
gives the company a greater opportunity to sell advertising to government and
commercial customers, said Greenberger. "It would be great if HUD's site had a
little ad saying, 'Are you eligible for the mortgage bailout? Fill out this
ad,'" Greenberger said in February, using the Department of Housing and Urban
Development as an example.
The administration's green light for
the use of YouTube cookies is mirrored by a push among federal technology
managers. In a Dec. 21 report, for example, a panel of four tech managers urged
that federal rules be changed to allow officials to "reach new audiences and
engage the public." Because "agencies are banned from using persistent cookies
without approval from their agency head... we can't take advantage of
sophisticated Web services and analytical tools that rely on persistent
cookies," the report said. To fix this shortcoming, the report recommended that
the administration's as-yet-unnamed chief technology officer should allow
agencies to use persistent cookies.
In February, the White House detailed one
of the study's four authors, Bev Godwin, to work as director of online resources
and interagency development on the White House's new media team.
Many people are
willing to trade some online privacy in exchange for convenience and bargains.
But when prompted, many people also say they're worried about online privacy.
For example, a survey by TRUSTe, a nonprofit that helps companies manage privacy
concerns, on Monday reported a poll in which more than 90 percent of 1,000
respondents deemed online privacy to be a "really [or] somewhat" important
issue.
But even
beyond privacy concerns, critics of Google worry about citizens unwittingly
adding to the company's bottom line just by visiting government Web sites. The
data gathered by Google from WhiteHouse.gov, for example, could help Google target
online advertising for politicians, said Chester of the Center for Digital
Democracy. "The White House has to make its rules regarding the use of digital
media transparent, and it can't be engaged in any kind of digital favoritism,"
said Chester. "The U.S. government should not be a subsidiary of Silicon Valley,
especially of Google.
"
http://www.nationaljournal.com/njonline/no_20090316_4054.php