K.S. Rajan (16
Feb 2012)
"GOOGLE AND FREEDOM"
Fr: Lee Bellinger, Publisher
Re: Google Coopted by Federal Government to
Spy on Customers
The federal obsession with peering into people's lives continues
to metastasize. Today, I want to alert you to an alarming new
situation where Google, the mega Internet search engine service,
is in cahoots with Uncle Sam to root into Americans' personal
lives.
And there are a few privacy defenses you can mount – which I
will share with you momentarily.
Google's upcoming changes to their privacy policies are causing
an uproar, because the new versions read more like "invasion of
privacy policies." If you use any Google service and are
concerned about your privacy and anonymity, there is a need to
better protect yourself.
Biometric Fingerscan
Sitesell.com founder Dr. Ken Evoy wrote a terse letter to Google
regarding its upcoming changes. His gripe is Google is not being
clear on how its new privacy policies affect the typical Google
consumer. Therefore, Google is forcing the consumer to accept a
new contract without properly informed consent.
The typical internet user does not fully understand the business
transaction taking place when using Google's free services: The
real reason you get to use Google services for free is because
Google sells away all your privacy to advertisers. That's the
exchange; that's the contract. You may already understand this
reality because my Independent Living and Executive Bulletin
readers are more savvy than others, but few consumers in the
mass market are truly informed.
Google is a private company, can choose how to operate its
business, and can make changes to its privacy policy at any
time. At the very least, though, it should make its policies
clear so the average consumer understands them and can give
proper consent, which in this case means agreeing to compromise
his or her privacy in exchange for use of Google's services.
There is one more problem, though...
The Feds Want Copies of Your Private Online Activity
and Google Happily Complies...
The public uproar focuses on how freely Google offers up your
private online activities to the feds and other governments
around the world.
Google's Transparency Report on Government Requests shows that
in just a six month period in 2011 the U.S. government made
5,950 requests covering 11,057 specific accounts. Google
complied 93% of the time! Due to all the different gag-like
laws, you will never know if you or someone close to you was
part of this or any future government dragnet.
India's government had the second most requests at only 1,739
covering just 2,439 specific users. In this instance, Google
complied only 70% of the time.
If we look purely at Google's "percentage of compliance," the
number two spot after the U.S. is tied between Brazil and Japan,
at 87%. What's telling is Brazil's government only made 703
requests, while Japan only made 75 requests in the same period.
It seems from the data that other governments are more
discriminating than the U.S. when it comes to rifling through
the public's online activity. The feds' numbers are off the
charts and Google happily complies.
Sponsored Message from Independent Living News
=============================
Defend your privacy at all costs
=============================
What Can You Do About It?
Google's new privacy policy centralizes ALL your activity on its
separate services and companies (YouTube, Gmail, online search,
web browsing through Chrome, etc.). This makes it much easier
for the government to pry into your online activity, past and
present, without your knowledge or consent.
Before this change, each service was separated and
compartmentalized by an internal "Chinese Wall" of sorts. When
the new policy begins on March 1, all your Google activity will
be consolidated, traced, recorded, and permanently stored in big
centralized databases out of your control and oversight.
The first steps to push back (... if they can't "see" you, they
can't trace you easily):
For the tracing and recording of your
activity to work, you must be logged into Google's services.
Make sure to log-off from all your Google services if it doesn't
require you to be logged-in to use it. For example, you don't
need to be logged into YouTube to watch videos.
Set your Google services to the maximum
security available. For instance, Google's browser, Chrome, can
be set to Incognito Mode to give you a bit more privacy. Simply
strike Shift-Control-N while in Google Chrome to open a new
window in Incognito Mode.
Look over Google privacy tools for further
directions.
Other Alternatives outside Google's Hive
Because centralization of your data is an Achilles' heel to
privacy and anonymity, decentralization is one important
solution. Here are a few Google-product alternatives:
Online Search Alternatives to Google –
Ixquick (https://www.ixquick.com/) is a privacy conscious search
engine. It doesn't record your IP address when you search, and
it has additional privacy tools like a proxy server to look at
search results anonymously.
Email Alternatives to Gmail – Hushmail
(https://www.hushmail.com/) offers free online email similar to
Gmail with one unique advantage: built-in tools to encrypt
emails making them more secure from eavesdroppers. If you're
open to a paid email service, Simon Black from Sovereign Man
suggests adding a layer of protection from the feds by working
with an email provider located in privacy friendly
jurisdictions: He mentions (http://www.NeoMailbox.com/)
headquartered in Switzerland and (https://secure.runbox.com/)
located in Norway.
Web browser Alternatives to Google's Chrome -
Apple's Safari (https://www.apple.com/safari/) is a popular
browser and so is Mozilla's Firefox
(https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/new/). Firefox also has
many free security and privacy related add-ons that allow more
anonymity.
Alternatives to Google Maps – Rand McNally
(http://maps.randmcnally.com) gives you online directions and
helps you find local businesses and hotels. Mapquest
(https://www.mapquest.com/) can do the same, plus it gives you
traffic conditions.
Here's What's Truly Disturbing...
Considering Google's intrusion of privacy and how readily it
surrenders customer data to the feds, many privacy critics on
security forums shared this similar comment: "... be careful
what you write or text in your email, blog, SMS; what you say
over Google voice; what you browse or search for online..." In
other words – Censor Yourself!
Before you capitulate to self-censorship, try some of the
suggestions above to maintain more of your privacy, anonymity,
freedom of speech, and especially freedom of thought.
Yours in Freedom,
Lee Bellinger
Lee Bellinger, Publisher
Independent Living