| The first sentence of the linked New York Times story: > Google on Tuesday acknowledged to state officials that it had violated people’s privacy during its Street View mapping project when it casually scooped up passwords, e-mail and other personal information from unsuspecting computer users. That answers your first three paragraphs. There’s no “if” to their lying and privacy invasions. They’ve been caught and admitted their actions time and again. > No one is forced to use these things they are free to use any other service or create their own. It is here I will respectfully give up on continuing the conversation with you. You’re either ignoring my main point or truly don’t care for the majority of users. Most people don’t understand the ramifications of these choices and for good reason; they are hard to understand. By suggesting non-technical users create their own services and devices, I’m now wondering it you’re trolling me. > And my attitude is out of pragmatism (…) I don't have any problem with the way Google uses my data Which is valid, but irrelevant. I’ve already mentioned in the top post different people make different choices. I presented another side and used facts to justify it. If you’re going to answer with mere opinion, you’re not adding to the points made by the original poster. |
This is information that Google doesn't have any need for (noise) and didn't want in the first place.
They also self-reported the failure, where they could have just nuked it and we wouldn't be having this conversation.