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by millstone
4950 days ago
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You may recall Google being fined $22.5 million for sneakily bypassing Safari's privacy settings earlier this year. But more to the point is Google's lobbying. Google spends far more on lobbying than do Apple, Facebook, or Microsoft. Google is required to report which issues they lobbied on, but not whether they are for or against proposed legislation. In some cases we can speculate. Google reports high spending on the "Global Online Freedom Act of 2011," which would make it a crime for companies to cooperate with foreign government (cough China) censorship. I do not know which way Google lobbied on this bill, because they won't say (which is itself suggestive). But I suspect they lobbied against it, i.e. would like to be able to censor, because it seems strange to spend so much money supporting a bill that could criminalize their behavior and make it more difficult for them to grow in China. So there is a potential example of Google defending censorship when it aligns with their interest. Overall, it's a fair guess that their lobbying efforts are for less Internet regulation, and also less consumer privacy protections, because that's where their financial interests lie. |
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The fine here was for lying to Safari users (Google told them they didn't need to opt out, because they couldn't be tracked, when in fact the company was tracking them).
The $22.5 million fine was _not_ for the covert tracking itself.