Privacy Ranking of Internet Service Companies

Found on Privacy International on Saturday, 09 June 2007
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We are aware that the decision to place Google at the bottom of the ranking is likely to be controversial, but throughout our research we have found numerous deficiencies and hostilities in Google's approach to privacy that go well beyond those of other organizations. While a number of companies share some of these negative elements, none comes close to achieving status as an endemic threat to privacy.

Google's increasing ability to deep-drill into the minutiae of a user's life and lifestyle choices must in our view be coupled with well defined and mature user controls and an equally mature privacy outlook. Neither of these elements has been demonstrated. Rather, we have witnessed an attitude to privacy within Google that at its most blatant is hostile, and at its most benign is ambivalent. These dynamics do not pervade other major players such as Microsoft or eBay, both of which have made notable improvements to the corporate ethos on privacy issues.

In the closing days of our research we received a copy of supplemental material relating to a complaint to the Federal Trade Commission concerning the pending merger between Google and DoubleClick. This material, submitted by the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) and coupled with a submission to the FTC from the New York State Consumer Protection Board, provided additional weight for our assessment that Google has created the most onerous privacy environment on the Internet.

The article is too long to post the main reasons for this too. However, it shouldn't be a surprise to anybody; Google has always been hoarding all information it could get, and the connection of its different services increase this pool even more. This should remind everybody to be careful with personal information: don't give it out easily, and try to make it as hard as possible to link your sessions, eg by rejecting cookies and avoiding GMail. If you terminate a service, don't trust the provider that it will delete your data: instead, modify and mess up your profile several times with random garbage to make sure it will be useless. It's a shame that users are forced to cover their tracks, but when your personal data is collected against your will, everything is allowed.