Bush Administration Subpoenas Google in Porn Probe
Thursday, January 19, 2006
SAN FRANCISCO Google Inc. is rebuffing the Bush administration's
demand for a peek at what millions of people have been looking up on
the Internet's leading search engine a request that underscores the
potential for online databases to become tools of the government.
Mountain View-based Google has refused to comply with a White House
subpoena first issued last summer, prompting U.S. Attorney General
Alberto Gonzales this week to ask a federal judge in San Jose for an
order to force a handover of the requested records.
Click here to read the government's motion to compel Google to turn
over search data.
The government wants a list all requests entered into Google's search
engine during an unspecified single week a breakdown that could
conceivably span tens of millions of queries. In addition, it seeks 1
million randomly selected Web addresses from various Google databases.
In court papers that the San Jose Mercury News reported on after seeing
them Wednesday, the Bush administration depicts the information as
vital in its effort to restore online child protection laws that have
been struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Google competitor Yahoo Inc., which runs the Internet's second-most
used search engine, confirmed Thursday that it had complied with a
similar government subpoena.
Although the government says it isn't seeking any data that ties
personal information to search requests, the subpoena still raises
serious privacy concerns, experts said, especially considering recent
revelations that the White House authorized eavesdropping on domestic
civilian communications after the Sept. 11 attacks without obtaining
court approval.
"Search engines now play such an important part in our daily lives that
many people probably contact Google more often than they do their own
mother," said Thomas Burke, a San Francisco attorney who has handled
several prominent cases involving privacy issues.
"Just as most people would be upset if the government wanted to know
how much you called your mother and what you talked about, they should
be upset about this, too."
The content of search request sometimes contain information about the
person making the query.
For instance, it's not unusual for search requests to include names,
medical information or Social Security information, said Pam Dixon,
executive director for the World Privacy Forum.
"This is exactly the kind of thing we have been worrying about with
search engine for some time," Dixon said. "Google should be commended
for fighting this."
Other search engines already have complied with similar subpoenas
issued by the Bush administration, according to court documents. The
cooperating search engines weren't identified.
Yahoo stressed that it didn't reveal any personal information. "We are
rigorous defenders of our users' privacy," Yahoo spokeswoman Mary Osako
said Thursday. "In our opinion, this is not a privacy issue."
Microsoft Corp. MSN, the No. 3 search engine, declined to say whether
it even received a similar subpoena. "MSN works closely with law
enforcement officials worldwide to assist them when requested," the
company said in a statement.
As the Internet's dominant search engine, Google has built up a
valuable storehouse of information that "makes it a very attractive
target for law enforcement," said Chris Hoofnagle, senior counsel for
the Electronic Privacy Information Center.
The Department of Justice argues that Google's cooperation is essential
in its effort to simulate how people navigate the Web.
In a separate case in Pennsylvania, the Bush administration is trying
to prove that Internet filters don't do an adequate job of preventing
children from accessing online pornography and other objectionable
destinations.
Obtaining the subpoenaed information from Google "would assist the
government in its efforts to understand the behavior of current Web
users, (and) to estimate how often Web users encounter
harmful-to-minors material in the course of their searches," the
Justice Department wrote in a brief filed Wednesday
Google whose motto when it went public in 2004 was "do no evil"
contends that submitting to the subpoena would represent a betrayal to
its users, even if all personal information is stripped from the search
terms sought by the government.
"Google's acceding to the request would suggest that it is willing to
reveal information about those who use its services. This is not a
perception that Google can accept," company attorney Ashok Ramani wrote
in a letter included in the government's filing.
Complying with the subpoena also wound threaten to expose some of
Google's "crown-jewel trade secrets," Ramani wrote. Google is
particularly concerned that the information could be used to deduce the
size of its index and how many computers it uses to crunch the
requests.
"This information would be highly valuable to competitors or miscreants
seeking to harm Google's business," Ramani wrote.
Dixon is hoping Google's battle with the government reminds people to
be careful how they interact with search engines.
"When you are looking at that blank search box, you should remember
that what you fill can come back to haunt you unless you take
precautions," she said.
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