Protecting children online

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Monday, December 3rd, 2007 @ 10:12 pm

Posted by Nicole Wong, Associate
General Counsel

Google is deeply committed to providing a healthy and trusted
online environment for all of our users, and especially children.
While the Internet provides an amazing opportunity for people to
connect with useful information, some online material poses serious
risks to children and families, and some online behavior violates
the law and should be eradicated. Child pornography, in particular,
is a horrific and vicious crime. Today, I href="/pdf/Google_Nicole_Wong_Testimony-062706.pdf" >testified
before the House of Representatives Subcommittee on Oversight and
Investigations about Google’s efforts to keep kids safe online.
Among the initiatives that I highlighted:

- Google has a zero-tolerance policy on child pornography. We
prohibit any advertising related to child pornography. When we
become aware of child pornography anywhere in our search engine or
on our site, we immediately remove and report it to the appropriate
authorities.

- We work closely with law enforcement to help track down child
predators, and respond to hundreds of child safety-related requests
per year.

- We help families stay safe online with tools like href="http://www.google.com/intl/en/help/customize.html#safe" >SafeSearch,
which enables users to filter adult content from search results. We
also promote online safety through our support of the href="http://www.wiredsafety.org/" >WiredSafety education
campaign.

These are just the beginning. We believe that much can be done to
combat child exploitation online, and are committed to doing our
part to protect the Internet as a safe place for all.

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Calling for federal consumer privacy protection

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Monday, December 3rd, 2007 @ 10:12 pm

Posted by Nicole Wong, Associate
General Counsel

Google is committed to protecting your privacy and to supporting an
Internet environment that also respects individual privacy. Today,
we're joining a group of notable U.S. companies href="http://www.cdt.org/privacy/20060620cplstatement.pdf" >calling
for federal consumer privacy legislation.

Here in the U.S., we have a growing patchwork quilt of state
privacy laws, disparate industry-specific privacy laws (for
example, different laws covering health-related data, financial
data and children's online data), and a similarly-mixed bag of
data security laws. This matrix of laws is complex, incomplete, and
sometimes contradictory. For consumers, the result is a set of
privacy protections that are uneven at best.

On an Internet beset with spyware, malware, phishing,
identity-theft, and other privacy threats, enforcement of privacy
protections has become an industry-wide challenge, and highlights
the lack of a coherent regulatory structure. Google strongly
supports the adoption of a federal consumer privacy law. It would
be good for our users, and would contribute to consumer trust on
the Internet as a platform for communication, expression,
e-commerce, and so forth. Americans care about their privacy, and
so does Google. A baseline U.S. federal consumer privacy law will
help protect all of us online.

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Judge tells DoJ “No” on search queries

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Monday, December 3rd, 2007 @ 10:12 pm

Posted by Nicole Wong, Associate
General Counsel

Google will not have to hand over any user's search queries to
the government. That's what a federal judge ruled today when he
decided to drastically limit a subpoena issued to Google by the
Department of Justice. (You can read the entire ruling href="http://www.google.com/press/images/ruling_20060317.pdf" >here
and the government's original subpoena href="http://www.google.com/press/images/subpoena_20060317.pdf" >here.)

The government's original request demanded billions of URLs and
two month's worth of users' search queries. Google resisted
the subpoena, prompting the judge's order today. In addition to
excluding search queries from the subpoena, Judge James Ware also
required the government to limit its demand for URLs to 50,000. We
will fully comply with the judge's order.

This is a clear victory for our users and for our company, and
Judge Ware's decision regarding search queries is especially
important. While privacy was not the most significant legal issue
in this case (because the government wasn't asking for
personally identifiable information), privacy was perhaps the most
significant to our users. As we noted in our briefing to the court,
we believe that if the government was permitted to require Google
to hand over search queries, that could have undermined confidence
that our users have in our ability to keep their information
private. Because we resisted the subpoena, the Department of
Justice will not receive any search queries and only a small
fraction of the URLs it originally requested.

We will always be subject to government subpoenas, but the fact
that the judge sent a clear message about privacy is reassuring.
What his ruling means is that neither the government nor anyone
else has carte blanche when demanding data from Internet companies.
When a party resists an overbroad subpoena, our legal process can
be an effective check on such demands and be a protector of our
users.

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Google in China

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Monday, December 3rd, 2007 @ 10:12 pm

Posted by Andrew McLaughlin, senior
policy counsel

Google users in China today struggle with a service that, to be
blunt, isn't very good. href="http://www.google.com/" >Google.com appears to be down
around 10% of the time. Even when users can reach it, the website
is slow, and sometimes produces results that when clicked on, stall
out the user's browser. Our href="http://news.google.com/" >Google News service is never
available; href="http://www.google.com/imghp?hl=en&tab=wi&q=" >Google
Images is accessible only half the time. At Google we work hard
to create a great experience for our users, and the level of
service we've been able to provide in China is not something
we're proud of.

This problem could only be resolved by creating a local presence,
and this week we did so, by launching href="http://Google.cn" >Google.cn, our website for the
People's Republic of China. In order to do so, we have agreed
to remove certain sensitive information from our search results. We
know that many people are upset about this decision, and frankly,
we understand their point of view. This wasn't an easy choice,
but in the end, we believe the course of action we've chosen
will prove to be the right one.

Launching a Google domain that restricts information in any way
isn't a step we took lightly. For several years, we've
debated whether entering the Chinese market at this point in
history could be consistent with our mission and values. Our
executives have spent a lot of time in recent months talking with
many people, ranging from those who applaud the Chinese government
for its embrace of a market economy and its lifting of 400 million
people out of poverty to those who disagree with many of the
Chinese government's policies, but who wish the best for China
and its people. We ultimately reached our decision by asking
ourselves which course would most effectively further Google's
mission to organize the world's information and make it
universally useful and accessible. Or, put simply: how can we
provide the greatest access to information to the greatest number
of people?

Filtering our search results clearly compromises our mission.
Failing to offer Google search at all to a fifth of the world's
population, however, does so far more severely. Whether our critics
agree with our decision or not, due to the severe quality problems
faced by users trying to access Google.com from within China, this
is precisely the choice we believe we faced. By launching Google.cn
and making a major ongoing investment in people and infrastructure
within China, we intend to change that.

No, we're not going to offer some Google products, such as href="http://mail.google.com/mail/" >Gmail or href="http://www.blogger.com/home" >Blogger, on Google.cn until
we're comfortable that we can do so in a manner that respects
our users' interests in the privacy of their personal
communications. And yes, Chinese regulations will require us to
remove some sensitive information from our search results. When we
do so, we'll disclose this to users, just as we already do in
those rare instances where we alter results in order to comply with
local laws in France, Germany and the U.S.

Obviously, the situation in China is far different than it is in
those other countries; while China has made great strides in the
past decades, it remains in many ways closed. We aren't happy
about what we had to do this week, and we hope that over time
everyone in the world will come to enjoy full access to
information. But how is that full access most likely to be
achieved? We are convinced that the Internet, and its continued
development through the efforts of companies like Google, will
effectively contribute to openness and prosperity in the world. Our
continued engagement with China is the best (perhaps only) way for
Google to help bring the tremendous benefits of universal
information access to all our users there.

We're in this for the long haul. In the years to come,
we'll be making significant and growing investments in China.
Our launch of google.cn, though filtered, is a necessary first step
toward achieving a productive presence in a rapidly changing
country that will be one of the world's most important and
dynamic for decades to come. To some people, a hard compromise may
not feel as satisfying as a withdrawal on principle, but we believe
it's the best way to work toward the results we all desire.

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