by Rob Waugh
17 February 2012
from
DailyMail Website
Search giant allegedly used 'cookie'
to monitor browsing habits.
Bypassed Apple's safety measures.
Privacy group says, 'This is bad news for the company. It's time for
Google to do a better job' |
Apple iPhone 4S
The smartphone's Safari
browser
is the most popular mobile
web browser
Google is alleged to have
bypassed privacy features built into the browser
Google and
Facebook may have used a computer
'trick' that allows them to monitor web browsing via Apple's Safari browser
to build up advertising 'profiles' - circumventing Apple's safety measures.
The search giant bypassed privacy settings built into Apple's Safari web
browser on iPhones, PCs and Macs, according to a recent report.
Other advertising companies, and Facebook, reportedly used a similar method.
Safari is the most popular mobile web browser, used in all models of Apple's
iPhone and iPad.
Google allegedly circumvented the protection to build up profiles of web
users, using a 'cookie' that collected advertising information. The move has
caused outcry among privacy advocates.
It comes shortly after EU privacy groups wrote to the search giant to ask it
to 'halt' a new privacy policy that would allow it to 'share' customer data
between services such as Search, Gmail and YouTube.
Google allegedly used a 'trick' which sends a blank message to the browser
to make it accept unauthorized 'cookies'. Apple says it is 'working to put a
stop' to the practice. The code was uncovered by a Stanford University
researcher Jonathan Mayer and was reported in the Wall Street Journal.
Google has since disabled the code, and claims that the report is in error,
and that its cookies only collected anonymous information. The revelation
caused outcry among online privacy advocates.
San Francisco's Electronic Frontier Foundation says,
'Coming on the heels of Google's
controversial decision to tear down the privacy-protective walls between
some of its other services, this is bad news for the company.
'It's time for Google to acknowledge that it can do a better job of
respecting the privacy of Web users.'
Google says that the report was in error.
'The Journal mischaracterizes what happened
and why,' says a spokesperson.
'We used known Safari functionality to
provide features that signed-in Google users had enabled. It’s important
to stress that these advertising cookies do not collect personal
information.'
Under fire
Google is accused of
'bypassing' Apple's privacy protection
to gather advertising
information
'Unlike other major browsers, Apple’s Safari
browser blocks third-party cookies by default,' says the spokesperson.
'However, Safari enables many web features
for its users that rely on third parties and third-party cookies, such
as 'Like' buttons. Last year, we began using this functionality to
enable features for signed-in Google users on Safari.
'To enable these features, we created a temporary communication link
between Safari browsers and Google’s servers, so that we could ascertain
whether Safari users were also signed into Google, and had opted for
this type of personalization.'
'However, the Safari browser contained functionality that then enabled
other Google advertising cookies to be set on the browser. We didn’t
anticipate that this would happen, and we have now started removing
these advertising cookies from Safari browsers.
European regulators recently wrote to Google CEO
Larry Page calling on the search giant to halt the introduction of
its new 'one-size-fits-all' privacy policy.
The policy was due to come into effect on March 1, and would allow Google to
share what it knows about users between services such as Google Search,
Gmail and YouTube.
The move horrified privacy advocates and bloggers-tech site ZDNet said
that Google would 'know more about you than your wife does' and said the
policy was 'Big Brother-ish'.
The European Union working party asked for Google to stop the new policy
while the working group investigate whether personal data is protected.
‘We call for a pause to ensure that there
can be no misunderstanding about Google’s commitments to information
rights of EU citizens.’
‘Given the wide range of services you offer, and the popularity of these
services, changes in your privacy policy may affect many citizens in
most EU member states,’ the group wrote to Google Chief Executive Larry
Page