Seems that one of the richest companies in Silicon Valley is having trouble finding lawyers to correctly T & C it’s latest browser release, Chrome.
Deep in the User Agreement, which all you downloaders have signed up to ,is something which we suspect Google has been doing all along. This just proves us right.
So here it is in black and white and from the Google-Horse’s mouth.
By submitting, posting or displaying the content, you give Google a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any Content that you submit, post or display on or through the Services. This license is for the sole purpose of enabling Google to display, distribute and promote the Services and may be revoked for certain Services as defined in the Additional Terms of those Services.
Thanks to the US firm of lawyers acting on Google’s behave for the head’s up on that one.
Google currently refuses to display a valid privacy policy from it’s front page in breach of US federal law.
In additional clicks the company, one of my favourite world-wide hoteliers, tells us.
A conversational blog by it’s founder and CEO Bill Marriott ranks amongst a list of 15 blogs (by sitepoint) where the corporate’s have got it right.
Here’s a picture from my favourite Marriott, Marriott Jordan Valley. Cheap, and great breakfast, I’d recommend it to those visiting the ruins who can’t get bookings at the Movenpick (founded by relatives of the Swiss Explorer who discovered the ruins and in the ideal situation).
Hammer time? An amusing anecdote about things you can do with house-hold tools.
AUGUST 6–While on patrol Monday evening, an Indiana cop noticed a naked guy standing in the window of a Fort Wayne home. So she approached the man’s front door, which was wide open, to investigate further. It was then that Officer S. Hughes and a colleague were treated to the sight of a prone Ronald Miller, 56, engaging in a remarkably lewd act on his living room sofa. For the dirty details, you’ll have to read the below Fort Wayne Police Department report, which notes that Miller is apparently handy with a claw hammer and some motor oil. Miller, pictured in the mug shot at right, was arrested on a felony indecency charge. A neighbor told cops that Miller was “not right” and parades around naked “24/24.”
The UK seems to have this mentality that it’s OK as long as it’s happening to someone else.
Read on..
Internet service providers are to be invited to tender for a government scheme to monitor all internet communications and telecommunications.
Under the proposed Interception Modernisation Programme (IMP), internet service providers (ISPs) would be required to link ‘black boxes’ to their servers to record all internet traffic, including details of emails, VoIP telephone conversations, instant messages and browsing habits. Telephone conversations would also be monitored.
The traffic data would then be siphoned into a centralised database, enabling the government to monitor all business and domestic internet and telephone communications. According to insiders, some ISPs have already been pitching to the Home Office to provide the ‘black boxes’ to record the data.
The Home Office and GCHQ have applied to central government for funding for the scheme. Answering a written question posed by Lord Northesk last month, Admiral West, the parliamentary undersecretary of state for security and an adviser to Gordon Brown, gave details of the funding request last week.
According to West, as part of the 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review (CSR), “a central bid was made to HM Treasury on behalf of the security and intelligence agencies. Funding for IMP was included in the bid, and the exact programme allocation across the CSR years is currently being finalised between the Home Office and HM Treasury.”
Funding would be for three years. University of Cambridge security expert Richard Clayton told ZDNet.co.uk that putting state-of-the-art surveillance devices into all UK ISPs would be “likely to cost quite a lot”. As a consequence, Clayton said the government plans to deploy the system at one ISP initially.
West confirmed that the government would be conducting a “feasibility study” for the surveillance of ISPs and for the centralised communications database, up to 2010.
“A significant proportion of the programme investment over the Comprehensive Spending Review period will be used to test feasibility and reduce the risk associated with implementing the proposed IMP solution,” said West. “The private sector is likely to play a major role in this work and the programme will be conducting a competitive tender and entering commercial negotiations to commission its services.”
However, peers criticised the government proposals. Lord Errol of Hay told ZDNet.co.uk on Tuesday that the proposals were “incredibly dangerous”.
“Part of the problem is that the Home Office would be able to self-authorise to do any searches in the database, which is very dangerous indeed,” said Errol. “At the moment, someone checks the access requests.”
Clayton agreed with Errol that the proposals were “completely not proportionate”. “If the government is going to do this, it would be far better to force all mosques, churches, and public houses to fit microphones and tape recorders,” he told ZDNet.co.uk. “East Germany used to have a comparable system.”
At present, surveillance information can be requested from ISPs by law-enforcement agencies, but those requests can be queried by the ISPs concerned. According to Clayton, a centralised database without such a check may contravene existing data-protection legislation, so the government would need to change the law to make the database legal.
“At the moment, the centralised database and self-authorisation would be illegal under the Data Protection Act,” said Clayton. “The draft Communications Data Bill will contain clauses to make this legal.”
Lord Errol agreed that the only reason to bring the Communications Data Bill in as primary, rather than secondary, legislation would be to legalise the government plans — secondary legislation would have to conform to existing data-protection laws.
“The Communications Data Bill has to be producing something new — the Home Office is going after some new powers,” said Errol. “They have all of the powers they want, except for being able to bring all of the data together at the Home Office.”
The Home Office on Tuesday confirmed that it was seeking to introduce a centralised database of communications data, but said the plans were at the proposal stage.
“The changes to the way we communicate, due particularly to the internet revolution, will increasingly undermine our current capabilities to obtain communications data — essential for counter-terrorism and investigation of crime purpose[s] — and use it to protect the public,” stated a Home Office spokesperson. “Proposals are being developed and full details of the draft Bill will be released later this year, allowing for full engagement with Parliament and the public.”
The Home Office spokesperson admitted that primary legislation would be necessary to legalise a self-authorised, centralised database. “That is why we’re introducing primary legislation,” the spokesperson told ZDNet.co.uk. However, the spokesperson again added that, at present, these are proposals rather than plans.
Privacy watchdog the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) said it had “grave questions about the acceptability of such a scheme”.
“In the fight against evil, we must not ride roughshod over our liberties,” said Richard Thomas in a speech on Tuesday. “Every phone call, email, internet search and online transaction would be monitored. Even the possibility of such a scheme needs the fullest debate before becoming legislation.”
Thomas declined to comment as to whether the Home Office proposals were legal under current data-protection law, and refused to comment any further about his concerns.
The ICO had not been consulted by the Home Office over the communications-database plans, said an ICO insider.
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