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UPDATE 3-Connecticut asks Google if it collected Wi-Fi data

Mon Jun 7, 2010 1:00pm EDT

* Atty gen asks if data collected from private networks

* Calls sweeps 'pernicious invasion of privacy'

* Google says will continue to cooperate with authorities (Adds Google response, paragraphs 5-6)

By Scott Malone

BOSTON, June 7 (Reuters) - Connecticut's top prosecutor called on Google Inc (GOOG.O) on Monday to say whether it had collected data from personal and business wireless networks without the owners' permission.

In a letter to a lawyer for Mountain View, California-based Google, Attorney General Richard Blumenthal demanded detailed records on any information taken from networks in the state and how it was used.

The most-used U.S. search engine last month acknowledged that the fleet of cars it uses to take photos of streets around the world for a three-dimensional mapping service had for several years been collecting information from open Wi-Fi networks that could include e-mail messages and passwords.

"Drive-by data sweeps of unsecured Wi-Fi networks here would be deeply disturbing, a potentially impermissible, pernicious invasion of privacy," Blumenthal said in a statement. "My office can evaluate whether laws were broken."

Google said it would cooperate with authorities.

"We're continuing to work with the relevant authorities to answer their questions and concerns," said spokeswoman Christine Chen, in an e-mailed statement.

In May the company said the collections had been accidental. The company had intended to collect information on Wi-Fi hotspots for other location-based services. [ID:nN14203313]

The state of Missouri began a similar inquiry on Friday.

Australia's attorney general on Sunday asked that country's police to investigate whether Google had broken telecommunications privacy laws by collecting the Wi-Fi data.

Google's fleet of camera-equipped vehicles have traveled the roads of more than 30 countries since 2006, collecting photos for the company's Street View mapping service. They have also been lightning rods for controversy, with privacy advocates contending that some of its cameras shot over fences into private homes.

Google said on Sunday it would cooperate with the Australia police investigation.

Blumenthal, a 64-year-old Democrat, is running for the U.S. Senate, seeking to fill the seat to be vacated by the retiring Christopher Dodd. (Reporting by Scott Malone, editing by Maureen Bavdek and Derek Caney)

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Comments (2)
billybob1 wrote:
I don’t blame CT for checking up on Google. Eric Schmidt is now a Bilderberger and we all know what they’re up to, don’t we? If you don’t know and would like to know about the Bilderberg Group’s plans for our national sovereignty, do a search of “Bilderbergers + NWO”, but use Yahoo or any search engine other than Google. If you think Google will be harmed by CT’s investigation, you’re mistaken. Sadly, they’re more powerful than any US state.

Jun 07, 2010 10:35pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
SubjectofUSSA wrote:
Who cares if google collected unsecured wireless data? If you’re stupid enough to put an unsecured connection in your business and home, you deserve the consequences.

So they want to map free wireless networks, that’s a good thing.

Jun 08, 2010 1:50pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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