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Friday, January 29, 2010 LIFE WITH BIG BROTHER WorldNetDaily Exclusive Here's a killer way to slay the Google beast! 'They're telling us they will turn data over to the feds' Posted: January 27, 2010 8:51 pm Eastern
By Chelsea
Schilling
That's the question Katherine Albrecht, radio
talk-show host and spokeswoman for Startpage, a search engine that protects
user privacy, is posing to American Internet surfers. "It would blow people's minds if they knew how much information the big
search engines have on the American public," she told WND. "In fact, their
dossiers are so detailed they would probably be the envy of the KGB." Google
exposed in Joseph Farah's "Stop the Presses!" autographed only at WND's
online store. It happens every day, Albrecht explained. When an unfamiliar topic
crosses people's minds, they often go straight to Google, Yahoo or Bing
and enter key terms into those search engines. Every day, more than a
billion searches for information are performed on Google alone. "If you get a rash between your toes, you go into Google," she said.
"If you have a miscarriage, you go into Google. If you are having marital
difficulties, you look for a counselor on Google. If you lose your job,
you look for unemployment benefit information on Google." Albrecht said Americans unwittingly share their most private thoughts
with search engines, serving up snippets of deeply personal information
about their lives, habits, troubles, health concerns, preferences and
political leanings. "We're essentially telling them our entire life stories – stuff you
wouldn't even tell your mother – because you are in a private room with a
computer," she said. "We tend to think of that as a completely private
circumstance. But the reality is that they make a record of every single
search you do." The search engines have sophisticated algorithms to mine data from
searches and create very detailed profiles about Americans. She said those
profiles are stored on servers and may fall into the wrong hands. She pointed to the recent cyber attacks that infiltrated Google's
operations in China. Bloomberg News reported that Yahoo was also among the
victims. Albrecht said the government may also subpoena citizens' private
information after it has been stored by Google, Yahoo and Bing. In a
December 2009 interview with CNBC, Google CEO Eric Schmidt divulged that
search engines may turn over citizens' private information to the
government. "If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you
shouldn't be doing it in the first place," Schmidt said. "But if you
really need that kind of privacy, the reality is that search engines,
including Google, do retain this information for some time. And it's
important, for example, that we are all subject to the United States
Patriot Act. It is possible that information could be made available to
the authorities." A video of Schmidt's statements follows:
"My jaw hit the floor when I heard that," Albrecht said. "Now they are
just coming right out and telling us that they will turn our data over to
the feds. Based on what I know about how much information they have on us,
it's really terrifying." In addition to information collected from searches, Google also saves
sent and received e-mails, including e-mail drafts, attachments and chat
messages through its Gmail system. "What these big search engines have is the eye in the sky," Albrecht
said. "It's like the totalitarian dictator's dream. They know
everything, and with a couple of mouse clicks, they could find
every single person in the country who observes Passover or attends a
Catholic or Baptist church or who buys ammunition." She continued, "They've gotten so sophisticated that they actually
boast that they can tell when their own employees are going to quit
because they monitor their employees' mouse clicks." (Story continues below) Albrecht said she was alarmed to discover that another application, Google Flu
Trends, used aggregated Google search data to track flu activity
around the world. The organization boasted that it could spot a flu
outbreak even before the Centers for Disease Control suspected one. The
search-engine giant collaborated with the CDC on the project. The following is a Google video illustrating how the Google Flu Trends
works:
"We have found a close relationship between how many people search for
flu-related topics and how many people actually have flu symptoms," Google
explained. "Of course, not every person who searches for 'flu' is actually
sick, but a pattern emerges when all the flu-related search queries are
added together. We compared our query counts with traditional flu
surveillance systems and found that many search queries tend to be popular
exactly when flu season is happening. By counting how often we see these
search queries, we can estimate how much flu is circulating in different
states and countries around the world." Albrecht said Google monitored search patterns that indicated a person
may have had the flu. Then it would pinpoint a person's location using an
IP address. "They turned that map over to the government," she said. "They didn't
give any personal information about individuals. They didn't give
individual IP addresses or say who the people were – but they could have."
The search-engine giant uses its search records for marketing purposes,
Albrecht explained. She said some people wonder why Google would give them all this "free
cool stuff" like Google Maps, Google Calendar, Google Groups, Google
Spreadsheets, Google Earth and Gmail. "When was the last time a company making billions of dollars gave you
every single thing they offered for free?" she asked. "They're not giving
you those products for free. You're the product, and that's the bait."
But she said there's good news. Startpage, and its European brand Ixquick,, are introducing a new search
alternative that will protect and never store private information about
its users. Startpage will launch its new proxy service tonight at 10 p.m.
EST.
The proxy service allows users to search and surf the Web anonymously. With each Startpage search, the word "proxy" appears under each result. If a user clicks "proxy," they may view the result privately. Startpage visits the selected website, retrieves the information and shows it to the user in a privacy-protected window. A private user's browser never interacts directly with the external website so the websites cannot capture or record personal data or load malware onto a private computer. Websites only see that a site in the Netherlands is visiting the website, she said. The search engine never records personal information, search data or IP addresses. "Startpage doesn't have any information, so even if it was served with a subpoena or, like Google, if it got hacked, there would be no records to obtain because it doesn't keep any records," Albrecht explained. She said she hopes people will start supporting companies like Startpage and move their traffic away from the other big search engines, so Google, Yahoo, Bing and others will learn to respect user privacy. "As consumers, we almost have an obligation to stop using them until they behave themselves," Albrecht said. "Sometimes you want to know private stuff. It doesn't mean you have something to hide or are doing anything wrong. It just means you don't want other people knowing what you're thinking about and looking up. It's nobody's business." Related offers: Google exposed in "Stop the Presses!" autographed only at WND's online store. Sign WND's Petition to Block Congressional Attacks on Freedom of Speech and Press Get the book that exposes the secret blueprint for ending free speech in America. Previous stories: Guess who is hotter on Twitter than Tiger! Google honors Veterans Day for 3rd straight year Your health records available to millions Get ready! Here come the energy police On Facebook, MySpace? Obama's got your e-mail Obama: Every move you make, I'll be watching you online WND being censored from search engines? Google blocks blog exposing homosexual agenda Guess what Google decides to honor on D-Day Google goes ape for 'missing link' Salute! Google honors Vet's Day for 2nd time Memorial Day 'war': Yahoo vs. Google About face! Google finally honors Veterans Day Google urges voters: Trash traditional marriage Google blinks, allows Christian ads Anti-Obama messages targeted by Google? Google celebrates communist Sputnik Google snubs Memorial Day, again More evidence of Google's 'evil'? Is Google's agenda becoming less 'evil'? Melting iceberg marks Earth Day Farah's Google indictment big news in Tibet Google censors China information in U.S. Google's 'evil' agenda exposed in new book Google again snubs George Washington Google spells its name wrong on Valentine's Day? Google: Veterans Day 'too solemn' for logo Google no-show for Veterans Day YouTube blocked video mocking Clinton administration Bush labeled 'a?hole' in new Google bomb Google map says Taiwan part of China Google goes ballistic after getting Googled Christian Exodus banned from Google ads Google blocks ad for anti-Clinton book Google still runs anti-DeLay ads Google money engine for Democrats only Google censoring conservative ads? Google: Big Media has higher quality Google censoring search results in China |