Google's New Privacy Settings Go Into Effect Tomorrow

Tomorrow, Google will put in place a new privacy policy across the vast majority of Google products and platforms. As we told you when they announced the new policy back in January, the new policy makes clear that Google will, for the first time, combine the personal data you share with any one of its products or sites across almost all of its products and sites (everything but Google Chrome, Google Books, and Google Wallet) in order to obtain a more comprehensive picture of you. And short of signing out of your Google account, there is no opting out.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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White House, FTC, and California Attorney General Step Up to the Starting Line

In the past week, the White House, the Federal Trade Commission, and the California Attorney General's Office have all released reports or announced agreements designed to promote consumer privacy. These announcements incorporate several good ideas that, if implemented and enforced, would give users more control over their own personal information. But the recent moves are just a starting point for protecting privacy, not the finish line.

By Chris Conley

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Time to Get Down to Business on Privacy

By Chris CalabreseACLU Washington Legislative Office

By ACLU of Northern California

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Exploring the "Right to Be Forgotten"

I'm heading to Palo Alto tomorrow for the Stanford Technology Law Review's symposium and looking forward to the first panel of the day, Taking Forgetting Seriously.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Keeping "Your World" Private: Turning off Google's New Private Search Results

Want to keep your information private now that Google has started rolling out "Search, plus Your World," a new search results format? For those signed-in with a Google account, the new feature combines search results from the public web plus private information and photos you have shared (or have been shared with you) through Google+ or Picasa.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Content, Context, and Control: Facial Recognition and Privacy

Photographs don't just capture your laughter and tears. They can also reveal the details of your life: the people you know, the events you attend, and more. And facial recognition makes it easy to link any photo of you--even one you didn't know you were in--to your name and identity. This could make it impossible to attend a support group meeting or political rally without sharing that information with everyone. And it could allow anyone who snaps your photo on their phone to instantly learn your name, interests, and more. Businesses and lawmakers need to ensure that facial recognition services give individuals the ability to choose whether and how they participate in the service and ensure that any information collected or generated by these services is adequately protected.

By Chris Conley

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Facebook Is Abiding By Its Own Rules, Great! Now How About Good Rules For Everybody?

Today, Facebook agreed to settle Federal Trade Commission (FTC) charges that it deceived customers by failing to uphold privacy promises. The FTC announced today that the social networking site "deceived consumers by telling them they could keep their information on Facebook private, and then repeatedly allowing it to be shared and made public. The proposed settlement requires Facebook to take several steps to make sure it lives up to its promises in the future, including giving consumers clear and prominent notice and obtaining consumers' express consent before their information is shared beyond the privacy settings they have established."

By Chris Conley

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The Facebook/FTC Settlement Proposal: What's New, What's Not

Earlier today the FTC announced a proposed settlement with Facebook, addressing its assertion that Facebook deceived users by failing to uphold its privacy promises. As we said elsewhere, the proposed settlement has one major step forward: it prohibits the company from "begging forgiveness instead of asking permission" by changing its privacy settings to make data more public or share it with more people. But it doesn't cure all of the outstanding issues [pdf] with Facebook privacy.

By Chris Conley

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Judge to Feds: to Track Cell Phones, Get a Warrant

Catherine CrumpACLU National Office

By ACLU of Northern California

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