Sunday, May 30, 2010

Search giant balks at turning over wireless data to German regulators


BERLIN


Google on Thursday balked at requests from regulators in Germany and Hong Kong to surrender fragments of Internet data and e-mails it had improperly collected from unsecured home wireless networks, saying it needed time to resolve legal issues.

In Germany, Google said it was not able to comply with the Hamburg data protection supervisor's request to inspect information the company collected from Internet users by roving cars used to compile its Street View photo map archive.

The company, in a statement, implied that German privacy laws, ironically, were preventing it from turning preventing it from turning over the information, even to a government agency.

"As granting access to payload data creates legal challenges in Germany which we need to review, we are continuing to discuss the appropriate legal and logistical process for making the data available," said peter Barron, a Google spokesman in London.

In Hong Kong, the Privacy commissioner, Roderick B Woo, threatened sanctions after Google did not respond to his request to inspect data. Woo said Google had ignored a Monday deadline to turn over the information.

The standoffs increase the chance that Google may face fines and proceedings in Europe and Asia after its cars collected 600 gigabytes of data from unsecured Wi-Fi networks in 33 countries and Hong Kong.

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