A US electronic privacy group has called for the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to investigate the security and privacy of Google’s Web-based products such as e-mail and photo services.
“Recent reports indicate that Google does not adequately safeguard the confidential information it obtains,” the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) said in the complaint filed with the FTC.
EPIC said it was petitioning the commission to probe “Google’s Cloud Computing Services to determine the adequacy of the privacy and security safeguards.”
Cloud computing services provided by Google include Gmail, the Internet search giant’s e-mail program; Google Docs, its online word processing and spreadsheet service; Picasa, a software application for digital photos; and Google Calendar.
EPIC, in the complaint filed on Tuesday, said that it wanted the FTC to determine whether Google had“engaged in unfair and/or deceptive trade practices” regarding its cloud computing products. It urged the FTC to enjoin the company from offering such services “until safeguards are verifiably established.”
“Such action by the commission is necessary to ensure the safety and security of information submitted to Google by American consumers, American businesses and American federal agencies,” EPIC said.
In its complaint, EPIC cited an incident with Google Docs this month in which the Mountain View, California company acknowledged that the privacy of some digital documents had been compromised.
Google Docs product manager Jennifer Mazzon said at the time that a “very small percentage of users shared some of their documents inadvertently” because of an unspecified “bug.”
There was no immediate response from Google about the EPIC complaint.
Google and other Internet firms have been enticing people to rely on applications offered online as services “in the cloud” instead of buying software to install and maintain on their own machines.
SONY DEAL
Meanwhile, Google is making half a million books, unprotected by copyright, available for free on Sony Corp’s electronic book-reading device, the companies were set to announce yesterday.
It’s the first time Google has made its vast trove of scanned public domain books available to an e-book device, and vaults the Sony Reader past Amazon.com Inc’s Kindle as the device with the largest available library, at about 600,000 books.
The scanned books were all published before 1923, and include works like Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities.
The books are already available as free downloads in the Portable Document Format.
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