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Tag: EPIC

  • Nvidia Becomes the Latest Corporate Patron of Blender

    Nvidia Becomes the Latest Corporate Patron of Blender

    Blender is a “free and open source 3D creation suite.” Originally released in 1994 as an in-house application for a Dutch animation studio, Blender has gone on to become a staple in the animation community. The software is used extensively by NASA and has been part of projects such as Spider-Man 2, Captain America: The Winter Soldier and The Man in the High Castle.

    Being open-source software, Blender relies on donations to support development, with both individuals and corporations donating to the effort. Nvidia has now become the latest corporation to commit to the highest donation level, contributing at least €120,000 a year. This makes them the second company, along with Epic, to achieve “Patron” level support.

    Per Blender’s Twitter announcement:

    “NVIDIA joined the Blender Foundation Development Fund at Patron level. This will enable two more developers to work on core Blender development and to keep NVIDIA’s GPU technology well supported for our users. Thanks NVIDIA for the trust in our work! https://fund.blender.org #b3d”

    Continued support of open-source software, especially such a well-known and widely used package as Blender, is a good thing for everyone involved.

  • Uber: We Don’t Collect Background Location Data, But We Might at Some Point

    Uber: We Don’t Collect Background Location Data, But We Might at Some Point

    On July 15, Uber is putting a new privacy statement into effect, and part of it is raising some eyebrows.

    A few paragraphs down in the new policy, under the heading “Collection of Information”, you’ll find this:

    Location Information: When you use the Services for transportation or delivery, we collect precise location data about the trip from the Uber app used by the Driver. If you permit the Uber app to access location services through the permission system used by your mobile operating system (“platform”), we may also collect the precise location of your device when the app is running in the foreground or background. We may also derive your approximate location from your IP address.

    If that sounds a little weird to you, you’re not alone. Privacy advocates EPIC (Electronic Privacy Information Center) have filed a formal complaint with the Federal Trade Commission over Uber’s stated intentions to collect location data – even when users aren’t actively using the app.

    EPIC also takes issues with Uber’s handling of users’ contacts information, mainly this:

    if you permit the Uber app to access the address book on your device through the permission system used by your mobile platform, we may access and store names and contact information from your address book to facilitate social interactions through our Services and for other purposes described in this Statement or at the time of consent or collection.

    “EPIC urges the Commission to investigate Uber Technologies, Inc., and enjoin its unfair and deceptive data collection practices with respect to Uber’s revised privacy policy that the company plans to implement on July 15, 2015. Specifically, EPIC requests the Commission to initiate an investigation of Uber’s business practices, including the collection personal data from users of location data and contact list and halt Uber’s collection of user location data when it is unnecessary for the provision of the service.”

    Uber provided a statement to Ars Technica, saying that this new policy is simply a clarification and that the company does not collect background data – but it might want to later.

    “There is no basis for this complaint. We care deeply about the privacy of our riders and driver-partners and have significantly streamlined our privacy statements in order to improve readability and transparency. These updated statements don’t reflect a shift in our practices, they more clearly lay out the data we collect today and how it is used to provide or improve our services,” said an Uber spokesperson.

    “We do not currently collect background location data. We may want to start doing that in order to provide new useful features, such as providing faster loading time when the user opens the app (currently, there is a lag time between opening the app and seeing the available cars in your area during which time the app is trying to figure out your location). We are not currently doing this and have no plans to start on July 15. If we move forward with this, users- will be in control and can choose whether they want to share the data with Uber.”

    Image via Uber, Facebook

  • Colin Farrell: Son is “Amazing Boy”

    Colin Farrell braved the cold weather in New York City to walk the red carpet for his film’s–Winter’s Tale–premiere, but it’s his brave son he gushes about and holds even nearer and dearer to his heart. Farrell’s 10-year-old son James has Angelman Syndrome, a genetic disorder that can impair movement, balance and speech.

    “James is an absolute stud,” he said during a recent interview. “Every day, just breaking down boundaries. He’s an amazing boy.”

    The syndrome was named in 1965 after the doctor who first described it–Dr. Henry Angelman. It is a neuro-genetic disorder characterized by “severe intellectual and developmental disability, sleep disturbance, seizures, jerky movements (especially hand-flapping), frequent laughter or smiling, and usually a happy demeanor.” People with Angelman Syndrome have a much higher capacity for understanding what is said to them than they do for expressing themselves. Most people diagnosed with the syndrome go on to live through adulthood, but rely on others for a good portion of their care.

    Colin Farrell credits James as the reason he checked into rehab back in 2005 for alcohol and drug addiction. He says he is inspired by the little boy every day.

    “Everything he’s achieved in his life has come through the presence and the kind of will that is hard work. He’s a lot to be inspired by,” Farrell said. “Things like walking and talking and eating and feeding himself, all those things that so many of us naturally take for granted because they come so easily, to James, they come somewhat harder … I remember the days when he couldn’t watch ten minutes of a film because he couldn’t sit still, but now he can.”

    James isn’t Colin Farrell’s only child. He also has a son named Henry with Alicja Bachleda. James is his son with model Kim Bordenave.

    When asked if his kids ever see him on the big screen he laughed.

    “Epic — [but] they didn’t know it was me, so that was kind of a bummer,” he joked. “They seemed to think it was alright. I don’t think it went to the top of their favorite list of cartoons, which is a bit disappointing.”

    Raising a child with any kind of disability is a challenge. Loving a child with a disability is often the greatest joy of one’s life. It’s plain to see that Colin Farrell’s love for James is unconditional, and his enthusiasm over his progress is contagious. James and Henry no doubt have a very doting dad.

    Image via YouTube

  • NSA Supreme Court Ruling: Spying Will Continue

    The Electronic Privacy Information Center, also known as EPIC, skipped lower federal courts and took their petition against the NSA straight to the Supreme Court.

    They claimed that a secret federal court improperly authorized the government to collect electronic records from telecom giant Verizon and leading Internet companies, including Microsoft, Apple, Google, Yahoo and Facebook.

    The court denied the petition on Monday and will allow the NSA to keep spying on American citizens’ phone records, according to CNN. For now, anyway. The NSA has publicly acknowledged it received secret court approval to collect vast amounts of metadata from telecommunications and internet companies, and EPIC says it Obama administration should have to publicly explain its legal justification for the spying program.

    “Telephone records, even without the content of the calls, can reveal an immense amount of sensitive, private information. There are no reasonable grounds for the NSA to have access to every call record of every Verizon customer,” said Marc Rotenberg, president of EPIC.

    The group argued that stripping the power of the NSA to collect metadata would be beneficial to the Supreme Court, itself, relegating power back where it should be. “Because the NSA sweeps up judicial and congressional communications, it inappropriately arrogates exceptional power to the executive branch.”

    While the NSA may still be able to monitor calls, the information collected only includes the numbers, time, and length of phone calls to and from the United States in the past five years. However, if it makes you feel any more secure, it does not include the location or actual monitoring of the conversations themselves, because in order to do that, the NSA would require a separate, specifically targeted search warrant.

    So, we know what’s next to go, then.

    Image via wikimedia commons

  • ‘Infinity Blade III’ Launching With iOS 7

    ‘Infinity Blade III’ Launching With iOS 7

    Today’s big Apple iPhone presentation was notable for being far from surprising. Nearly all of the leaks and rumors floating around about the iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C were proven true this afternoon. One of the only surprises of the conference was when Donald Mustard, co-founder of video game developer ChAIR, took to the stage.

    Mustard announced that Infinity Blade III will be launching on September 18 alongside iOS 7. The game features better visuals and new “ClashMob” modes, along with the new campaign. As for the story, it’s description is best left up to that game’s creators, who have crafted quite an intricate lore for the Infinity Blade series.

    Here’s one description, from the Epic blog announcement:

    Infinity Blade III sees Siris return to action for a final showdown against the Worker of Secrets, who has gathered an army of Deathless Titans and seeks the destruction of the entire world. But Siris won’t have to fight this battle alone. Isa, Siris’s stealthy female companion from Infinity Blade II, is now a playable character for IB3. She offers a different style of fighting – quick and nimble – and comes equipped with a crossbow she uses to damage enemies before leaping into battle.

    The game will obviously run best on the upcoming iPhone 5S, which Apple today touted as a graphics powerhouse. The new device will feature a 64-bit processor that should run Infinity Blade III more smoothly than the iPhone 5C or iPhone 4S.

  • Gears of War: Judgment Season Pass Includes Permanent Double XP

    Gears of War: Judgment Season Pass Includes Permanent Double XP

    Epic Games today announced the details of its “Season Pass” DLC bundle for Gears of War: Judgment.

    For 1600 Microsoft Points ($20), gamers will get two DLC packs that will be made up of six multiplayer maps, two new multiplayer modes, and exclusive armor and weapon skins. Purchasers of the Season Pass will also get early access to new multiplayer maps.

    In addition to this in-game content, Epic will be offering Season Pass subscribers a permanent multiplayer XP boost.

    The junk-food extra XP tie-ins for shooters such as Halo were sketchy, but were limited by their physical nature and limited-time offers. Weekend XP bonuses don’t discriminate among players who don’t have extra cash to spend on DLC. Paying for this permanent double XP offer is, according to Epic, a way “to accelerate your ascent through the ranks.”

    That’s the way Epic is promoting it, at least. Another way to look at it would be to say that players who don’t pony up a $20 tribute will only earn half XP.

    True, extra XP in this case may not confer any winning advantages (unless you consider being a high rank winning), but regardless of whether Judgment‘s XP boost amounts to a pay-to-win scenario, it’s another in a long line of incremental DLC offers that are moving in that direction. While these types offerings are normal and accepted in low-cost mobile games and free-to-play games, seeing them pop up for AAA, $60 console titles is more than a bit disconcerting.

  • Epic Opens an Online Store Just in Time For Christmas

    Epic Opens an Online Store Just in Time For Christmas

    Epic Games, the creators of the Gears of War series and the Unreal game engine, today launched an online store to sell merchandise related to its games and brands. The items being sold in the Epic store are exclusive, and can’t be found in other stores.

    We’re excited to launch Epic’s official store and provide our loyal fans apparel and merchandise that they can’t find anywhere else,” said Kendall Boyd, Epic’s director of marketing for worldwide studios. “Our hope is to grow our brand via channels such as the Epic Store and celebrate all of our terrific intellectual properties with the community.”

    Unfortunately, the Epic store is rather sparse at this point. Most of the merchandise is Gears of War-related, though there are a couple of Infinity Blade t-shirts, a Bulletstorm t-shirt, and an “Ultrakill” Unreal Tournament t-shirt. There is also a Jazz Jackrabbit t-shirt for old-school gamers or hipsters, and an Impossible Studios t-shirt for those who are excited by Epic’s newly-created development studio, crafted from the remnants of Big Huge Games.

    In a statement today, Epic promised its new store will be “continually upgraded and expanded” and that they have “surprises planned for fans in the coming weeks or months.” Here’s hoping those surprises include Shadow Complex pint glasses, or Unreal Tournament LEGO sets.

  • Epic Games President Steps Down to Advisory Role

    Epic Games President Steps Down to Advisory Role

    Mike Capps, president of Epic Games, announced this week that he will be leaving his position and stepping down to an advisory role within the company. He will also remain on Epic’s board of directors.

    This announcement comes just two months after design director Cliff Bleszinski announced that he would be leaving Epic. While the reason for Bleszinski’s departure was vague, Capps has a perfectly solid reason for handin off his presidential duties. From Capps’ announcement at the Inside Epic blog:

    “If you haven’t heard, I have a baby boy on the way. I’m fortunate that with Epic’s success and generosity, I can be a stay at home dad for a while. My wife Julianne and I are very happy in Raleigh, and other than cleaning up baby barf, I don’t have much planned. I might do some teaching, spend more time on creative writing, and maybe get more active with a few charities.”

    Capps revealed through his Twitter account that he will be celebrating his 10 years at epic with a suitably fancy wine:

    Capps emphasized that he isn’t just walking away from Epic, and will be available “as a resource to Epic, to provide context or advice where I can.” He also expressed his confidence that the remaining executives can handle the transition and business of running one of the most prestigious game studios in existance. From the blog:

    Whatever I can do to help in Epic’s success, I’m in! I’ve got great confidence in our executive team – VP of Development Paul Meegan is new to our Raleigh HQ, but we’ve worked with him for years, and I can only contemplate this retirement knowing that he and VP of Operations John Farnsworth can manage development better than I ever did.

  • Unreal Engine 3 Demoed on a Windows 8 Tablet

    Unreal Engine 3 Demoed on a Windows 8 Tablet

    If you’ve been following the news leading up to the IFA conference this week in Berlin, you might think the trade show was meant as a venue for Sony and Samsung product announcements.

    As much as Windows 8 has been bashed as a desktop operating system, it’s widely acknowledged that the platform is an excellent interface for tablet devices. And though Windows 8 desktop gaming might end up being a catastrophe, the mobile and tablet gaming experiences are beginning to look very nice. Even Windows 8 Phone gaming might be a blast, as just last week it was announced that the Unity engine will be supported on that platform.

    Today Nvidia and Epic Games debuted a demonstration of Epic’s Unreal Engine 3 running on a Windows RT tablet. Windows RT is a version of Windows 8 that will run on ARM devices, such as tablets.

    The demonstration seen below shows a short Unreal Engine 3 demo that is running on an Asus Vivo Tab RT, which has a Tegra 3 quad-core processor. The Nvidia labs handler states that the demo is running 30 to 40 frames per second. He also states that the full PC implementation of Unreal Engine 3 is running, meaning that developers should be able to import their games relatively easily.

    “The Unreal Engine 3-powered ‘Epic Citadel’ demonstration for Windows RT tablets implements our full DirectX 9 pipeline, with shaders and materials, all running beautifully on Tegra 3,” said Mark Rein, vice president of Epic Games. “By porting the full engine as opposed to a modified mobile version, Nvidia and Epic have made it easy for UE3 developers around the world to bring their best content to Windows RT, Windows 8, and Nvidia’s Tegra 3 processor. Windows RT code is available to licensees from Epic now and we’re excited to see the great games they develop with it.”

    It might not be long before gamers see tablet hardware good enough to run the slick-looking Unreal Engine 4, but, for now, the Unreal Engine 3 will certainly be setting a standard for tablet gaming.

  • Search Engines Owed Same Free Speech Protections As CNN, Claims Google Report

    In a new report commissioned by Google that examines the scope of free speech that should be permitted to search engines, UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh, who authored the report, says that search engines should be regarded as media companies, akin to how CNN and the New York Times are media companies. In that respect, the report asserts that search engines like Google and Bing have a protected right to pick and choose what appears in their search rankings.

    Wait, what – Google’s claiming the right to design search results as it sees fit? Ruh-roh, nobody tell Rick Santorum that news.

    paidContent explains Volokh’s report as such:

    Search engine results are a form of opinion, says the report, in which companies offer information they think is most relevant to users.

    In practice, this would mean Google has the right to punt sites like Yelp, which has complained that Google is a monopolist, to the search equivalent of Siberia if it decided that was best for users (Yelp now comes up second in a search for “restaurant review”).

    The report goes on to relate cases in which media companies were sued for excluding access to information or producing inaccurate information. One involved a cable company unsuccessfully arguing that excluding certain channels was an exercise of the company’s free speech right – an example, Volokh argues, that does not mirror the situation with search engines.

    According to paidContent, Google commissioned the report because it feels that “these issues were worth exploring in more depth by a noted First Amendment scholar.”

    I’m sure Google finds such inspections to be of utmost concerning the company seems to have a regular appointment to butt up against the Federal Trade Commission with regard to how search results are produced to Google users. Last year, the FTC launched an investigation to find out whether Google “grants preferential placement on its website to its own products” that resulted in an antitrust hearing with the Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust. It was at this hearing, as paidContent mentioned above, that Yelp delivered a testimony claiming that Google was engaging in anticompetitive business practices.

    The way Google conjures search results drew more criticism earlier this year when the Electronic Privacy Information Center contemplated filing a complaint with the FTC when Google announced the “Search Plus Your World” feature.

    With the completion of this report from a noted free speech legal scholar, Google appears to be circling the wagons around its right to manipulate search results . The debate over whether the government should be regulating Google’s search results has yawned throughout the year thus far, and, of course, Google believes it can reserve the right to alter search results.

    In the end, Google maintains that if consumers aren’t happy with the search results, they can always use a competing search engine. However, if searches including only Google-approved results throttle competing search engines and therefore leave consumers with little to no choice other than to use Google, the company could face an antitrust lawsuit. The Justice Department would have to suspect that, somehow, Google’s search manipulation was not in the best interest for consumers before any lawsuit could be filed.

    In an interview with The Hill, Volokh echoed Google’s argument, saying nobody was obligated to use Google if they don’t like the search results. “What can be said about Google can be said about newspapers, encyclopedias and a wide range of information sources,” he said.

    So what do you think, should this issue fall under the free speech category or is it more of an antitrust issue? Do you think Google should be extended the same protections for free speech the way New York Times or CNN are afforded? Let us know what you think.

  • Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two Debut Trailer

    The first trailer for Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two has been released today.

    The game features some new aspects, along with some recurring points that made the original so good.

    • It will be available for PS3 and XBox 360 for the first time; the first installment was for Wii exclusively.
    • It will feature voice acting, something the original lacked.
    • It is a musical featuring scores from Jim Dooley and Mike Himelstein.
    • Since the first installment relied heavily on motion controls, the game will be compatible with the Playstation Move.
    • Warren Spector returns as creative director.

    Epic Mickey 2 will feature one of Disney’s very first creations, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit. See him here in 20’s black and white glory:

    An original drawing from this particular cartoon was released along with other promotional material at a special event today. The drawing had previously been kept in the Disney archives, and hasn’t seen the light of day in 40 years.

    The rights to Oswald were lost by Disney in a 1928 contract dispute with Universal Studios. It wasn’t until 2006 that Disney got them back.

    “It’s amazing,” said Warren Spector, creative director for Epic Mickey 2. “Everybody at Disney is so proud that he’s back. I’m no different. It’s just so exciting to be a part of bringing that character back into the world and to see people respond so affectionately toward him. Now, to have Mickey and Oswald brothers united to save the world, it’s unbelievable. I feel really privileged.”

    Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two’s is expected to release sometime this fall.

  • EPIC Files Emergency Appeal Against Google

    The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a consumer watchdog group, has just appealed a court ruling in a Google privacy case, in which they’d asked that the Federal Trade Commission to investigate Google’s latest privacy policy changes. On February 18th, EPIC’s initial request was denied by federal court, after the FTC basically told them to mind their own business, citing that EPIC had no legal standing in the matter. In a statement, the agency added, “we are asking the court to dismiss the case because parties such as EPIC are barred by law from interfering with the proper investigation and enforcement of F.T.C. orders.”

    Today, EPIC announced its plan for an emergency appeal of the decision, and is again pushing for a ruling by March 1st, when Google’s new privacy policy changes are set to update. Google announced in January that they were combining about 60 of their privacy policies into one, calling the idea a “beautifully simple, intuitive user experience across Google.” User accounts will be linked across Google products, and the privacy policy itself will be made easier to read and comprehend.

    EPIC is concerned that the changes at Google will compromise users’ privacy, and that Google failed to comply with a consent order issued by the FTC. EPIC asserts that Google “chose not to answer many of the questions,” and failed to fully explain the impact on user privacy that will occur on March 1st. Still, the FTC is in charge here, which apparently really angers EPIC, with the group adding, “if the government is unaware that Google plans to make a substantial change in its business practices on March 1, 2012, it should turn on a computer connected to the Internet.”

    >>> Check out WebProNews’ special page covering Google Privacy … updated live. Subscribe to the Google Privacy RSS feed too!

  • Safari User Sues Google Over Tracking Debacle

    In a turn of events that should surprise no one, a Safari user has filed suit against Google over recent news that the search giant had circumvented privacy settings on Apple’s Safari browser. Matthew Soble of Illinois has filed suit in U.S. District Court in Delaware. The suit alleges that “default privacy settings on the web browser software… known as ‘Safari,’ were knowingly circumvented by Google Inc.”

    The complaint (PDF) declares that Soble uses Safari and “never disabled the privacy protection” that the browser comes with by default. The suit accuses Google of violation of the Federal Wiretap Act, the Stored Electronic Communications Act, and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. The suit is a class action suit filed on behalf of Soble and “all others similarly situated.” The suit asks for unspecified compensatory damages, plus interest, and legal fees for the plaintiff and all members of the class, and a permanent injuction preventing Google “from installing tracking cookies on users’ mobile phones or computer devices that could track the users’ information in violation of federal law.”

    On Friday news broke that Google had been exploiting a loophole in the privacy settings of Apple’s Safari browser (both desktop and iOS versions) that allowed Google’s ads to set tracking cookies in the browser that then monitored the users’ web browsing activity. Google responded quickly to the news, saying that the original report had mischaracterized the situation. The workaround was only developed, Google said, because Apple had designed Safari to work differently than other browsers currently on the market. The workaround was only intended to “ascertain whether Safari users were also signed into Google, and had opted for” personalized advertising. The fact that the exploit also allowed Google’s ads to set tracking cookies, Google says, was a completely unintended side effect.

    The situation has drawn massive amounts of attention from users, the media, and even U.S. lawmakers. On Monday representatives Edward J. Markey, Joe Barton, and Cliff Sterns sent a letter to Federal Trade Commission director Jon Leibowitz, asking the agency to investigate whether Google had violated a 2011 consent order concerning Google’s handling of private user data.

    Google’s handling of private data has been very much in the news in recent weeks, as the announcement of a new unified privacy policy across all Google’s services created its own storm of controversy. The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) went so far as to file suit against the FTC in order to compel the agency to block the privacy policy, scheduled to go into effect on March 1. Google responded quickly to the suit, accusing EPIC of being “wrong on the facts and the law.” In fact, as came to light later, Google had already submitted a report to the FTC detailing the new policy’s compliance with the order. The FTC, meanwhile, filed their own response on the same day the Safari news broke. In a motion to dismiss the case, the FTC argued that EPIC had no legal grounds to interfere in the FTC’s enforcement or non-enforcement of consent orders, and that the privacy watchdog’s suit was “baseless.”

    Today, EPIC filed a response (PDF) of their own. Their response asserts that EPIC does indeed have the right “to challenge the FTC’s failure to act,” and that “the agency’s failure to act prior to March 1, 2012 would constitute irreparable injury.”

    A request for comment was sent to Google this morning concerning the Safari lawsuit. Google responded with the same statement they issued last week when the news originally broke.

  • FTC Responds To EPIC Google Privacy Suit

    FTC Responds To EPIC Google Privacy Suit

    Two weeks ago we brought you news that the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a privacy watchdog, had filed suit against the Federal Trade Commission to compel the agency to block the planned rollout of Google’s new unified privacy policy, scheduled to go into effect March 1. Google responded quickly to the suit, saying that “EPIC is wrong on the facts and the law.”

    The court gave the FTC until February 17th to respond, a deadline which the agency just met. The FTC filed two separate documents: a memorandum of opposition (PDF) to the suit, and a motion to dismiss it (PDF). In the memorandum, the FTC asserts that the lawsuit “seeks to deprive the Commission fo the discression to exercise its enforcement authority,” that it “flouts controlling precedent that universally rejects such efforts,” and that as such “[t]his lawsuit is completely baseless.” The FTC also asserts that EPIC has no legal grounds for its attempt to compel the agency to enforce anything, as both law and judicial precedent leave all enforcement solely in the hands of the FTC.

    It is worth noting that the FTC’s argument against EPIC does not discuss Google’s privacy policy at all. In responding to the suit, the FTC is not making any statements whatsoever about whether the privacy policy violates the 2011 consent order that EPIC claims it does. That leaves open the possibility that the FTC may yet pursue action against Google on that front. The day after EPIC filed suit, however, a document surfaced showing that Google had submitted a report to the FTC detailing the new privacy policy’s compliance with the consent order, which dealt with user privacy and was issued concerning Google Buzz.

    According to the court order that expedited the suit, EPIC has until the 21st to issue its own reply to the FTC’s filings.

    What do you think? Should EPIC really mind its own business here? Sound off in the comments.

  • Google’s New Privacy Policy: Danny Sullivan Provides Insight

    In January, Google announced that it was overhauling its more than 60 privacy policies and replacing them with one. As Alma Whitten, Google’s Director of Privacy in Product and Engineering, wrote in the announcement, the idea is to create a “beautifully simple, intuitive user experience across Google.”

    The search giant said the main change for users would be that it could combine information from one service with its other services, thus providing a more fluid user experience. For example, if you conduct several searches on Google on a particular item, Google could assume that you want a video on that item if you then visit YouTube.

    What do you think of Google’s new privacy policy? Does it affect you at all? We’d love to hear your thoughts.

    Danny Sullivan, Executive Editor of Search Engine Land According to Danny Sullivan, the Executive Editor of Search Engine Land, the new policy will provide users with more personalized results. He told us that it really wasn’t surprising that Google made the change since most other tech and Internet companies have one privacy policy for all their products and services.

    “Google, which kind of has come from privacy policies on a per product basis, is kind of playing catch up, so that they have the ability to be more flexible both in what they may do with the information and how they may use the information to improve products and services,” he said.

    This flexibility is what has some people worried, however. Under the new policy, Google could potentially take the information it gathers when users search to target them with ads. Although Google says it will not do this, the new policy gives it the right if it so chooses.

    “Potentially, it gives Google a lot of new rights,” said Sullivan.

    Privacy groups have voiced numerous concerns over what the new policy could mean. Specifically, the Electronic Privacy and Information Center (EPIC) has even sued the FTC, saying that Google’s new policy violates the settlement the company and the agency reached last year over Google Buzz. The group is asking the FTC to take action that will prevent Google from combining user data “without user content” before the company puts its new policy into effect next month.

    Due to the timing of the matter, a federal district judge ordered the FTC to have its response to EPIC ready today. In return, EPIC is supposed to have its counter response ready by February 21.

    EPIC also filed another complaint this week over the privacy assessments the FTC required Google to take. Google said it was complying with the audits but has, up to this point, kept them closed.

    “I thought that if you’re going to be audited on privacy, then perhaps you ought to release the privacy audits so that… the public could see it,” said Sullivan.

    EPIC claims that the FTC Consent Order required Google to answer detailed questions about privacy and user information but that the search giant did not answer them.

    Interestingly, Forbes featured a report this week stating that the court should dismiss the lawsuit between EPIC and the FTC. According to the report, the privacy group is overstepping its third party right under administrative law.

    Glenn G. Lammi wrote:

    Washington Legal Foundation would be the last one to argue that federal agency actions should be immune from judicial review as a general principle. But once a settlement agreement has been reached between an agency and a private entity, the agency should not be compelled to embrace an outside party’s view that the agreement has been breached. EPIC is welcome to communicate its general views to FTC (which they do so quite often) on the Google Buzz settlement, just as Google might avail FTC of its thoughts on whether a competitor like Facebook or Twitter violated its respective privacy agreement with the Commission. But empowering activists or competitors to imprint their views of consent agreement breach on the Commission would be a dangerous and easily abused tool. If Congress wanted such third parties to inject themselves into FTC’s process on such agreements more formally and authoritatively, it would have said so.

    Sullivan told us that, although he has yet to look closely at EPIC’s case, he doubted the FTC would find Google in any violation.

    Unfortunately for Google though, that’s not where its problems stop. The European Union has also asked it to delay the roll out of the new privacy policy. In a letter to Google’s CEO Larry Page, Jacob Kohnstamm, a European privacy regulator, wrote:

    We wish to check the possible consequences for the protection of the personal data of these citizens in a coordinated procedure. We have therefore asked the French data protection authority, the CNIL, to take the lead. The CNIL has kindly accepted this task and will be your point of contact for the data protection authorities in the EU.

    In light of the above, we call for a pause in the interests of ensuring that there can be no misunderstanding about Google’s commitments to information rights of their users and EU citizens, until we have completed our analysis.

    In a post on its European Public Policy Blog, Google responded to the letter saying it had met with several officials prior to its announcement and briefed them of the changes. It said that no one had any objections at that time and indicated that it would proceed with its plans to implement its new policy in March.

    Most recently, nonprofit Consumer Watchdog wrote a letter to the U.S. House of Representatives’ Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade Subcommittee requesting that Larry Page explain Google’s “disingenuous statements about its supposed commitment to users’ privacy.”

    In this letter, Privacy Project Director John Simpson wrote:

    “If Google were truly committed to “user control,” it would ask users to “opt in” to these substantive changes in its data handling, rather than imposing them across the board… Google’s practices affect millions of Americans. Google is so dominant on the Internet that for many people Google is the Internet.

    You must not allow Google to escape legitimate privacy concerns by sending underlings whose high-sounding pledges prove to be empty or whose answers prove insufficient in closed-door meetings. It is the chief executive who is ultimately responsible for the company’s behavior.”

    What’s more, a Washington Post poll found that 65 percent of users said they would cancel their Google accounts over the privacy changes.

    Sullivan, however, told us that he believes this poll is “99 percent inaccurate.” As he explained, users reacted in this same way when Facebook made changes in 2010. In the end, Facebook grew instead.

    “If they’re that concerned about it, then their alternative is to go to another company that is doing exactly the same thing,” he said. “It really doesn’t come down to what these privacy policies say, it comes down to the kind of controls that you’re provided and given, and ultimately, I think, your trust in the company overall.”

    Ironically, as Matt McGee pointed out, Google quietly launched a new program that allows users to get paid if they use the Chrome browser and share their data with the search engine. It’s called Screenwise and pays users in Amazon gift cards. Although many other companies conduct similar practices in order to learn how they can improve their services, Sullivan told us that the timing of this program was very bad for Google.

    In spite of the backlash, it appears that Google will roll out its new privacy policy March 1. The company currently has an ad campaign to help to alleviate concerns, but Sullivan believes that Google will need to begin doing extensive PR outreach in D.C. as well.

    Does Google’s privacy policy go too far, or is it what you would expect from a company of its size? Let us know what you think in the comments.

  • Google Responded To the FTC On Privacy Issues Before EPIC Sued

    Yesterday we brought you news that the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) had filed a federal suit against the FTC in order to block Google’s switch to a new, unified privacy policy that would cover all their services. EPIC claimed that the new policy violated a 2011 consent order that prohibited Google from combining user data without consent.

    Google, however, insisted that the suit was groundless, saying that “EPIC is wrong on the facts and the law.” Late yesterday afternoon, the court agreed to expedite the case, giving the FTC until February 17th to respond to the suit, and EPIC until the 21st to file their reply to the FTC.

    Now it looks like Google may have been ahead of the game the entire time. Politico is reporting this afternoon that they have managed to get hold of a report Google filed with the FTC on January 26th detailing the company’s compliance with the very consent order that EPIC insists their new privacy policy violates.The report details the steps that Google has undertaken to maintain the privacy of their users and to ensure that users are properly notified of the changes to Google’s policy. The report describes an “aggressive notification process” that Google intends to use “to promote user awareness of the current terms of teh Google Privacy Policy and to present users with clear information in order to exercise meaningful choice regarding their continued use of Google services.”

    The report walks through the provisions of the consent order step by step and describes the steps Google has taken to make sure that their new privacy policy complies with it. The report is dated January 26, 2012 (two days after the initial announcement), and signed by Keith Enright, Google’s Senior Privacy Council. A copy of the report can be found here.

  • EPIC Google Privacy Suit Gets Expedited

    EPIC Google Privacy Suit Gets Expedited

    Yesterday we brought you news that the Electronic Privacy Information Center had filed suit against the Federal Trade Commission to force them to block Google’s controversial new privacy policy, set to roll out on March 1. EPIC claims that the privacy policy violates an order issued in October 2011 preventing Google from combining user data without consent. Google responded quickly, saying that “EPIC is wrong on the facts and the law.”

    Now, a federal judge has expedited the suit. The court has given the FTC until February 17 to file a response to EPIC’s demands, after which EPIC will have until the 21st to issue their own reply. According to a post on EPIC’s blog late yesterday, “[t]he Court’s deadlines reflect Google’s imminent, substantial changes to the company’s business practices.” EPIC accuses Google of preparing “to consolidate the personal data of Google users across 60 services,” which it claims is a violation of the earlier consent order. The original order dealt with Google’s short-lived Google Buzz social network.

    Google has continued to insist that their new policy poses no threat to user privacy, and that they have worked hard throughout this process to be as transparent as possible and make sure all users are informed of the changes.

    What do you think? Is EPIC overreacting? Sound off in the comments.

  • Google Responds To EPIC Lawsuit

    Google Responds To EPIC Lawsuit

    Earlier this afternoon we brought you news that the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) had filed suit against the FTC to block the rollout of Google’s new privacy policy. EPIC claims that the new policy violates a consent order entered into by Google in October 2011. That order dealt with Google Buzz, and prevented Google from combining user data. EPIC is seeking a preliminary injunction and a restraining order preventing Google’s new privacy policy from going into effect on the 1st of March as planned.

    Not long after the earlier story ran, Google responded to my request for comment. Here’s what a Google spokesperson had to say:

    We take privacy very seriously. We’re happy to engage in constructive conversations about our updated Privacy Policy but EPIC is wrong on the facts and the law.

  • We’re keeping your private information private — we’re not changing how any personal information is shared outside of Google.
  • We’ve undertaken the most extensive notification effort in Google’s history to ensure that users have many opportunities and ample time to learn about our Privacy Policy changes. And we’re continuing to offer choice and control over how people use Google services.
  • We’ve created a world-class privacy compliance program, as we’re confident our third-party assessments will demonstrate.
  • The response is a little short on specifics – i.e., Google doesn’t explain how “EPIC is wrong on the facts and the law” – and the bullet points are similar to the one’s we’ve seen here and here, and the statement Google made here. Reading between the lines, it looks like Google thinks all the hubbub over their new privacy policy is much ado about nothing. Personally, I’m inclined to agree.

    What do you think? Let us know in the comments.

  • Privacy Watchdog EPIC Sues To Block Google’s New Privacy Policy

    The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) has filed suit to block Google’s new unified privacy policy. They claim that the new policy violates a consent order issued in October of 2011 concerning Google’s short-lived Google Buzz social network. The order prevents Google from combining user data without consent.

    EPIC filed their suit against the Federal Trade Commission in federal court in the District of Columbia. They filed a complaint (PDF) and a request for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction (PDF) seeking to require the FTC to enforce the consent order and prevent Google from making the changes to their privacy policy.

    Google’s attempt to create a simple, unified privacy policy for all their services has been met with a storm of controversy since it was announced late last month. Many expressed concerns about the impact of the new policy on their own privacy, and on Google’s access to their data. The situation drew the attention of Congress as well as the European Union, a prompted efforts by Google to set the record straight.

    A request for comment from Google has not yet received a response. The new privacy policy is intended to go into effect on March 1.

  • Google Search Plus Your World May Draw FTC Complaint

    EPIC, the Electronic Privacy Information Center, is reportedly considering filing a complaint with the United States Federal Trade Commission over Google’s new “Search Plus Your World” features.

    In an interview with the LA Times, EPIC’s executive director Marc Rotenberg said the group may file a complaint. The group has done so in the past, with regards to Google’s inclusion of YouTube videos in search results.

    EPIC has put up the following statement on its site, citing concerns over Search Plus Your World:

    Google is changing the results displayed by its search engine to include data from its social network, such as photos or blog posts made by Google+ users, as well as the public Internet. Although data from a user’s Google+ contacts is not displayed publicly, Google’s changes make the personal data of users more accessible. Users can opt out of seeing personalized search results, but cannot opt out of having their information found through Google search. Also, Google’s changes come at a time when the company is facing increased scrutiny over whether it distorts search results by giving preference to its own content. Recently, the Senate held a hearing on Google’s use of its dominance in the search market to suppress competition, and EPIC urged the Federal Trade Commission to investigate Google’s use of Youtube search rankings to give preferential treatment to its own video content over non-Google content. Google has also acknowledged that the FTC is investigating whether Google uses its dominance in the search field to inhibit competition in other areas.

    There has been a lot debate around the new features, which make Google+ much more a part of Google Search. You can read more about Twitter’s public opposition to the features here. In a nutshell, Twitter thinks the changes make Twitter content less accessible to users. I don’t really see how this changes things in that regard. Twitter content has been less accessible since Twitter and Google failed to renew their realtime search/Twitter firehose deal last year (which I do also see as a negative thing).

    Twitter and Facebook are both keeping Google from certain data, which Google would be able to use to improve as a search engine. Some argue, however that Google can get enough public data from Twitter and Facebook to work into the new offerings, at least to some extent. All of this is true.

    On the one hand, Google could, for example recommend Twitter accounts and Facebook pages for celebrities, the way it is doing with Google+ profiles. On the other hand, Google doesn’t have the data from Twitter and Facebook to deliver the kind of personalized results it can offer via Google+. It’s easier for Google to improve the user experience, at least in theory, when they can give you any data that that is available (personalized data). Google+, which is really just an extension of the Google account itself, is Google’s way of trying to deliver this stuff, supplemented with other public data from places like Flickr, Quora, WordPress, etc.

    Danny Sullivan posted this video of Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt talking about the lack of Facebook and Twitter data:

    Part of Search Plus Your World is the addition of a special section for “People and Pages on Google+”. When I search for “music” I see profiles for Britney Spears, Mariah Carey and Busta Rhymes – Google profiles. Nothing but Google profiles in that section. However, the top organic result I get is for Yahoo Music. Not even Google Music.

    I see the new features as more of a relevancy problem than an antitrust problem. If Google is taking what it knows about me, to personalize my search results, it should recognize that I use Google Music (I don’t use Yahoo Music), and that I don’t give a crap about Britney Spears, Mariah Carey or Busta Rhymes) – at least not as much of a crap as it would take to deem them worthy of that kind of placement for such a broad term. In fact, I would argue that my results would be much better for the user (me) if Google actually tapped its own Google Music property to understand the music I like. I don’t need Facebook pages or Twitter accounts for Britney, Mariah or Busta either.

    Part of the reason I use multiple products from Google is because I expect there to be integration. It’s often disappointing when that integration is lacking. It makes things less usable. If I’m signed in to my Google account, I want easy access to content that’s related to my Google account. If I want things from Facebook or Twitter, I know where to look.

    If you are signed into Google, you are signed into your Google account. You are signed into Google+. When you’re not signed in, well, that’s a different ballgame. One thing that is a bit iffy here, is that Google said in is announcement that Search Plus Your World would be for users that are signed in. The personal stuff is, but the People and Places stuff that highlights Google+ accounts still appears when the user is signed out.

    That could be an issue.