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U.S. Congressman Joe Barton Quizzes Google on Privacy
By Privacy Maven | December 13, 2007
Rep. Joe Barton has questions for Google, as Declan McCullagh reports.
A top Republican in the House of Representatives is demanding that Google answer a barrage of questions about privacy, some of which are related to the company’s proposed purchase of the DoubleClick advertising firm.
Rep. Joe Barton, who has positioned himself as a privacy advocate and previously criticized the merger last month, complained in a letter to Google CEO Eric Schmidt that the company had initially agreed to let his aides visit the so-called Googleplex in Mountain View, Calif. but then didn’t confirm a date. Barton is the senior Republican on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has Internet regulation as one of its responsibilities.
The two men met in person on November 7 and the idea of a visit came up. But then, Barton said in his letter on Wednesday, “all efforts to reach a mutually agreeable time have been rebuffed, and it begins to seem that no date for a visit is sufficiently convenient to Google. Your warm initial invitation followed by Google’s chilly response to a proposed visit by Committee counsels is disconcerting.”
Most of the rest of Barton’s 24 questions deal with what Google does with search queries, how long information is kept, what data will be merged with DoubleClick’s, and how the company performs its partial anonymization of search results. Barton asks for a response by December 18. (Unlike Ask.com, AOL, and Microsoft, Google does not delete search-related queries after 12 to 18 months. See the chart on this page for details from a survey we performed in August.)
The article continues.
Topics: Search Engines and Privacy |



