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Google has gone ahead with its new privacy policy despite warnings from the EU that it might violate European law.

The change in Google’s privacy policy means private data collected by one of its services can be shared with its other platforms including YouTube, Gmail and Blogger.

Google said the new set-up would enable it to tailor search results better.

But data regulators in France have cast doubt on the legality of the move and launched a Europe-wide investigation.

Google has merged 60 guidelines for its individual sites into a single policy for all of its services.

France’s privacy watchdog CNIL wrote to Google earlier this week, urging a “pause” in rolling out the revised policy.

“The CNIL and EU data authorities are deeply concerned about the combination of personal data across services,” the regulator wrote.

“They have strong doubts about the lawfulness and fairness of such processing, and its compliance with European data protection legislation.”

The regulator said it would send Google questions on the changes by mid-March.

 

Google has gone ahead with its new privacy policy despite warnings from the EU that it might violate European law

Google has gone ahead with its new privacy policy despite warnings from the EU that it might violate European law

In response, Google’s global privacy counsel Peter Fleischer said he was happy to answer any concerns CNIL had.

“As we’ve said several times over the past week, while our privacy policies will change on 1st March, our commitment to our privacy principles is as strong as ever,” Peter Fleischer wrote in a blog post.

Google rejected the regulator’s request to hold off on making the changes. Users are being moved on to the new single policy shortly after midnight on 1 March, local time.

Google’s business model – the selling of ads targeted on individual user behavior – relies on collecting browsing information from its visitors.

Until today, this information was kept apart between services.

This meant a search on, for example, YouTube, would have no significance on what results or advertising you would encounter on another Google site like Gmail.

The new agreement, which users cannot opt out of unless they stop using Google’s services, will mean activity on all of the company’s sites will be linked.

Many websites and blogs in the technology community have given guidance for users concerned about how their browsing history will be used.

They suggest users can access, and delete, their browsing and search history on the site by logging in to google.com/history.

A similar page for YouTube viewing and search history can also be accessed.

Users can see which Google services hold data about them by viewing their dashboard.

In preparation for the policy change, Google displayed prominent messages notifying visitors about the plans. A dedicated section was set up to provide more details.

However, campaign group Big Brother Watch has argued that not enough has been done to ensure people are fully aware of the alterations.

A poll of more than 2,000 people conducted by the group in conjunction with YouGov suggested 47% of Google users in the UK were not aware policy changes were taking place.

Only 12% of British Google users, Big Brother Watch said, had read the new agreement.

The group’s director Nick Pickles said: “If people don’t understand what is happening to their personal information, how can they make an informed choice about using a service?

“Google is putting advertisers’ interests before user privacy and should not be rushing ahead before the public understand what the changes will mean.”

 

Less than one in eight Google users has read the search engine’s new privacy policy, a poll found yesterday.

The great majority are in the dark about the way Google will use information about what they look for and what they do on-line, it said.

The findings came amid deepening concerns about the abuse of private information by internet companies.

At the weekend it was disclosed that people who download smartphone apps may be ignoring small print that allows large-scale intrusion into their lives by outsiders.

The rights they unwittingly hand over even include the legal power to make their camera phones take pictures and video on the command of a app company.

Less than one in eight Google users has read the search engine's new privacy policy, a poll found two days before the moment of changing

Less than one in eight Google users has read the search engine's new privacy policy, a poll found two days before the moment of changing

Google has been widely criticized for the way it handles information made available to it by the millions who turn to its search engines and other services.

Its new privacy policy, which comes into effect on Thursday, March 1, sets out how the search engine company will exploit detailed information on its users, down to the locations where they use their smartphones, and how it will distribute it to other organizations.

Google’s new policy replaces around 60 different existing privacy policies.

The poll, carried out by YouGov for the Big Brother Watch pressure group in UK, found that 92% of adults who use the internet go through a Google service at least once a week.

But only 12% of them have read the company’s new privacy policy, which Google has been advertising prominently for weeks.

Nearly half of the adult population said it did not know Google was bringing in a new privacy policy, and only 40% of Google users said they thought the new policy should be brought into operation.

Nick Pickles, of Big Brother Watch, said: “The impact of Google’s new policy cannot be understated, but the public are in the dark about what the changes actually mean.

“Companies should not be allowed to bury in legal jargon and vague statements how they may monitor what we do online, where we use our phones and even listen to what we say in calls.

“This change isn’t about Google collecting more data, it’s about letting the company combine what’s in your emails with the videos you watch and the things you search for.”

Nick Pickles added: “If people don’t understand what is happening to their personal information, how can they make an informed choice about using a service?

“Google is putting advertiser’s interests before user privacy and should not be rushing ahead before the public understand what the changes will mean.”

The pressure group has called for an inquiry into how the new Google policy complies with British data protection law.