Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, January 20, 2006
Yahoo and others reveal queries from millions of people; Google refuses. Identities aren't included, but the data trove stirs privacy fears.By Joseph Menn and Chris Gaither
Times Staff Writers
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SAN FRANCISCO Federal investigators have obtained potentially billions of
Internet search requests made by users of major websites run by Yahoo Inc.,
Microsoft Corp. and America Online Inc., raising concerns about how the massive
data trove will be used.
The information turned over to Justice
Department lawyers reveals a week's worth of online queries from millions of
Americans the Internet Age equivalent of eavesdropping on their inner
monologues. The subpoenaed data could, for example, include how many times
people searched online for "apple pie recipes," "movie tickets 90012" or even
"bomb instructions."
The Internet companies said Thursday that the
information did not violate their users' privacy because the data did not
include names or computer addresses. The disclosure nonetheless alarmed civil
liberties advocates, who fear that the government could seek more detailed
information later.
A Justice Department spokesman said the government was
not interested in ferreting out names only in search trends as part of its
efforts to regulate online pornography. But the search-engine subpoenas come
amid broader concerns over how much information the government collects and how
the data are used.
Congress is debating an extension of the Patriot Act,
which dramatically expanded the government's ability to obtain private data. And
congressional hearings are expected soon on the legality of a National Security
Agency program to track communications by U.S. citizens without prior court
approval.
Privacy advocates said the opportunity to peruse search queries
provided an unprecedented glimpse into people's private thoughts and habits.
Virtually unknown a decade ago, search engines rapidly have become an integral
part of daily life.
Search engines maintain "a massive database that
reaches into the most intimate details of your life: what you search for, what
you read, what worries you, what you enjoy," said Kurt Opsahl, a staff attorney
at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "It's critical to protect the privacy of
this information so people feel free to use modern tools to find information
without the fear of Big Brother looking over their shoulder."
The issue
came to light this week only when Google Inc., the most-used Internet search
engine, fought its subpoena. AOL, Microsoft and Yahoo also had been subpoenaed.
Government lawyers filed a brief in U.S. District Court in San Jose seeking to
force Google to comply.
Google's refusal was first reported by the San
Jose Mercury News.
Search engines and e-mail providers are asked for
information on specific people in hundreds of cases yearly, both by law
enforcement and in civil lawsuits. They generally comply, and their privacy
policies warn users that data can be turned over to authorities.
Under a
section of the Patriot Act expanding the use of so-called national security
letters, companies such as Google can be asked to turn over potentially useful
data even about people who aren't suspected of wrongdoing while being barred
from disclosing those requests.
But no previous case is known to have
involved such a wide range of data.
"Their demand for information
overreaches," said Nicole Wong, Google's associate general counsel. "We had
lengthy discussions with them to try to resolve this but were not able to, and
we intend to resist their motion vigorously."
The other search engines
disclosed the information after narrowing the government's original request for
two months' worth of searches to one week's worth. The week was not
specified.
"We are rigorous defenders of our users'
privacy," Yahoo spokeswoman Mary Osako said. "We did not provide any personal
information in response to the Department of Justice's subpoena. In our opinion,
this is not a privacy issue."
A Microsoft spokeswoman said the company
complied with the request "in a way that ensured we also protected the privacy
of our customers. We were able to share aggregated query data
that did not
include any personally identifiable information."
AOL spokesman Andrew
Weinstein said the Time Warner Inc. subsidiary initially rebuffed the Justice
Department's requests and eventually provided "an aggregated and anonymous list
of search terms
. What we gave them was something that was extremely limited,
didn't have any privacy implications and is fairly common data."
Beth
Givens, director of the nonprofit Privacy Rights Clearinghouse in San Diego,
said those companies should have fought.
"Google and the other search
engines," she said, "represent a very appealing honey pot for government
investigators."
In some ways, Google's action echoes Verizon
Communications Inc.'s fight against the record industry two years ago. The
record labels used a provision of a digital copyright law to demand the names of
subscribers to Verizon's Internet service who were suspected of swapping music
files illegally. Verizon resisted, and a federal appeals court eventually agreed
that the labels would have to sue individuals before forcing Verizon to turn
over information on them. The Supreme Court declined to intervene in the
case.
Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller said the government
wanted an overview of what people look for online as part of its effort to
restore an anti-pornography law that was struck down by the Supreme
Court.
The Child Online Protection Act was adopted in 1998 after a
similar law, the Communications Decency Act, was struck down on constitutional
grounds. The Child Online Protection Act establishes fines and jail terms for
businesses that publish sexually oriented material on the Web that is obscene or
offensive, unless they weed out minors by demanding a credit card or other proof
of age.
In 2004, the Supreme Court upheld an injunction against the law
but sent the case back to a lower court in Pennsylvania. A majority of the high
court wrote that the government could save the measure if it showed that the
rules were more effective than Internet content filters at balancing the need to
keep pornography from children against the free-speech rights of website
operators.
Philip Stark, a UC Berkeley statistics professor working for
the government, wrote in the San Jose court filing that the queries, along with
a list of available websites, would help show what users were looking for and
how often they found material that the government deemed harmful to
minors.
The Justice Department also asked the Internet companies for the
addresses to every website in their search-engine indexes, a request that was
negotiated down to 1 million randomly chosen addresses. Government lawyers said
they wanted that information to gauge the prevalence of websites that were
harmful to minors and to measure the effectiveness of filtering software on
those sites.
"We're not seeking any individual information regarding
anybody who entered the query terms," Miller said.
He did not respond to
other questions, including whether the department would rule out seeking such
information in the future and how the existing data would be used.
Google
said, though, that the words in a single text query could lead the government to
a searcher's identity.
"One can envision scenarios where queries alone
could reveal identifying information," the company wrote in a letter objecting
to the demand.
Users often search for information about
themselves.
More broadly, the company wrote, "Google's acceding to the
request would suggest that it is willing to reveal information about those who
use its services. This is not a perception that Google can
accept."
Google has tried to cast itself as an enlightened company, going
so far as to tell investors that it planned to do business under a simple rule:
"Don't be evil."
But as Google has collected increasing amounts of
information about its users, some observers have expressed concern that the
company could break that rule by letting the data fall into the wrong hands or
simply by complying with government demands.
"Google could help protect
its users
by limiting the information that is kept and how long it is stored,"
said the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Opsahl. "The easiest way to respond to
a subpoena is by saying, "We don't have it.' "