« Time For Google To Give Up The Fight Against Paid Links? | Main | Google Declares Stephen Colbert As Greatest Living American »
Apr. 20, 2007 at 12:11pm Eastern by Barry Schwartz
Complaint Over Google-DoubleClick Acqusition Expected To Be Filed At FTC Today
Google draws privacy complaint to FTC from News.com reports three organizations are going to file a joint complaint today with the Federal Trade Commission over Google's proposed acquisition of DoubleClick.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), along with the Center for Digital Democracy (CDD) and the U.S. Public Interest Research Groups (U.S. PIRG) are all calling for the FTC to delay Google's acquisition of DoubleClick. They first want the FTC to investigate "Google's data collection and storage practices" and for "DoubleClick to sweep out its data storehouse and require the search giant to offer a public plan for safeguarding consumer privacy."
Former Anti-Trust Targets Microsoft And AT&T Raise Trust Worries Over Google-DoubleClick Deal has the view from some of Google's competitors, while EU Group May Serve Google With Letter Over Data Retention Policies from yesterday covers how Google might be facing a privacy investigation in Europe.
Postscript: The complaint has been issued. Here are the full complaints:
- http://www.democraticmedia.org/PDFs/google_complaint.pdf
- http://www.epic.org/privacy/ftc/google/epic_complaint.pdf
And some more news on this at News.com.
Postscript #2: DoubleClick: We don't own consumer data from News.com has a statement on who owns what data. In short, DoubleClick says the data belongs to their clients and not to DoubleClick.
|
Like The Story? Vote For It On Yahoo Buzz!
Send me the monthly search newsletter too! (Learn more about our newsletters and feeds) |
|
Subscribe To Our Search Feed! |
| Share & Bookmark This Story! |
By Barry Schwartz
Permalink
Jump To Comments
See Related Stories In: Google: Acquisitions, Google: Critics, Google: Legal, Legal: Privacy


