DSE

Feb 14, 2012

Google’s new privacy policy from Mar 1

In a move aimed at creating a simpler and more intuitive user experience, Google has announced changes to its privacy policy that will take effect on March 1.

The reaction to the change has been far from positive.

The subtext of the new policy is that users cannot opt out of the changes unless they close their Google accounts.

‘Currently it is a flat policy’, Hari Iyer, an IT professional who deals with information security in Dubai, told Gulf News.

The new policy unifies 60 privacy policies, and applies to all Google services.

‘With a single log in, Google will have details of what applications I access at any given time and place including details of my posts either on the social sharing service Google+ or content of my Gmail’, Iyer said.

Google product users have been alerted about the change through emails and search alerts, eliciting several critical comments.

A lecturer on Human Rights in Colombia, Dayro Reyes Acosta (@djreyesa), tweeted: ‘Let’s put attention to this new tech change. Our data future is on risk Google seeks to clarify new privacy policy’.

Blogger Sryokan (@sryokan) from Portland tweeted: ‘#Google changes it privacy policy on March 1st 2012. Hopefully it isn`t an Opt-Out policy change like Facebook’.




The new policy has even worried privacy advocates.

One US report stated that a leading lawmaker on privacy issues said he would ask for a probe into whether recently announced changes in how Google handles consumer data violated an agreement it made with the US Federal Trade Commission.

In Dubai, Anthony Stilgoe, IT manager in an educational institute, said that people are upset because the information a user shares through one service is no longer respective to that service.

‘Many aren’t happy about information being shared across Google services’.

The plus side he explained was that Google will better understand a user’s preferences.

‘Google can suggest tailor search results based on a user’s separate activity on video-sharing website YouTube or email service Gmail.

MENA Scenario
Saudi Arabia has the largest number of search queries per day followed by Egypt, Morocco, Algeria and the UAE, who together represent 70 per cent of all searches in the Mid East and North Africa (MENA) region.

Since local map domains were launched in the Mena region in 2011, there has been 50 per cent growth in usage. Google Maps usage grew at a phenomenal rate of 180 per cent in Egypt.

Google Chrome is the leading browser in Tunisia, Libya, and Jordan and the second most popular browser in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain, UAE, Algeria and Morocco.

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