Posts tagged as:

consumer

A Race to the Bottom - Privacy Ranking of Internet Service Companies

by Cooee on November 4, 2008

 

The report was compiled using data derived from public sources (newspaper articles, blog entries, submissions to government inquiries, privacy policies etc), information provided by present and former company staff, technical analysis and interviews with company representatives.  

Interim results are available here in PDF format: Interim Rankings

 PI is based in London, and has an office in Washington, D.C. Together with members in 40 countries, PI has conducted campaigns throughout the world on issues ranging from wiretapping and national security activities, to ID cards, video surveillance, data matching, police information systems and medical privacy, and works with a wide range of NGO’s, academic institutions and inter-governmental organizations.

  Campaigning against corporate privacy practices, e.g. Amazon  Identifying the problems in technology design, e.g.problems with advertising in Gmail  Monitoring and campaigning against the disclosure of data from companies to governments, e.g. EU-US PNR, SWIFT, Telecommunications companies  Founding and running the Big Brother Awards, now held annually in over 15 countries, that identify ‘worst corporate invaders’,  Campaigning against bad practice in account management, for instance preventing users from deleting accounts, e.g. against Amazon and eBay  Ranking countries for their privacy protection and surveillance levels,  Building particularly from our work on companies’ practices on customer account management and our expertise developed in the country rankings we are now positioned to develop rankings for companies.
[click to continue...]

{ 1 comment }

Chrome labelled a ‘digital Trojan horse’

by Cooee on November 4, 2008

 

Increasingly, as Google burrows deeper into everyday computing, its product announcements are prompting questions about its ability to gather more potentially sensitive personal information from users.  

  Data gathered through most of the company’s services “disappears into a black hole once it hits the Googleplex,” said Simon Davies, director of London-based Privacy International, referring to Google’s headquarters.

[click to continue...]

{ 0 comments }