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Google determined to have broken the law...
but nothing will really be done about it: http://www.news.com.au/technology/go...-1225889886185
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It sounds like they only collected data from unsecured networks. That's almost like telling someone off for listening in on conversations that are spoken across neighbourhoods using loudspeakers, or for reading PMs written on 12ft high ad boards. I should think that if the people on those networks really cared about privacy then they'd turn on the security?
Edit: Don't get me wrong. I'm all for privacy, and the legal protection of it. But it's not like they tapped phones or hacked email accounts. An unsecured Wi-Fi network is like a radio station broadcasting information. At some point you have to draw a line and say "if people see/hear this, it's not their fault". |
Probably just more hot air in Australia's quest against the internet.
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:sign_yeah:Bulls-eye! (IMnot soHO)
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Wonder what would happen if I accidently sat in a stationary location accidently collecting data from someone else's unsecured WiFi network? Would I get let off in the same way if I said sorry it was an accident? |
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Yeah, it was no "accident".
Last time I was in the US I was on a bus going through a city, so I decided to get out my iPhone and check for any wireless networks that I might be able to connect to... and the first one that appeared on the list was a secured network with the name "keep driving ****er". :rotfl2: |
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lol thats a good one. |
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