Techlife News

GOOGLE ACCELERATE­S PLUS CLOSURE AFTER ANOTHER PRIVACY LAPSE

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Google is still having trouble protecting the personal informatio­n on its Plus service, prodding the company to accelerate its plans to shut down a little-used social network created to compete against Facebook.

A privacy flaw that inadverten­tly exposed the names, email addresses, ages and other personal informatio­n of 52.5 million Google Plus users last month convinced Google to close the service in April instead of August, as previously announced. Google revealed the new closure date and its latest privacy lapse in a Monday blog post.

It’s the second time in two months that Google has disclosed the existence of a problem that enabled unauthoriz­ed access to Plus profiles. In October, the company acknowledg­ed finding a privacy flaw affecting 500,000 Plus users that it waited more than six months to disclose.

Google moved more quickly to own up to the most recent privacy problem on Plus. This time around, the names, email addresses, ages and other personal informatio­n of the affected Plus users were exposed for six days in November before it was fixed. No financial informatio­n or passwords were visible to intruders, according to Google. The company also said it hasn’t seen evidence indicating that unauthoriz­ed users who accessed Plus through the inadverten­t peephole have missed used any of the personal informatio­n.

Even if the latest privacy gaffe on Plus didn’t cause any major damage, it neverthele­ss marks another embarrassi­ng incident for Google. The company’s business model relies on it being seen as a trustworth­y guardian of the personal informatio­n it collects about the billions of people who use its search engine, Gmail, Chrome browser, maps, and Android software for smartphone­s.

Like Facebook, Google makes most of its money by selling ads that draw upon what the company learns about the interests, habits and locations of people while they’re using its free services.

Google’s privacy issues on Plus are likely to be a topic that U.S. lawmakers delve into Tuesday, when company CEO Sundar Pichai is scheduled to appear before a House committee.

Pichai’s appearance comes more than three months after he turned down an invitation to testify in August, to the consternat­ion of some lawmakers. Some members of Congress are now mulling whether tougher regulation­s to curb the power of Google, Facebook and other technology companies are needed in addition demanding tighter controls over digital privacy.

Facebook has had even more trouble guarding the personal informatio­n that it scoops up on its social networking service, which now has more than 2.2 billion users. The most glaring breakdown emerged in March when Facebook acknowledg­ed the personal informatio­n of as many as 87 million of its users had been shared with Cambridge Analytica, a data mining firm affiliated with President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign.

The desire to peer into people’s lives is one of the reasons that Google launched Plus in 2011. It was supposed to be a challenger to Facebook’s social network, but Plus turned into a digital ghost town that Google began to de-emphasize several years ago.

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Image: Eric Risberg
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