Google violates privacy to counter child abuse

Google violates privacy to counter child abuse
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Summary The story 'seems' like a simple one with a happy outcome,a bad man did a ‎crime and got caught.

WASHINGTON (AFP) -- Google defended its policy of electronically ‎monitoring its users  content for child sexual abuse after it tipped off police in ‎Texas to a child pornography suspect.‎
Houston restaurant worker John Henry Skillern, 41, was arrested Thursday ‎following a cyber-tip that Google had passed along via the National Center for ‎Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), based outside Washington.‎
‎"He was trying to get around getting caught, he was trying to keep it inside his ‎email," said detective David Nettles of the Houston Metro Internet Crimes ‎Against Children Taskforce.‎
‎"I can t see that information, I can t see that photo but Google can," he told ‎Houston television station KHOU, which first reported the story.‎
It is common knowledge that the world s leading Internet service, like its rivals, ‎tracks users  online behavior in order to fine-tune its advertising services.‎
However, the Texas case prompted concerns about the degree to which Google ‎might be giving information about its users  conduct to law enforcement ‎agencies.‎
‎"The story seems like a simple one with a happy outcome -- a bad man did a ‎crime and got caught," blogged John Hawes, chief of operations at Virus ‎Bulletin, a cyber security consultancy.‎
‎"However, there will of course be some who see it as yet another sign of how ‎the twin Big Brothers of state agencies and corporate behemoths have nothing ‎better to do than delve into the private lives of all and sundry, looking for ‎dirt," he said.‎
In an email to AFP, a Google spokesperson said Monday: "Sadly, all Internet ‎companies have to deal with child sexual abuse.‎
‎"It s why Google actively removes illegal imagery from our services -- including ‎search and Gmail -- and immediately reports abuse to the NCMEC."‎
The NCMEC operates the CyberTipline, through which Internet service ‎providers can relay information about suspect online child sexual abuse on to ‎police departments.‎
‎"Each child sexual abuse image is given a unique digital fingerprint which ‎enables our systems to identify those pictures, including in Gmail," added the ‎spokesperson, who did not disclose technical details about the process.‎
‎"It is important to remember that we only use this technology to identify child ‎sexual abuse imagery -- not other email content that could be associated with ‎criminal activity (for example using email to plot a burglary)."‎
In a separate email to AFP, the NCMEC said federal law requires Internet ‎service providers to report suspected child porn to the CyberTipline.‎
‎"NCMEC makes all CyberTipline reports available to appropriate law-‎enforcement agencies for review and possible investigation," it said.‎
On its website Monday, KHOU described Skillern as a registered sex offender, ‎convicted 20 years ago of sexually assaulting an eight-year-old boy.‎
Investigators who raided his home allegedly found child porn on his phone and ‎tablet device, as well as cell phone videos of children visiting the Denny s ‎family restaurant where he worked as a cook.‎
Skillern has been charged with one count of possession of child pornography ‎and one count of promotion of child pornography. He remains in custody on a ‎‎$200,000 bond, KHOU said.‎
Google s online set of "program policies" for its Gmail service, with more than ‎‎400 million users worldwide, includes "a zero-tolerance policy against child ‎sexual abuse imagery."‎
‎"If we become aware of such content, we will report it to the appropriate ‎authorities and may take disciplinary action, including termination, against the ‎Google accounts of those involved," it states.‎
Last year, Google s chief legal officer David Drummond, writing in Britain s ‎Daily Telegraph newspaper, acknowledged Google had created technology to ‎‎"trawl" for known images of child sex abuse."‎
‎"We can then quickly remove them and report their existence to the ‎authorities," he said.‎

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