Privacy officials from 10 countries on Tuesday penned a letter to Google criticizing its approach to privacy, pointing to its Buzz and Street View products as examples.. Privacy officials from 10 countries on Tuesday penned a letter to Google criticizing its approach to privacy, pointing to its Buzz and Street View products as examples. "We are increasingly concerned that, too often, the privacy rights of the world's citizens are being forgotten as Google rolls out new technological applications," Jennifer Stoddart, the privacy commissioner of Canada, wrote in the letter. It was also signed by the privacy commissioners of France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain, and the United Kingdom. Google introduced Buzz in early February. The social networking product added a "news feed" feature to Gmail, and also added some social components to Google mobile on Android and the iPhone. Amid concern over how much personal information was being made public, Google tweaked Buzz several days after its debut, making it more clear how information was shared, and simplifying the process for blocking or following other users. In March, several members of Congress also penned a letter to the Federal Trade Commission, asking the agency to investigate Buzz-related privacy concerns. The link for this article located at Fox News is no longer available. . Privacy officials from 10 countries on Tuesday penned a letter to Google criticizing its approach to. privacy, officials, countries, tuesday, penned, letter, google, criticizing, approach. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The White House yesterday essentially threw in the towel on the government's ability to limit exports of high-performance computers, while also acknowledging that there's little the U.S. can do to prevent other nations from developing high-powered systems by harnessing computer power . . . . The White House yesterday essentially threw in the towel on the government's ability to limit exports of high-performance computers, while also acknowledging that there's little the U.S. can do to prevent other nations from developing high-powered systems by harnessing computer power through networked clusters of machines. As part of an announcement that substantially relaxes the limits placed by the U.S. on computer exports, the Clinton administration said it "has concluded that there are no meaningful or effective control measures for computer hardware that address the technological or marketplace challenges" identified during a policy review that began in the fall of 1999. The link for this article located at ComputerWorld is no longer available. . The White House yesterday essentially threw in the towel on the government's ability to limit export. white, house, yesterday, essentially, threw, towel, government's, ability, limit, export. . Anthony Pell
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