Google's official blog gets hacked
The Google Blog is one of the company's main communication tools
October 10, 2006 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
A hacker broke into Google Inc.'s main official blog on Saturday and posted a false message saying that the company had decided to cancel a joint project with eBay Inc.
The intrusion marks the second time this year that Google's official blog has fallen into unauthorized hands. In March, Google staffers deleted the so-called Google Blog by mistake and someone briefly took control of the Web address.
In Saturday's incident, someone exploited a bug in Blogger, the Google Web log publishing service on which Google Blog is hosted. The hacker published a note riddled with grammatical and spelling errors that said Google had ended its click-to-call advertising project with eBay because it was "monopolistic."
The next day, Karen Wickre, from the Google Blog team, alerted readers about the false posting and said the Blogger bug had been fixed, without detailing the breach. The eBay project remains alive and well, she wrote on the blog.
The Google Blog is one of the company's main communication tools. As official corporate messages similar to press releases, its postings often trigger news reports, analyst recommendations and investor decisions.
Key to Google's success is that individuals and organizations trust that the company will keep their confidential information safe. Public displays of security vulnerabilities erode that confidence.
On the consumer side, Google keeps massive logs of search queries, a portion of which are directly linked to specific Google account holders who have given the company permission to track their search activities.
For consumers, it also stores personal information like e-mail messages, digital photos and calendar entries via a variety of online services like its Gmail Web mail service, Picasa photo manager and Google Calendar.
Organizations do business with Google for a variety of reasons, including advertising online, analyzing their Web sites' traffic, processing e-commerce transactions and implementing enterprise search systems, all of which involve entrusting Google with sensitive data.
Google didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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