Google says privacy change won't affect government users
Company downplays privacy, security concerns from former federal IT official
Computerworld - Google today dismissed concerns by a former senior federal IT official that the company's controversial new privacy policy would create problems for customers of Google Apps for Government (GAFG).
In a statement, Google said the new policy will not change existing contracts that define how it handles and stores data belonging to government users of its cloud services. "Enterprise customers using Google Apps for Government, Business or Education have individual contracts that define how we handle and store their data," Amit Singh, vice president of Google Enterprise said in a statement.
"As always, Google will maintain our enterprise customers' data in compliance with the confidentiality and security obligations provided to their domain," he said.
According to Singh, Googles contractual agreements have always superseded its privacy policy for enterprise customers.
All core productivity and collaboration applications that a government, business or educational institution pays for are covered by contract, a Google spokesman today said. However, if an administrator were to turn on a Google application not covered by the contract, that application would be subject to Googles new privacy rules, he said.
Singh was responding to concerns raised Wednesday by Karen Evans, former de facto federal CIO and administrator of e-government and IT at the White House Office of Management and Budget.
Evans, who is now an independent consultant, is a founding member of Safegov.org, which is focused on promoting a set of best practices for cloud deployment in the government. On Wednesday, Evans and another Safegov partner, Jeff Gould, CEO of Peerstone Research, released a statement saying that Google's new privacy policy threatens the security of government data in the cloud.
The two of them called on Google to "immediately suspend" the application of its new privacy policy to GAFG users, calling it a significant change that needed further review by the public sector.
Google earlier this week announced that it was replacing separate privacy policies for each of its services with one universal policy. Under the policy, Google will combine user data from services like YouTube, Gmail and Google search and create a single merged profile for each user of its services. Google said the new policy is shorter, easier to understand and will allow the company to deliver better and more targeted services.
Privacy watch
- Google, Microsoft butt heads over IE privacy skirting
- Microsoft slams Google over iPhone, Mac privacy boner
- FBI says social media monitoring won't infringe privacy rights
- Google says privacy change won't affect government users
- Supreme Court GPS ruling called a win for privacy
- Lawmakers seek hearing on Carrier IQ privacy issues
- Social Security agency leaks thousands of SSNs every year, report says
- OnStar reverses course on controversial GPS tracking plans
- Nonprofit must rehire workers fired for Facebook comments
- Mozilla issues do-not-track guide for advertisers



- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- ESG: Defining Tier One Storage in the Modern Data Center
- This report defines "tier-1" storage in the modern IT world and in the data centers and services that support it. What was a...
- ESG: Using HP's Converged Storage to Develop/Enhance Business Resiliency in VMware Environments
- In this report, Enterprise Strategy Group reviews how HP's portfolio of hardware, software, and services can provide the foundational support for VMware environments....
- HP 3PAR Storage Systems Designed for Mission Critical High Availability
- In this technical whitepaper, learn how HP 3PAR Storage Systems have been designed to deliver 99.999% and greater availability, bringing new possibilities to...
- Utility Storage - The Ideal Platform for Virtual and Cloud Computing
- Server virtualization has transformed corporate IT -- companies have enjoyed major cost savings and have gained flexibility and efficiency. But this has also...
- ESG Lab Review: Focus on Federated Workload Balancing, Asset Management, and Thin Provisioning
- This ESG Lab review documents hands-on testing of HP 3PAR Peer Motion Software's distributed volume management with a focus on federated workload balancing,... All Privacy White Papers
- A Road Map for Best Practice Social Media Acceptable Use Policy
- Organizations around the world are racing to leverage the power of social media for business. Sites like Facebook are used for marketing, human...
- Data Protection and Disaster Recovery with iSCSI and VMware
- Get this on demand webcast now
- The Higher-Bandwidth, Lower-Cost Connection of Choice: 10GBASE-T LAN on Motherboard
- Learn how Expedient, a cloud provider, is using 10 Gigabit Ethernet to boost its services and rein in costs.
- Banish Poor Application Performance
- End User Experience, 30-Min Webinar
Wed. March 21st ~ 11 AM ET
Are you ready to gain the proactive ability to rapidly respond... - Virtualization KnowledgeVault
- Virtualization initiatives are underway at most small and midsize businesses, but some unexpected challenges have prevented many organizations from achieving original goals. This... All Privacy Webcasts
