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AOL screwed up and juicers could pay for it

Golddoor

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This isnt good if you are a AOL user. Not sure but couldnt they use this to bust people like us?

NEW YORK - AOL released the Internet search terms that more than 650,000 of its subscribers entered over a three-month period and admitted Monday that what it originally intended as a gesture to researchers amounted to a privacy breach and a mistake.

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Although AOL had substituted numeric IDs for the subscribers' real user names, the company acknowledged the search queries themselves may contain personally identifiable data.

For example, many users type their names to find out whether sites have dirt on them and then separately search for online mentions of their phone, credit card or Social Security numbers. A few days later, they may search for pizzerias in their neighborhoods, revealing their locations, or for prescription drug prices, revealing their medical conditions. All those separate searches would be linked to the same numeric ID.

"Search query data can contain the sum total of our work, interests, associations, desires, dreams, fantasies and even darkest fears," said Lauren Weinstein, a privacy advocate.

The company apologized for the disclosure.

"This was a screw up, and we're angry and upset about it," AOL spokesman Andrew Weinstein said. "It was an innocent enough attempt to reach out to the academic community with new research tools, but it was obviously not appropriately vetted, and if it had been, it would have been stopped in an instant."

He could not say whether anyone has been disciplined, saying an internal investigation was continuing.

The disclosure comes as the Time Warner Inc. unit tries to increase usage of its search services and other free, ad-supported features to offset a decline in subscriptions, a drop likely to accelerate with its recent decision to give away AOL.com e-mail accounts and software.

AOL ranks fourth in search, behind Google Inc., Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) and Microsoft Corp.'s MSN, according to Nielsen/NetRatings. Although AOL gets search results and keyword ads from Google, which owns 5 percent of the company, AOL is trying to get people to search directly on its own sites in hopes of distracting them with an ad-supported video or two.

Ari Schwartz, deputy director of the technology watchdog group Center for Democracy and Technology, lauded AOL for responding quickly.

"We're glad to hear that AOL is treating this as a serious incident because it is a serious incident," he said.

He added that search engines should use AOL's disclosure to re-evaluate why they even retain such data.

"Old searches don't mean a lot to them and present a big risk to individuals," he said.

The AOL search data had been posted about 10 days ago but were not widely known outside the research community until Web journals began pointing to AOL's research site Sunday. AOL removed the file, but not before copies were already circulating on the Internet.

The data file included information on what search terms were used, when the search was conducted and whether the user clicked on any of the results.

All told, the file had information on 19 million queries from 658,086 subscribers from March 1 to May 31. The data only included searches conducted in the United States using AOL's proprietary software, which until last week was available only to paying subscribers. Searches made over the free AOL.com portal were not disclosed.

AOL's Weinstein said only 0.3 percent of all searches were released.

AOL, like other search engines, does make such data available to law-enforcement authorities with subpoenas. It complied with a Justice Department request for search queries as part of the Bush administration's effort to revive a law meant to shield children from online pornography. AOL said it did so without compromising users' privacy.

Google, on the other hand, fought the subpoena, and a judge ultimately ruled that the company didn't have to turn over specific search requests.

A display in the lobby of Google's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., continually scrolls some of the searches being conducted through its site. The data, however, can be viewed only by people physically at Google, and multiple searches by the same person are not linked.

"It doesn't really matter if someone is peeking at you," said Alex Halavais, a professor of interactive communications at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Conn. "When the data starts to get tied together, it becomes much more invasive."

He said such data would be useful for researchers like him, "but if I were an AOL subscriber, I would be a little more than upset."
 
i dont think any bust would come directly from this as most people are using their hush emails for juice talking.... but its just another sign of how messed up our government it... im sure the government approved of the " mistake"
 
f*ck AOL, never used them never will... GOOGLE is your best friend, and is in court right now fighting the goevernment to protect your search rights.. governement is trying to collect Google users search records, as they have with MSN, Yahoo and other search engines, but Google will not give them the info.
 
HotMan said:
f*ck AOL, never used them never will... GOOGLE is your best friend, and is in court right now fighting the goevernment to protect your search rights.. governement is trying to collect Google users search records, as they have with MSN, Yahoo and other search engines, but Google will not give them the info.

even more reason to use the "ghost surfing" software etc.. who knows if that even works though
 
HotMan said:
f*ck AOL, never used them never will... GOOGLE is your best friend, and is in court right now fighting the goevernment to protect your search rights.. governement is trying to collect Google users search records, as they have with MSN, Yahoo and other search engines, but Google will not give them the info.


haha, you beleive that?? That court case is for show only. Google and everyone else has been giving the government everything and anything from the get go. Google will win the court case so everyone feels safe using google....all the while the government will be getting their weekly google downloads of everything that's being looked at in the country. The government gets what the government wants....PERIOD!! They are our daddy's.....we are their bitches. We've been getting it in the ass since the day we were born....we're just used to it, so we don't often feel it anymore. We lay down everyday for this government in ways most of you couldn't even conceive unless told about. I had my eyes opened "just a little bit"....and I was floored. I can't even imagine what it's really like....we are NOT free.....not free like we were meant to be anyway.
 
redsamurai said:
haha, you beleive that?? That court case is for show only. Google and everyone else has been giving the government everything and anything from the get go. Google will win the court case so everyone feels safe using google....all the while the government will be getting their weekly google downloads of everything that's being looked at in the country. The government gets what the government wants....PERIOD!! They are our daddy's.....we are their bitches. We've been getting it in the ass since the day we were born....we're just used to it, so we don't often feel it anymore. We lay down everyday for this government in ways most of you couldn't even conceive unless told about. I had my eyes opened "just a little bit"....and I was floored. I can't even imagine what it's really like....we are NOT free.....not free like we were meant to be anyway.



FUCK MAN...GREAT POST!! sucks but i must MOST DEF AGREE
 
I have a business opportunity running right now that "MAY", and I say "may" very strongly, net me ALOT of money in the next couple years. Enough to take me to some carribean country and live like a king of kings for the rest of my life and have alot left over. It is my dream to escape the machine.....kind of like neo coming out of the matrix....ya feel me??
 
back to the thread, things to be wary of if you used AOL client search software:

1. Searched for your name, SS#, Address, Phone #, etc..
2. Live in a small town
3. Anything else sketchy.

If the gov't sees a weird pattern they can subpoena AOL and get your info.... this really sucks. Im going to put the 5GB file in a database and have some fun searching through it to see if I know anyone :o
 
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