
The world’s largest search engine and the largest entity that spies on you and I might team up, according the Washington Post.
Under an agreement that is still being finalized, the National Security Agency would help Google analyze a major corporate espionage attack that the firm said originated in China and targeted its computer networks, according to cybersecurity experts familiar with the matter. The objective is to better defend Google — and its users — from future attack.
Google and the NSA declined to comment on the partnership. But sources with knowledge of the arrangement, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the alliance is being designed to allow the two organizations to share critical information without violating Google’s policies or laws that protect the privacy of Americans’ online communications. The sources said the deal does not mean the NSA will be viewing users’ searches or e-mail accounts or that Google will be sharing proprietary data.
The ACLU is urging its members and supporters to speak out:
The partnership is supposed to help protect Google’s networks, but the ramifications of companies like Google working with the NSA are frightening.
The NSA — a component of the Department of Defense — is an intelligence collection agency with few effective checks against abuse, and no public oversight of its activities. The NSA sucks up the equivalent of the contents of the Library of Congress every six to eight hours, every single day. In the last decade, the NSA’s dragnet, suspicionless surveillance has targeted everyday Americans, in violation of the law and the Constitution.
Google’s never won much praise from folks concerned about their privacy (do your own web searching on that if you’re interested), not that other search giants are exactly revolutionary in this area. And maybe this means nothing. But it’s sure creepy, to me, too.
Bad news if you don’t want Google to give the US gov all of your internet info. Good news if the US is gearing up for a cyber cold war with China. But somehow I think that’s bad news too. Either way I believe we’re screwed.