Google accused of illegal or unethical business practices in collection of private information

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg endured an hours-long grilling by dozens of U.S. senators last Tuesday during which he repeatedly apologized and promised privacy reforms but also pointedly defended his company against the threat of new legislation. Zuckerberg invoked Facebook’s unlikely journey — from a tiny start-up he co-founded in his Harvard dorm room 14 years ago to a social media behemoth — in explaining Facebook’s frequent privacy missteps and its failure to spot and defeat Russia’s aggressive campaign to manipulate American voters in 2016 and beyond.

While many observers of the Zuckerberg grilling believe the Internet giants have only recently been involved in alleged criminal or unethical practices, an examination of a previous controversy is in order. In a police action by South Korea’s law enforcement.  South Korean cops filed charges against Google Inc. for allegedly collecting information on private citizen thereby breaking Internet privacy laws South Korea, according to a press statement released by the Seoul Police Department.

Google’s Seoul office had first been raided by police in August 2010 on suspicion of illegally collecting personal information in preparing the local version of its “Street View” mapping services.

According to the police officials, Google used vehicles equipped with special video recorders for taping streets and landscapes throughout South Korea between October 2009 and May 2010. Police suspected that these video recorders and other equipment gathered private data about Korean citizens.

The Cyber Terror Response Center, the Internet investigation unit at South Korea’s National Police Agency, said that after a months-long investigation they discovered proof that Google’s mapping division illegally obtained and stored e-mails, instant messages, Internet site identification passwords, banking and credit data and other personal information of more than a half-million people in Seoul, Busan and Inchon as well rural areas.

According to police officials in a statement, Google’s activities, while legal in many parts of the world, violated South Korea’s laws regarding information and communication, Internet privacy, and protection of private location information.

The police officers confiscated more than 200 hard drives and verified the information of hundreds of thousands of people, while investigating about 10 Google corporate executives, according to the National Police Agency report obtained by the US’s National Association of Chiefs of Police.

In response to police allegations, Google executives in South Korea admitted the company collected individuals’ private information. However, they claimed it was unintentional and Google stopped collecting all Wi-Fi data as soon as they became aware of the problem.

Google also claimed the collected information was never misused or abused by the Internet giant. Google officials announced that they have been cooperating with the Korean Communications Commission and the police throughout the intricate investigation and will work to correct any abuses discovered during that investigation.

Google has been providing Street View service, which allows users to view panoramic street scenes on its digital photomaps, in several countries such as the United States, Germany, Australia and Canada, and it has also been accused of similar charges in those countries.

NACOP Chiefs of Police - James Kouri

Jim Kouri is a member of the Board of Advisors and a former vice president of the National Association of Chiefs of Police, Inc. a 501 (c) (3) not-for-profit organization incorporated in Florida in May 1967. The Association was organized for educational and charitable activities for law enforcement officers in command ranks and supervisory agents of state & federal law enforcement agencies as well as leaders in the private security sector. NACOP also provides funding to small departments, officers and the families of those officers paralyzed and disabled in the line of duty.

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