BEIJING, June 14 (Xinhuanet) -- Faced with
concerns by European online privacy advocates, Google promised to obscure
information about people's Internet searches after only 18 months, according to
media reports on Wednesday.
Google's global privacy counsel Peter Fleischer
revealed late Monday that the firm's policy change in a letter to the Article 29
Data Protection Working Party in Belgium.
Fleischer's message was a response to a demand by
Article 29 that Google justify why it doesn't conform to the Resolution on
Privacy Protection and Search Engines adopted in London in November of 2006.
The resolution calls on search engines to erase data
linking people to searches when sessions end unless they get permission to keep
it.
Google said it needs to keep information about
searchers and their online explorations to protect its system against attacks;
expose online scams and hackers; to improve the algorithm on which searches are
based and to meet requirements by law enforcement.
Google called on the Working Party to lobby European
nations to make laws regarding what information has to be kept and by whom
clearer and more regionally uniform for Internet firms.
The exchange between Fleischer and Working Party
chairman Peter Schaar was posted on Google's website after a British human
rights group concluded Google has the most abysmal privacy policies and is
leading a "race to the bottom" by the world's most renowned Internet firms.
London-based Privacy International, which has
monitored rights protections on the Internet since its fledgling days, ranked
Google "hostile to privacy."
Google scored lower in privacy protection than rivals
Microsoft, Yahoo and AOL.
Google told AFP that it is proud of its array of
products and that it stands by what it claimed as a record for protecting user
privacy.
"We are disappointed with Privacy International's
report which is based on numerous inaccuracies and misunderstandings about our
services," Google general counsel Nicole Wong said in a written statement.
"We recognize that user trust is central to our
business and Google aggressively protects our users' privacy."
Google has a "vague, incomplete and possibly
deceptive" privacy policy, PI concluded in the report.
(Agencies)