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Google Email Spying Ruled Unlawful

cryptome.org

17 points by cbolat 12 years ago · 15 comments

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pjc50 12 years ago

That's not what the document says though! Scroll to the end.

It says that one of Google's motions to dismiss has suceeded, striking out part of the case as inapplicable, and that the case is being allowed to proceed. This is nowhere near even a first ruling. And it relates to "spying" in the sense of processing email to show adverts, not the NSA.

r0h1n 12 years ago

IANAL but the Court seems to have granted Google's motion to dismiss only for claims under CIPA Section 632 while denying it for all the other sections.

> the Court hereby GRANTS Google’s Motion to Dismiss with leave to amend with respect to Plaintiffs’ CIPA section 632 claims

This is Section 632:

> Section 632 prohibits unauthorized electronic eavesdropping on confidential conversations. To state a claim under section 632, a plaintiff must allege an electronic recording of or eavesdropping on a confidential communication, and that not all parties consented to the eavesdropping.

However, the Court has not granted Google's motion to dismiss claims related to other sections:

> The Court DENIES Google’s Motion to Dismiss with respect to all other claims.

So one of the sections that still stands is Section 631:

> Section 631 prohibits wiretapping or “any other unauthorized connection” with a “wire, line, cable, or instrument.” The California Supreme Court has held that section 631 protects against three distinct types of harms: “intentional wiretapping, willfully attempting to learn the contents or meaning of a communication in transit over a wire, and attempting to use or communicate information obtained as a result of engaging in either of the previous two activities.”

Which probably explains the title. I still don't agree with the title though.

  • dingaling 12 years ago

    Interesting, re: Section 632

    > and that not all parties consented to the eavesdropping.

    Are they indicating that when someone sends an e-mail to a Gmail account that they are implicitly consenting to the 'eavesdropping'?

    As another poster pointed-out on HN a few weeks ago, sometimes it's not even clear if a domain is using Gmail. One would have to check the MX RRs first, before making a decision on sending.

    Sounds like a useful postfix plug-in, actually...

    • dragonwriter 12 years ago

      > Are they indicating that when someone sends an e-mail to a Gmail account that they are implicitly consenting to the 'eavesdropping'?

      No, not at all.

      There are, per the order, three requirements identified for a 632 violation: "(1) an electronic recording of or eavesdropping on (2) a 'confidential communication' (3) to which all parties did not consent."

      The order finds the plaintiffs' case deficient on this point because: "Plaintiffs have not established that the communications at issue are confidential pursuant to section 632."

devx 12 years ago

Good. Google shouldn't be able to even "analyze" private communications and data, at the very least not without the user's explicit consent (opt-in). Being in the ToS doesn't count since nobody reads those.

Maybe if they aren't allowed to do it anymore, they'll finally take requests to encrypt their services end-to-end seriously. Because right now they probably aren't even considering encrypting Hangouts if that means they can't analyze it for ads anymore, which is just sad and frustrating.

  • cromwellian 12 years ago

    Analyzing emails is what email service providers do. If you can classify a message as spam, you can also classify it as being about shoes and target ads against it.

  • Oletros 12 years ago

    So, you're saying that every email provider that does scanning for spam, full text search, auto categorization and other things must stop doing them?

dragonwriter 12 years ago

The headline is a lie, nothing Google has been found to have done has been ruled unlawful. The order here simply allows the case against Google to proceed in part (while throwing out part of it in its current form). This is a very early ruling in the case, before any evidence has been presented, and is purely a ruling as a matter of law about the standing of the parties to bring the case, and whether the claims made are even valid legal charges.

cromwellian 12 years ago

Taken to an extreme, this idea of applying wiretapping law to federated services seems to be a danger to open systems. A closed messaging system can get all users, both senders and recipients, to agree to whatever is needed to make the system work (e.g. if they need to examine the content and not just the envelope)

However, when you have federation, two different sets of users on two different services may have agreed to differing terms. Applying terms like "interception" in these cases also seems strange.

It's bad enough that silos and vertical integration seem to be winning over the internet of old, but to have the legal system create a situation in which the open systems are much more risky to run seems to be a bad precedent.

(I also have to wonder who is really behind these cases. It's not very plausible that any of the plantiffs are really being harmed by automated ad serving, and then there's the whole Scroogled campaign...as Arsenio Hall used to say...things that make you go hmmmmm.)

semjada 12 years ago

no such thing as a free email account

  • ciucanu 12 years ago

    "Free Is The Most Expensive Price" or another popular expression on these days: "If You're Not Paying for It, You're the Product"

    • Oletros 12 years ago

      Popular but wrong

      • ciucanu 12 years ago

        Wrong as not ethic or wrong like false?

        • Oletros 12 years ago

          Wrong like false, you are not the product, the product is ad space

          • AjithAntony 12 years ago

            I feel like you have something more you want to say that makes you point more clear. I think this audience would say ad space is not far removed from the eyeballs that make the ad space valuable.

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