Google Buzz

From Internet Law Program 2011
Revision as of 13:17, 26 July 2011 by BenNH (talk | contribs) (New page: ==Overview== Buzz is a social networking service offered by Google that is implemented into their email program, Gmail. Buzz was launched on the same day it was announced, on February 9t...)
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Overview

Buzz is a social networking service offered by Google that is implemented into their email program, Gmail. Buzz was launched on the same day it was announced, on February 9th, at 11am to a discrete set of initial users in gmail, and slowly rolled out to all gmail users over the next several weeks. When Gmail users logged in after Buzz was launched, they were presented with a notification that appeared to give them two options: “Sweet! Check out Buzz” or “Nah, go to my inbox.” Regardless of which option the user selected, Google activated the account for its Buzz service.

The service had several design features which implicated privacy concerns. First, once activated, Buzz automatically set gmail users to follow their most frequent “contacts” in Buzz. Also, once in the system, a user’s gmail account contacts were visible to a user’s followers in Buzz as a default setting, even if a user’s follower had no direct connection to the user’s contacts before. The result was that a user’s most “frequent” contacts (including their email addresses) were visible to the public. The service and its privacy flaws affected more than 37 million users, eliciting "thousands of complaints." from people whose email contacts had been shared with co-workers, spouses and ex-spouses, patients, students, or competitors.

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