
“At this point, it is our belief that it is not an accident,” said Brooks Cooper, an Oregon attorney suing Google in one of several class actions lawsuits around the country arising from Google’s disclosure that its Street View cars intercepted Wi-Fi traffic around the world. Google has described the sniffing as a coding error.
The evidence, the relevance of which Google disputed Thursday, is a 2008 Google patent application (.pdf) describing a method to increase the accuracy of location-based services – services that would allow advertisers or others to know almost the exact location of a mobile phone or other computing device. The patent application involves intercepting data and analysing the timing of transmission as part of the method for pinpointing user locations.
The so-called “776″ patent application, published by US Patent and Trademark Office in January, describes “one or more of the methods” by which Google collects information for its Street View program, Cooper’s legal team said in court documents filed late Wednesday in federal court in Oregon.
Google spokeswoman Christine Chen said in an email that the patent in question “is entirely unrelated to the software code used to collect Wi-Fi information with Street View cars”. In a follow up email, Chen added that Google files “patent applications on a variety of ideas that our engineers come up with. Some of them mature into real products or services, and some of them don’t.”
Chen did not immediately respond to an email asking whether Google has performed the “776″ method in practice.
Whether Google wilfully sniffed out internet traffic on unsecured Wi-Fi hotspots in dozens of countries is an enormous public relations headache. It also carries huge legal and monetary ramifications in the United States, where the Mountain View, California, internet giant is being sued for privacy violations in multiple federal courthouses.
Among other reasons, Google might escape liability if it accidentally collected and never divulged the data, which includes web pages users visited or pieces of email, video, audio and document files.
Google must turn over the US data it siphoned to a federal judge in Oregon by Friday. The data will remain under lock and key.
Street View is part of Google Maps and Google Earth, and provides panoramic pictures of streets and their surroundings across the globe.
The internet giant has maintained the collection of data was inadvertent – the result of a programming error with code written for an early experimental project that wound up on the Street View code. Google said it didn’t realise it was sniffing packets of data on unsecured Wi-Fi networks in dozens of countries for the last three years, until German privacy authorities began questioning what data Google’s Street View cameras were collecting.
Photo: Byrion/Flickr

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matt
Friday, June 4, 2010 at 12:20 PMit is laughable to think that someone could accidentally program a complicated wifi sniffer.
boc
Friday, June 4, 2010 at 12:47 PMIt’s quite possible.
On some of my projects we have an automated build system that collects, builds, tests, and deploys our code.
If I push code into to it when I shouldn’t it’ll go through that whole process. If the code just so happens to not cause any errors it’ll end up being deployed.
The only way it’d get picked up is by someone doing a code audit against the spec.
Not saying this is what happened at Google, but that it a possibility.
Myself, I’ve released code by accident 3 times that I can recall. Fortunately they weren’t significant features.
Garye
Friday, June 4, 2010 at 2:06 PMWho cares that they collected the information. The only people that make any money over this will be the lawyers. We are getting carried away by privacy issues. What is private now, with social interactions such as facebook, twitter etc.
I like Google Maps and the street view, it is fantastic. Lets hope that meddling by the lawyers doesn’t cause Google Maps to close down .
Tezz
Friday, June 4, 2010 at 3:10 PMhow is it google’s fault if people are stupid enough not to have a secure network. Trust me, Google wont be the worst person to access your network.
Jamie Carl
Friday, June 4, 2010 at 9:24 PMIf the people who’s ‘private data’ got collected really wanted to protect it, then maybe they shouldn’t have had open and unencrypted WiFi networks. These people need to get a clue.