Some 1,000 voters indicated that while the majority of users are concerned
about Google's collection of citizens' computer data from wireless networks,
they stick with Google because it meets their needs for search and other Web
applications.
Google
said May 14 that its Street View cars, which roam Earth's streets to
collect ground-level footage for Google Maps, accidentally collected 600
gigabytes of Web users' e-mails, passwords and other tidbits of information.
The nonprofit Consumer Watchdog teamed with researcher Grove Insight to poll
1,000 "likely 2010 general election voters."
Nearly two-thirds of the 1,000 respondents said
Google's WiSpy incident is one of the things that "worries them
most" or a "great deal" about the search engine.
In fact, consumers are bothered enough by the so-called WiSpy issue that 69
percent of respondents said they would like Congress to conduct hearings on the
matter, as well as on what information Google is sharing with the National
Security Administration.
"This poll shows that the WiSpy scandal is a political minefield for
both Google and Congress, and it has the power to scar both," said John M.
Simpson, consumer advocate with the group. "The company and the government
need to come clean about how Google is cooperating with NSA."
And yet through it all, people still enjoy using Google, which received an
overall favorable rating of 74 percent, according to the poll.
The gist seems to be that while consumers are concerned about how Google
treats user data, they will continue to use the search engine and other Web
services.
Meanwhile, Google is working to resolve the WiFi data collection issues with
the more than 30 countries where data was collected on servers.
Google claims the data was not used at all and that the data collection was
the result of code installed on Google's servers by a rogue engineer.
Even so, Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal is
spearheading an investigation to determine whether Google intended to have
its Street View software collect data from unsecured wireless computer
networks.
Blumenthal threatened to sue the company if he does not receive some
answers.
Consumer privacy is a hot topic during the dog days of summer. The Consumer
Watchdog and Grove issued their poll results the same day the Senate Commerce
Committee held general hearings about protecting consumer online privacy.
Respondents to the poll said they would like Congress to enact laws that
order a stronger ability to block tracking of personal information, as well as a
"make me anonymous button" that prohibits Internet companies from
tracking personal information or Web searches without explicit consent.
Read further analysis of the Grove poll here.