Germany Investigating Facebook Tagging Feature
August 3, 2011 by admin
Filed under Lingerie Events
BERLIN — A German regulator said Wednesday that he had asked Facebook, the social networking leader, to disable its new photo-tagging feature, which he warned could violate European privacy laws.
Johannes Caspar, the data protection supervisor in Hamburg, who has been aggressive in investigating the online practices of companies like Google and Apple, said he was concerned that Facebook’s facial recognition feature amounted to the unauthorized collection of data on individuals.
The software, called “suggested automatic tagging,” lets Facebook users assign digital name tags to people in their photographs. Photos that are uploaded later are scanned for physical features and can be tagged and stored.
In a letter sent Tuesday, Mr. Caspar said he had asked Facebook to disable the feature in Germany and respond in two weeks to his concerns. Under German law, the regulator could fine Facebook, which is based in Menlo Park, California, up to €300,000, or $426,000.
Mr. Caspar also confirmed that the Article 29 Working Party, the European Commission’s data privacy advisory panel, will determine whether tagging itself violates a user’s privacy. Mr. Caspar said he was coordinating his investigation with Jacob Kohnstamm, the chairman of the panel and the Dutch data protection authority.
Through a spokesman, Facebook rejected the regulator’s claim, saying the tagging feature, which ultimately gives the person in the photograph the final right to accept, reject or remove a tagging, conforms with European privacy law.
“We will consider the points the Hamburg Data Protection Authority have made about the photo tag suggest feature but firmly reject any claim that we are not meeting our obligations under European Union data protection law,” said a Facebook spokesman in Berlin, who declined to be identified, citing Facebook’s own company policy on not identifying its spokespeople.
The dispute is the latest between leading U.S. technology companies and European privacy regulators, especially in Germany, over the privacy ramifications raised by social networking, online mapping and location services tied to mobile advertising.
Last year, Google apologized to privacy officials around the world, and paid some fines, after it was revealed that Google’s roving Street View mapping vehicles were also collecting private data from unencrypted Wifi routers.
The disclosure was made during a German inquiry led by Mr. Caspar. Google attributed the systematic, unauthorized collection of individual data to a programmer’s error.
Apple, the maker of the iPhone, came under scrutiny in April in Germany after a computer expert revealed that the iPhone was compiling logs of user locations. The inquiry, which was led by privacy officials in Bavaria, was closed in June after Apple agreed to redesign the feature to address German privacy concerns, said Thomas Kranig, the head of the Bavarian data protection agency.
Mr. Kranig, in an interview, said Apple had attributed the unauthorized data collection to a programmer’s error and had redesigned iPhone software to give Germans the option to allow collection of location data.
In July 2010, Mr. Caspar started an investigation into Facebook over its Friends Finder feature, which allows Facebook to copy names and details from a user’s e-mail address book to find friends who are also on Facebook. Mr. Caspar said Facebook, besides finding friends, was also targeting non-Facebook users culled from the lists with solicitations to join its network.
That inquiry was closed, Mr. Caspar said, after Facebook agreed to change the Friends Finder application to let anyone contacted through the function decide in advance whether their data can be used by Facebook.
Despite its run-ins with privacy officials, Facebook has continued to grow in Germany, where it has more than 20 million users who log in at least once a month.
In a statement Tuesday, Mr. Caspar said that Facebook had built an archive of more than 75 billion photos, and 450 million people have been tagged worldwide.
“If they are collecting the data to build a digital archive of individual faces, then this is clearly a violation,” Mr. Caspar said.
The Facebook representative in Berlin said Facebook did not permanently store data on individual faces. But he could also not say how long Facebook kept the data.
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Cheshire police monitor Facebook
August 3, 2011 by admin
Filed under Lingerie Events
3 August 2011: 11:50am
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RSS News for you | What’s this?
Aug 3 2011
by David Holmes, Chester Chronicle
WE’RE watching you.
That’s the message from Cheshire Constabulary who have revealed how police use social networking sites like Facebook in investigating serious crime and monitoring community concerns.
A Freedom of Information response shows that last year 16 senior officers and detectives took part in two day-long workshops on how social media can impact on investigations, public order incidents and community engagement.
PC Shelley Williams, of Cheshire Police, explained: “In terms of serious crime, the monitoring of social networking sites provides an awareness of community concerns, but can also be a useful intelligence gathering tool for the investigating officers when comments are placed on a social networking site.
“For example, a comment on Facebook concerning a crime can lead to police identifying vital witnesses.”
PC Williams said officers could also gain an understanding of ongoing issues within a neighbourhood.
She explained: “Police sporadically monitor some social networking sites to understand the concerns and needs of the community and tackle a particular problem.
“It is sometimes the case that a localised problem – eg spate of anti social behaviour or vandalism is not reported to the police but is discussed on social networking sites, and it is for this reason that police can have an awareness of issues that are of concern to the public that they serve, and deal with the problem appropriately.”
Cheshire police uses Facebook and Twitter to communicate with the public. Even the Cheshire police helicopter ‘tweets’ to let people know what incidents it has been attending.
PC Williams added: “The monitoring of social networking sites can also be a valuable tool for the police to assess and address community tensions, and to relay key messages and help dispel rumour or supposition.”
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