Google, under scrutiny from privacy watchdogs for changes it
made to its search engine, is launching a splashy ad campaign
designed to alleviate privacy concerns.
Google is rolling out the Good to Know campaign in two dozen
US newspapers and magazines and in public places such as the
subways in New York and Washington to encourage people to
protect themselves and their information on the Web.
The campaign offers practical advice and tips, including how
to manage what kind of data people share with Google and
websites.
Google, whose success depends on users feeling comfortable
enough to spend huge chunks of their time online, originally
launched the campaign in Britain in October.
The Internet search giant is trying to drum up publicity
stateside as discomfort spreads with its new search feature
called Search plus Your World, in which photos, updates and
other private information from its Google plus social network
are blended with search results.
Last week, the Federal Trade Commission widened its antitrust
probe of the search engine to include Google+, according to a
person who is familiar with the investigation but requested
anonymity because the person was not authorized to speak on
the matter. The FTC is examining whether the company is
giving preferential treatment to its own services in
violation of antitrust laws.
The FTC made the move after the Electronic Privacy
Information Centre, a Washington advocacy group, filed a
complaint about the search changes on privacy and antitrust
grounds. Twitter has also complained that the new search
feature harms competitors.
Google, which handles about two-thirds of all search queries
in the US, is looking to blunt competition from social
networking giant Facebook, which has an alliance with
Microsoft's Bing search engine, which began displaying
information from Facebook last year. Facebook has more than
800 million members, compared with more than 40 million for
Google+ as of October.
Google's director of privacy, Alma Whitten, called the Good
to Know privacy campaign "quite ambitious."
"Given who we are, we have a strong incentive to make the
Internet a place that people feel safe to do interesting
things," Whitten said.
Google, one of the world's biggest advertising companies, is
increasingly using advertising on television and elsewhere to
promote its powerful online brand offline.
With the Good to Know campaign, it's spending tens of
millions of dollars to connect with users over privacy and
security as regulatory storm clouds gather.
Google, which has come under fire for privacy blunders in the
US and Europe, is wrestling with heightened government
scrutiny around the world.
Last year it agreed to settle FTC claims that it used
deceptive tactics and violated its own privacy policies when
it introduced the Buzz social networking service. The
settlement is in effect for 20 years and covers future
situations such as Google's collection of Wi-Fi data. Google
agreed to an independent audit of privacy procedures every
other year.
The Electronic Privacy Information Centre asked the FTC to
investigate whether consumers were harmed when users of
Google's Gmail service had private email contact information
automatically displayed when they enrolled in Buzz, which
Google has since shut down.
Google is banking that the campaign will cast it in a
positive light and help it sidestep some of the regulatory
issues that stymied Microsoft's ability to innovate, said
Danny Sullivan, editor of the SearchEngineLand website.
"Google is thinking, ‘We had better do a better job
explaining this or we will have Congress stepping in to
regulate us in a way that might be harmful to our business,'"
he said.
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