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United States Cellphones Google Government Privacy Wireless Networking

Google Wi-Fi Kiosks in New York Promise No Privacy, 'Can Collect Anything' (observer.com) 71

Here's the thing about those wi-fi kiosks replacing New York City's public payphones. They're owned by Google/Alphabet company Sidewalk Labs, they're covered with ads, and if you read the privacy policy on its web site, "it's not that one." An anonymous Slashdot reader quotes an article from the Observer: Columbia professor Benjamin Read got a big laugh at this weekend's Hackers on Planet Earth XI conference in Manhattan when he pointed out that the privacy policy on LinkNYC's website only applies to the website itself, not to the actual network of kiosks.
The web page points out that it has two separate privacy policies in an easily-missed section near the top, and for their real-world kiosks, "They essentially have a privacy policy that says, 'we can collect anything and do anything' and that sets the outer bound'," says New York Civil Liberties Union attorney Mariko Hirose.

The Observer reports that the policy "promises not to use facial recognition... however, nothing stops the company from retracting that guarantee. In fact, Hirose said that she's been told by the company that the kiosk's cameras haven't even been turned on yet, but it is also under no obligation to tell the public when the cameras go live." The article concludes that in general the public's sole line of defense is popular outrage, and that privacy policies "have been constructed primarily to guard companies against liability and discourage users from reading closely."
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Google Wi-Fi Kiosks in New York Promise No Privacy, 'Can Collect Anything'

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  • as long as VPNs aren't banned, it shouldn't be an issue, should it? Who trusts public WiFi anyway, anybody could spy on it.

    • Re:VPN (Score:5, Informative)

      by ZorinLynx ( 31751 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @03:48PM (#52613669) Homepage

      A regular public WiFi, that you can connect to without installing profiles, etc... is indeed unencrypted. But most services that matter these days use SSL so it's not an issue.

      But if you have to install a profile, it can do things like set proxies, install SSL client certificates and so on. It can spy on you VERY deeply. You're actually better off connecting to unencrypted open WiFi than one of these.

      • Yeah if you have to install an app or a profile or whatever it is of no real use. Its in fact probably even worse as those "public" WiFi stations where you first need an account before you can use it.

      • by Sloppy ( 14984 )

        Very serious question; I really don't understand. What does "install a profile" mean? I have never heard of this.

  • by ZorinLynx ( 31751 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @03:42PM (#52613645) Homepage

    I went to use one of these and it wanted to install an iOS configuration profile on my phone.

    These profiles can configure your phone on a fairly deep level, doing things like adding proxies, restricting functionality, and so on.

    I hit cancel and just continued to use my data plan. Screw that.

    • Oh, I should also mention that configuration profiles can install SSL certificates too. Gee, that can't be abused at all, can it? :)

  • allows a human being to conclude that bits they transmit in the clear from their devices while physically out on the public sidewalk using a protocol that by design and by physical necessity allows and requires uniquely identifying the transmission source...should somehow be private?

    Get over it tinfoil hatters, things that happen in public are public for all to see. If you want complete privacy, then conduct your business behind closed doors, but make sure you get some trusted body doubles to walk around e
    • by Anonymous Coward

      So shall we put one in front of your house and point the ir camera and backscatter xray at your front door or bedroom window? The street in front of out house is a public place after all...

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Nah, bugger that. Don't like the invasion of privacy, the strive to change the law so that more of your privacy is respected as it should be. Wont happen overnight but keep pushing at it and as the years go by, so we will regain our privacy and companies will have to delete what they have or face massive fines. Get over corporate douche bags, we will get our privacy back and we will legally invade your data centres to ensure you respect that, just a matter of time, a whole bunch of fines and even a few cust

  • Alphabet/Google/whatever they are called is a for-profit business. This endeavor has to (roughly) do one ore more of the following:

    • Generate a profit,
    • Enable other activities to generate profit (e.g. data collection on you), or
    • Be booked as an advertising expense.

    Anything else would violate their fiduciary responsibilities.

    Repeat after me: Do not plug into random USB ports or connect to random WiFi hot spots unless you are comfortable with their security practices and business model.

  • You guys need to establish a reasonable expectation of privacy even in public or this is only a small glimpse of the coming total surveillance society. It is not reasonable to expect that nobody will take your picture. It is reasonable to expect that you won't be tracked everywhere you go. If you don't want never sleeping, never forgetting computer systems to have eyes everywhere, establish a legal right against surveillance. Surveillance is not the same as being seen in public.

  • Some time ago I saw a picture in a news post where one of these Wi-Fi kiosks was being installed in front of a Starbucks entry door. Hmmm... Seems like you could just go inside the Starbucks and activate the Wi-Fi there for free without buying anything. You could also sit down while doing your web surfing. Better, too, during inclement weather. Not sure about NYC, but in my medium size city there's a Starbucks within walking distance of every other Starbucks.
  • If you want privacy, pay for it. Don't complain that the free access you're getting is used for marketing.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Google's business model is providing free services in exchange of collecting personal data.

    It's very simple really, if you don't like it, like me, don't use their service.

  • Dark patterns (Score:4, Informative)

    by John Allsup ( 987 ) <slashdot@chal i s q u e.net> on Saturday July 30, 2016 @05:20PM (#52614037) Homepage Journal

    There is a site called Dark Patterns, mentioned by our friends at Ars, detailing this kind of 'small print designed for people to miss'. Understandable, but wrong.

  • then about all it is good for is googling some benign information and trolling 4chan
  • We can always use this if anybody complains about us recording the cops, with a microphone and all. Make this a two way street, and it becomes a much smaller issue. *No privacy for me, no privacy for thee* Hope you like apples...

  • If no one uses them, that will send the right message.
  • Since the camera's are not currently off, put superglue on the camera lens. It will block it from taking clear pictures and be hard a fuck to take off. And since they don't have the camera's on yet, they won't know who did it.

    Sometimes you have to take your privacy back from those you who want to abuse it.

  • by jon3k ( 691256 )

    Google Wi-Fi Kiosks in New York Promise No Privacy, 'Can Collect Anything'

    So basically what you should assume is happening at every WiFi hotspot?

  • VIDEO of the HOPE XI talk is at https://livestream.com/interne... [livestream.com] (where you will notice that "Professor Read" is in fact Benjamin Dean, Fellow for Cyber-security and Internet Governance at Columbia SIPA. )

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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