Google’s notes Collection Gives Viacom Privacy Details

U.S. District Judge Louis Stanton last week ordered Google to supply Viacom with records that reveal which users watched specific videos on its YouTube site. The ruling comes in the discovery phase of Viacom’s $1 billion lawsuit against Google for copyright infringement.

Stanton decided Viacom needed more than user log-in names and IP addresses to target rare YouTube visitors. Nonetheless, privacy advocates are calling the ruling a blow to online privacy.

Some are criticizing Viacom for making the discovery demand. Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy knowledge Center (EPIC), doesn’t entirely disagree with those concerns, but he said the larger issue is Google’s business practices.

“Viacom is doing what an aggressive corporation does when it files a lawsuit, which is to try to learn as much as it can about whether its rights have been violated,” Rotenberg said. “Google, considering it’s sitting on all that data, is making it much easier for Viacom to pursue litigation.”

The IP Address Connection

While the court denied Viacom’s inquiry that YouTube turn by the source cipher that powers its search engine, Stanton did require YouTube to hand by info that records all video viewing for the site. That input shows which users watched which videos and when.

“The logging database does not identify users by name, but it does contain users’ IP addresses and rare log-in IDs. A log-in ID will be whatever the user chose — which could be anything from a nonsensical set of characters or a random word to the user’s actual name,” wrote Dave Sohn, senior policy counsel for the Center for Democracy and Technology.

Sohn figures that in a substantial number of cases, the ID will contain name or e-mail data. In those cases, the ID, perhaps aided by the IP address, could be sufficient to determine the real-world identity of the user….

Original post by Top Tech News

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