9885google automated car 470 75

Google has been told by the courts that collecting of Wi-Fi data with its Google Street View Cars was not illegal practise but it still has to pay a fine for doing it. It’s been some two years since it came to light that Google was collecting Wi-Fi data while snapping the world’s streets for its Street View service.

The US’ Federal Communications Commission has decided that Google’s ‘accidental’ trawling of this data was not actually illegal but the fact the company delayed an investigation into the affairs means that it will have to pay a $25,000 fine, which equates to around £15,000. Considering that Google has hundreds of billions of pounds in its coffers, we’re guessing the company found this in its pocket change.

Future techGoogle Glasses seen in the wildGood faith

A spokesperson said of the FCC’s verdict:

“We worked in good faith to answer the FCC’s questions throughout the inquiry, and we’re pleased that they have concluded that we complied with the law.”

The FCC noted that Google “deliberately impeded and delayed” the investigation, explaining: “Although a world leader in digital search capability, Google took the position that searching its employees’ e-mail ‘would be a time-consuming and burdensome task’.”Related StoriesiTunes 11 to properly embrace iCloud and iOS 6?Spotify Play button revealed – legal music coming to whole of webGoogle unveils a ‘more beautiful’ Google+New domain name deadline extended by ICANN following software hitchFacebook and Apple ‘will stifle innovation’ online, says Google

More –

Google Steet View Wi-Fi data swoop deemed legal

About the author

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Get notified of our weekly selection of news

You May Also Like

What shifting supply chains for semiconductors mean for Emerging markets in South-East Asia

The manufacturing of semiconductors is dominated by three countries – China, South Korea and Taiwan – which accounted for 87% of the global market in 2021.

JD.com to cease operations in Thailand and Indonesia

Local websites showed JD.com will end its services in Thailand from March 3 and in Indonesia from the end of the same month. Both units will stop taking orders on February 15.

Thailand Receives $164 million Investment from Japanese Data Center Providers

According to a report, Telehouse has recently opened its first data center in Thailand with an investment of $74 million, while NTT Global Data Centers Corporation has invested 3 billion baht to develop its largest data center in Thailand