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October 30, 2008 6:09 PM PDT

Google's JotSpot exposes user data

by Elinor Mills
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Updated at 10 p.m. PT with comments from Google.

A researcher has found that Google's JotSpot service, which allows people to collaborate on online documents, exposes user names and e-mail addresses to anyone on the Internet, but Google says the problem is due to administrator users not making the settings private.

As a result, sensitive user data is indexed by Google's crawler and made accessible on the Web, said Ben Edelman, a Harvard Business School professor and security researcher.

This screen shot shows the user management page for a JotSpot group. It lists full names.

(Credit: Ben Edelman)

"This is not a security issue," a Google spokesman said in an e-mail. "The information in these wikis is accessible because they have been set to public on the Site Permissions page. Users are always in control of the information they share. If wikis are set to private, no information will be publicly accessible."

JotSpot Wikis are private by default and no information is made public unless the group administrator changes the privacy controls, the Google spokesman said.

CNET News was able to view full user names, e-mail addresses, and group memberships of JotSpot users. This was done by searching Google for "user management" pages on JotSpot that list registered users for different JotSpot projects or groups. Such a search conducted late on Thursday brought up about 2,800 results.

Each user listed on the user management pages has a link to a page with more information, including an e-mail address.

This was the case even for wiki pages that groups designated specifically as being private, Edelman wrote in a blog post. A test of one of Edelman's examples showed that the user management page for a private group was no longer accessible, so Google may have removed public access to some of those pages.

Clicking on a user name brings up this page with e-mail address of the JotSpot user and other information.

(Credit: Ben Edelman)

Edelman said he notified Google of the security problems a week ago and that some of the affected sites were modified to address the situation Monday.

The security lapse not only exposes data that users believed was protected, but it puts the users at risk of being spammed and of being victimized by a social engineering attack, Edelman said.

Told of Google's comment, Edelman said that even if the problem is due to users not setting the privacy settings adequately, the matter still reflects poorly on Google.

"This is not good design. Showing e-mail addresses is hard to defend" especially when Web crawlers can scoop them up, he said. "It's a question of what users could reasonably understand and accept. The privacy policy doesn't give any indication" that the data could be exposed to the Web.

Google acquired JotSpot two years ago.

The problem also exposes a chink in Google's hosted services business, which relies on customers--individuals and companies--having faith in Google's ability to secure customer data, he said.

"JotSpot's postings are, by all indications, accidental. But in the context of a series of similar slip-ups, this error raises questions about the efficacy of Google's model of hosted applications," Edelman wrote.

Edelman mentions three Gmail-related security weaknesses since January 2007 that exposed full user names, allowed Web sits to retrieve user contact lists and to forward e-mails to attackers from Gmail accounts.

"As these services become increasingly widely used, each slip-up exposes an ever-larger amount of data," he writes. "So far few users seem concerned, but I suspect these hidden challenges will ultimately impede the server-based applications Google envisions."

Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service, and the Associated Press. E-mail Elinor.
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by bummerhan October 31, 2008 3:27 AM PDT
email databases are pretty much traded furiously like CDS, the only comfort in fixing this is making sure that these records are out of 'casual abuse'

there is no stopping a twisted spammer mind

ps:as long as Google double up their spamguard dev't as well
Reply to this comment
by MrRodgers14u October 31, 2008 8:43 AM PDT
You would think they would just make them private as the default. Oh well.

This made me laugh anyway, vote for which presidential nominee you want to boot off the plank - McCain or Obama
http://www.pursuitofinfamy.com/mccain-vs-obama/
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by knowles2 October 31, 2008 1:47 PM PDT
MrRodgers14u

Reading the article you will fine that they are private by default.

User are just as much responsible for their data as the company that hosting it, if the user disable the privacy then it their fault.

May be google should remove all the options and not allow any private data to be display public. I sure their will still be people complaining.

But then gmail is fairly descent at blocking spam anyway so I do not care let my email run wild.
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