Comments on: Legislator seeks to block Gmail
A California Democrat blasts Google's free e-mail service as an invasion of privacy and "a direct-marketing opportunity" for the company.
A California Democrat blasts Google's free e-mail service as an invasion of privacy and "a direct-marketing opportunity" for the company.
January 3, 2010 9:30 PM PST
January 3, 2010 4:40 PM PST
January 3, 2010 3:10 PM PST
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As long as google puts out what will be read and how it will be used, fine. If they become deceptive, then it is an issue.
One point, can the government issue a supona to google to ask for records of transactions in an email box... even after the person thought the stuff was deleted? That could be an issue. As I said, I don't have an issue with that since I don't break the law.
Also, since when did it become the State's job to babysite us and "protect" us from things that could harm us? Aren't we, as human beinds, naturally looking out for our own best interest and if we see something that would hurt us we stay away from it! DOH!
Regards,
James
Why not try dealing with Spyware? It can scan what you're doing online and popup relevent ads!!! And it's a whole lot more common than one e-mail service will ever be.
place ads in your email, and protect your "privacy". Here's how:
1) In the URL field of your browser, do not enter Gmail.com.
2) There is no step 2.
Some of us want the Gmail.com service exactly how it's being
proposed. I *like* the idea of targeted ads. Why does this
California liberal want to prevent me from entering an
agreement with Google to receive them?
I won't tell her what she can and can't do with her body, if she
won't tell me what I can and can't do with my mind!
- I always knew Californians were goofy but...
- by March 29, 2005 1:56 AM PST
- Ok forget the fact that Gmail scans incoming email and places non-obtrusive TEXT ads where you can easily ignore them (where Yahoo and Hotmail just BLURT them out at you).
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(10 Comments)Scanning incoming email to place ads, create hyperlinks, or to filter out certain things is the way it has always been. Ok wait...let's forget email period!
I want someone with unix or linux to do a traceroute (Windows users do tracert in the command prompt) to a certain website like http://www.yahoo.com and see how many hops your packets take before it reaches its destination. Anyone, with the right scanning capabilities, can intercept your packets. The same is true with email...your email makes many hops to where any skilled hacker, miner, or scanner could pick it up without too much difficulty.
Privacy is not an issue here. This is a well-designed, very functional web-based email service that Hotmail and Yahoo will have a very hard time competing with.
This is not about Privacy, but politics wrapped up so tightly to look like a privacy issue. If these legislators are so dead-set about privacy, they may as well outlaw credit cards, checking accounts, and driver's licenses. Maybe they should do something about those Spyware companies. This is a classic example of a politician trying to keep her job without having a single clue on how to do so....sounds alot like our prez, but that's a different issue altogether...