YouTube ordered to reveal its viewers

Did you catch this in the news?  I’m sure most of you have, but CNN has a pretty interesting read.

image

Dismissing privacy concerns, a federal judge overseeing a $1 billion copyright-infringement lawsuit against YouTube has ordered the popular online video-sharing service to disclose who watches which video clips and when.

U.S. District Judge Louis L. Stanton authorized full access to the YouTube logs after Viacom Inc. and other copyright holders argued that they needed the data to show whether their copyright-protected videos are more heavily watched than amateur clips.

The data would not be publicly released but disclosed only to the plaintiffs, and it would include less specific identifiers than a user's real name or e-mail address.

Here’s the “money quote”:

Lawyers for Google Inc., which owns YouTube, said producing 12 terabytes of data -- equivalent to the text of roughly 12 million books -- would be expensive, time-consuming and a threat to users' privacy.

The database includes information on when each video gets played, which can be used to determine how often a clip is viewed. Attached to each entry is each viewer's unique login ID and the Internet Protocol, or IP, address for that viewer's computer.

Right.  12 terabytes of data that Google says is a “threat to users’ privacy”.  So, why in the world would you keep that much data if it’s a threat?  Doesn’t Google have a better data retention policy than that?

All I can say is thank goodness my email lists had problems…I’m unplugging from Google.

Comments

No Comments