I'll accept your apology now.
I apologize for not taking a good look at the document, but not for your ignorance of the text select tool. You will need it someday.
You're welcome.
I'll accept your apology now.
Read it. Same as I did.
Because the Feds are going to use this information to find the best girl on girl web sites and shut them down. Such sites are wrong. Do you want that Ed?So what?
"Google is not a party to this lawsuit and their demand for information overreaches," Nicole Wong, an associate general counsel for Google, said in a comment to CNN.
I apologize for not taking a good look at the document, but not for your ignorance of the text select tool. You will need it someday.
You're welcome.
No thanks.
Well, the front page of today's Washington Post explicitly states:Maybe. If I have time this afternnon, I will indeed copy the paragraphs in question and we can debate them.
The government asked...Google... to turn over every query...without providing identifying information about the people who conducted the searches.
Well, the front page of today's Washington Post explicitly states:
Admittedly this is a secondary source, but unless they publish a retraction in a day or so I think we can take it as accurate.
The tracking information is in the data unless it is somehow deleted (a possibility). Remember, the government is demanding the data be delivered electronically, not by hard copy.
If it is deleted (and Google agrees that it has) I will withdraw my objection.
Not interested in facts, only supporting Bush, eh?
Mark, the only one not interested in facts here is you. You are only interested in spin, just like you were here.
I'm not supporting Bush in this instance. Pretty obvious from my initial post. Whether I'm interested in the facts or not should be rather obvious from my defense of you Re: jocko's assertion that you could copy/paste from those .pdfs. "People like" who care about the facts point out things like that, even to benefit people like you who refuse to be civil to "people like".
I don't have time to read 45 pages of .pdf looking for something you claim is in there, somewhere. (something I'm sure you can understand, since you don't have time to type out 3-4 sentences from one of them)
Since you claim that the document says something, it should take almost no effort at all to prove it to everyone. The fact that you're so unwilling sets off my BS detectors.
If I was google and was forced to do this I would be so tempted to deliver it as hard copy!
So let me understand this. It would seem to me that the people who don't think this is a big deal are pretty much saying the government should be able to demand information for any company even when that company is not involved directly in an action? Or that the government acting as if it can demand such information is no big deal?
As regards the URLs, the tracking information is not in the data -- the government wants just the actual urls. i.e., amazon.com, forms.randi.org, exhibitionisticthongwearing17yearoldfundamentalistchristianlesbians.com, etc.The tracking information is in the data unless it is somehow deleted (a possibility). Remember, the government is demanding the data be delivered electronically, not by hard copy.
If it is deleted (and Google agrees that it has) I will withdraw my objection.
So let me understand this. It would seem to me that the people who don't think this is a big deal are pretty much saying the government should be able to demand information for any company even when that company is not involved directly in an action? Or that the government acting as if it can demand such information is no big deal?
So let me understand this. It would seem to me that the people who don't think this is a big deal are pretty much saying the government should be able to demand information for any company even when that company is not involved directly in an action? Or that the government acting as if it can demand such information is no big deal?
In fairness, I said that I have "no objection" to the request for random URLs. Let me amend that statement. I have no privacy-related objection to the government's request for that information. As regards the government's "right" to obtain the information by subpoena I can see some arguments on both sides and I'm content to let the big boys at the Justice Department and Google's legal department slug it out, but I'm secretly rooting for Google to win.What Nyarlathotep said.