My original claim:
They are asking for web addresses (URLs) that are searchable by google.
They are not asking for e-mail addresses.
Mark's response:
Google says that information would be in the data; read the subpoena. The Government disagrees. Guess who I find more credible? The people who actually have the data.
So after some wrangling, we get Mark to point out
where in the subpoena it says what he claims. And what does he come up with?
A) Page 4, line 6 on, show how the government did want all data, including personal info, but now limited it to data that do not have that info. This is bogus, because they still want the original electronic data which does have such personal identifiers. There is no provision in this entire motion explaining how personal identifiers will be deleted, or how we as Google users can confirm such deletions.
No, page 4, line 6 on, shows that the government asked for all data, and then granted Google's requests to let the data be stripped of personally identifying information. Your objection that that is 'bogus' seems once again to show that you don't know the difference between 'an' electronic file and some file which you refer to as 'the' electronic file which (according to you)
must contain personal identifiers. The motion implies that the manner and confirmation of deletion of personal identifiers would be at google's discretion.
The simple fact of the matter is that the government is willing to do without the personal info, because it doesn't need that info to demonstrate what it wants to demonstrate.
Page 8, line 8 again confirms that the government wants the electronic files...and there is no provision whatsoever explaining how personal identifiers are to be deleted, or how such deletions are to be confirmed.
Once again, you say 'the' electronic files as if the government is demanding some master file that personal identification can't or won't be stripped out of. Page 8, line 8 on refers to an electronic file first of all URLs (these are web addresses, not e-mail addresses, and THERE WOULD BE NO PERSONAL IDENTIFIERS IN SUCH DATA, how could there be?) that google finds via web search, and then this request is limitted to a list of random URLs, which once again would contain no personal information.
There is nothing I see in that section that suggests that even google objected to providing this info on the the grounds that it could have personally identifying information within it.
On this section, the motion also says that the government wants access to the databases where the URLs are stored...such databases certainly contain personal identifiers.
On which line does the motion say that?