Court order on YouTube User Data fans Privacy fears
Posted on Thu, 3 Jul 2008 23:27:28 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By Kenneth Li and Eric Auchard
NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A U.S. judge's order to Google Inc to turn
over YouTube user data to Viacom Inc sparked an outcry on Thursday from privacy
advocates in the midst of a legal showdown over video piracy.
Viacom, owner of movie studio Paramount and MTV Networks, requested the
information as part of its $1 billion copyright infringement lawsuit against the
popular online video service and its deep-pocketed parent, Google.
Judge Louis Stanton of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New
York ordered Google on Tuesday to turn over as evidence a database with
usernames of YouTube viewers, what videos they watched when, and users' computer
addresses.
Privacy activists from the Electronic Frontier Foundation said in a blog post
the order "threatens to expose deeply private information" and violated the
Video Privacy Protection Act, a 1988 federal law passed after Supreme Court
nominee Robert Bork's video rental habits were revealed.
Representatives of both companies said they were looking to work out how to
comply with the court order to share video data while ensuring personally
identifiable information is secure.
Viacom responded in a statement that it needs the data to demonstrate video
piracy patterns that are the heart of its case against YouTube. But it sought to
diffuse privacy fears, saying it had no interest in identifying individual
users.
"Viacom has not asked for and will not be obtaining any personally identifiable
information of any user," Viacom said.
"Any information that we or our outside advisors obtain ... will be used
exclusively for the purpose of proving our case against YouTube and Google (and)
will be handled subject to a court protective order and in a highly confidential
manner."
Google senior litigation counsel Catherine Lacavera said her company was looking
to resolve the issue quickly in a way that balanced Viacom and other plaintiffs'
need for evidence in the case while "carving out some space for user privacy."
Lacavera said her company was pleased the court's decision had put limits on
evidence discovery, including refusing to allow Viacom access to YouTube's
search technology or to users' private videos on the site.
But the Google attorney called on Viacom to allow YouTube to anonymize user data
-- in other words, redact rows of data containing usernames or unique computer
Internet addresses.
In closed-door hearings ahead of the ruling, Google attorneys had argued against
turning over such data without eliminating personally identifiable information.
"We are disappointed the court granted Viacom's overreaching demand for viewing
history," she said. "We will ask Viacom to respect users' privacy and allow us
to anonymize the logs before producing them under the court's order."
(Editing by Braden Reddall)
© Copyright 2008 Reuters.
Posted on Thu, 3 Jul 2008 23:27:28 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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