Internet Attorney: Is Your Google Gmail Password Safe?

As an Internet attorney, I try to keep up with issues that can affect you and an online entrepreneur. Here’s something you should know. A January cyberattack apparently accessed Google’s password system called Gaia a.k.a. Single Sign-On. Whether or not your Google Gmail and other passwords are safe (unknown), it is a good idea to regularly change your passwords. Be sure to use a combination of letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, etc. that you’ll remember but won’t be easy for hackers to crack.

Remember that hackers aren’t your only privacy concern. When you read an e-mail in your Gmail inbox, check the ads surrounding it. Chances are the keywords in your Gmail are used to generated targeted advertising at the top and to the right of the message. In other words, even password-protected Google isn’t that private (at least to Google and its advertisers). You’ll want to discuss your privacy rights with your Internet lawyer and be sure to avoid sending confidential information via unencrypted e-mail.

Gmail Privacy: Are You Giving Away Your Business Plans to Google?

When you go to an Internet marketing event, you don’t run around the room telling all your potential competitors your new business ideas and trade secrets. And if you find spyware on a computer filled with your business documents, you don’t leave it there to harvest your confidential information.

Why not?

Because you want to implement your plans before someone else does.

Yet the odds are good that you’re telling Google your business plans and other confidential information on a daily basis. And if you believe Google’s informal “Don’t be evil” motto, then perhaps your trust is well-placed.

But are you willing to take the risk?

Here’s an example…

I recently sent an e-mail to one of my Gmail accounts from my law firm as a test. The e-mail described a nonexistent “Project X” as being being important, potentially the “next Google,” and the need to get a patent right away to protect intellectual property rights.

Checking the message in the gmail inbox, I was hit with a bunch of sidebar ads by attorneys including patent lawyers.

Think about that for a moment.

If Google is willing to sniff through your e-mail to target advertising, what is it willing to do when it comes to your business ideas that you’re communicating back and forth daily by e-mail?

Note that I”m not picking on Google. The same could be said of Yahoo! and others. Google just happens to be a very good example because major Internet marketers prefer to use it because of ease and functionality. However, this convenience comes at a price…the privacy of your business plans.

If you develop a better widget, understand that your e-mail communications are not private. And when it comes to gmail, know that the content is being actively scanned for keywords…at least for advertising. Perhaps more. Who knows? Maybe your widget plans will become Google Widget 1.0. If so, good luck trying to collect royalties.

On a lighter note, check out this related humor video regarding Google and privacy.

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Behavioral Targeting: FTC to Crack Down on Internet Ads that Invade Privacy

internet privacyThere’s a reason for the Google Privacy Policy Change for its Interest Based Advertising. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has made protecting consumer privacy from behavioral targeted advertising a high priority. The FTC is tired of spyware and other measures used to track consumers online in order to deliver advertising based on information provided online and website viewing habits.

Google and other advertisers argue that using methods like the DoubleClick dart cookie to track enhances website viewing experience by providing readers with advertising that matches their interests. And it is unlikely that the FTC would disagree with this position.

The sticking point is transparency and informed consent. By regulation or Congressional legislation, look for the FTC to crackdown on interest based advertising except in instances where the consumer has specifically opted in to receive such advertising.

What’s this mean for Internet marketing? Behavioral marketing will continue to exist but there will be a price to pay in order to get collect the information needed to deliver targeted ads based on reader preferences. Some type of carrot (money, special report, coupons, etc.) will need to be provided as an incentive for consumers to sign up for behavioral targeted ads and the related use of tracking cookies and other devices to collect personal data as they surf the Web.

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