What have you been watching on YouTube lately?
Thursday, July 3rd, 2008I am rushing off to meetings, but this is disturbing news and I figured folks around here would want to know about it.
From the Electronic Frontier Foundation by Kurt Opsahl (posted July 2nd):
- Yesterday, in the Viacom v. Google litigation, the federal court for the Southern District of New York ordered Google to produce to Viacom (over Google’s objections):
all data from the Logging database concerning each time a YouTube video has been viewed on the YouTube website or through embedding on a third-party website
The court’s order grants Viacom’s request and erroneously ignores the protections of the federal Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA), and threatens to expose deeply private information about what videos are watched by YouTube users. The VPPA passed after a newspaper disclosed Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork’s video rental records. As Congress recognized, your selection of videos to watch is deeply personal and deserves the strongest protection.
Various MSM sources are just starting to roll out their own coverage (e.g., BBC).
I guess those – must be many – who watch YouTube without a user ID or without logging in to the service have less to lose, but forget the privacy of the more avid and loyal users.
As to the source code, Google does get to keep that. It’s interesting to see which news item (the user ID issue vs source code) is being covered where.