Looking for Porn in All the Wrong Places
I can't believe that I (one of G's toughest critics, and just
another hapless victim of its infamous, algorithmic dance), of
all people, am going to side with Google today. Well, here goes
nothing...
About three and a half weeks ago, the Department of Justice subpoenaed the four major search
engines - Google, Yahoo, MSN, and AOL - to turn over the results
of a certain amount of adult search queries performed in each
engine. The federal government said it needed the information
pursuant to its ongoing monitoring and enforcement of the Child
Online Protection Act. While the latter three search giants were
cooperative towards the government's efforts, Google was not.
There are two different aspects of this situation that I'd like
to discuss: the right & wrong of the matter and the reality of
it. In a perfect world, Google (and anyone else) would be
forthcoming in providing information that would help save
children from viewing pornographic images, and/or info that
would help authorities catch online adult predators.
Now having said that, from all I know about this current Bush
administration, it is hell-bent on ridding this society of
pornography (as unrealistic as that goal may seem). So while the
DoJ may state one noble reason for seeking this information from
Google, the real reason (most likely) - in addition to its COPA
defense - for the government's acquisition is for its mission to
eradicate porn.
Realistically-speaking, it seems that Google is well within its
rights, in the absence of overt wrong-doing (and remember, this
information is not being used to make a prosecutorial case
against the search giant), to keep the information regarding its
enterprise (public company though it is) to itself. It may
disseminate that information to its stockholders or other
information-gathering or statistical-analyzing venture on the
net (as long as it's not violating personal privacy issues), as
it sees fit. And to Big G, it's not a matter of shielding
questionable or highly irregular adult/porn search terms. It's
an issue of principle.
Some people would say that Google (as well as the other search
engines) has only itself to blame in this matter for keeping
such detailed records (a fact which is widely-known throughout
the internet community) in the first place, but that's a copout.
The Google-heads have a right to know (again, assuming that they
handle information irresponsibly) the who, what, when, where,
why, and how of everything that transpires in their own little
corner (or in Google's case, their 50-room mansion) of
cyberspace.; insofar as porn is concerned or otherwise. And to
anyone who uses their engine and doesn't like that fact, the web
is a big place and they're at liberty to go perform their search
queries elsewhere.
Now, to tell you the truth, I think Google is going to lose in
this matter anyway. The government is going to get its
injunction, and eventually the Googleplex is going to have to
submit said records. But, in the meantime, Google is going to
come out smelling like a rose. And, if anything, it will gain
even more trust, loyalty, and confidence from their patrons;
including and especially from those who look for extreme porn.
So in the end, Google may be wrong (and conversely, the
government is right) for standing in the way of shielding
underage children from porn. But that's if, and only if, the
government is using said information for - and only towards -
its intended purpose , which I highly doubt. The reality of the
case is that, with the high-profile nature of this case,
Google's steadfastness almost guarantees it a no-lose situation.
Meanwhile, the 35%-total-market-share of online search queries
that is the Google juggernaut rolls on, gobbling up any and all
information and data streams and sources in its path. Why
doesn't the government legislate an act against that also?