Search Engines
Google Yahoo MSN AOL and other search engines record your search queries and maintain massive databases that reach into the most intimate details of your life. When revealed to others these details can be embarrassing and even cause great harm. Would you want strangers to know where you or your child work or go to school? How about everyone seeing searches that reference your medical history financial information sexual orientation or religious affiliation?
Unfortunately information stored with a third-party is given much weaker legal protection than that on your own computer. It can be all too easy for the government or individual litigants to get access to your search history and connect it with your identity.
Your search data demands more substantive legal and technical protections. Learn more about this issue below and take action to defend your privacy.
Google v. DoJ Subpoena
In January 2006 the Justice Department asked a federal court in San Jose California to force Google to turn over search records for use as evidence in a case where the government is defending the constitutionality of the Child Online Protection Act (COPA). On March 17 2006 the judge rejected the government's overreaching request for user records.
EFF Related Content: Search Engines
- Online queries can give insight into our private details and innermost thoughts, but police increasingly access them without adhering to longstanding limits on government investigative power.
New Privacy Badger Prevents Google From Mangling More of Your Links and Invading Your Privacy
We released a new version of Privacy Badger that updates how we fight "link tracking" across a number of Google products. With this update Privacy Badger removes tracking from links in Google Docs, Gmail, Google Maps, and Google Images results. Privacy Badger now also removes tracking from links added after...UPDATE: Colorado Supreme Court Grants Review in First U.S. Case Challenging Dragnet Keyword Warrant
UPDATE (January 18, 2023): After the trial court denied Mr. Seymour's motion to suppress the keyword warrant in fall 2022, he petitioned the Colorado Supreme Court for reivew. EFF filed a new amicus brief in support. Such petitions are rarely granted, but in January 2023, the court decided to...
- Press Release | March 3, 2022
Cybersecurity Experts Urge EU Lawmakers to Fix Website Authentication Proposal That Puts Internet Users’ Security and Privacy at Risk
SAN FRANCISCO—Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) technologists, along with 36 of the world’s top cybersecurity experts, today urged European lawmakers to reject proposed changes to European Union (EU) regulations for securing electronic payments and other online transactions that will dramatically weaken web security and expose internet users to increased risk of...
- Document | March 2, 2022
eIDAS Letter 2022