AOL has 8 privacy principles and none of them directly addresses how search information might be compiled or distributed to others. As a longtime AOL user, I might take exception with how the 8th principle has been applied in the past and more recently. I have, though, found that principles have been translated into practice consistently for the last 10 years or so. Here are the principles: (1) We do not read your private online communications. (2) We do not use any information about where you personally go on AOL or the Web, and we do not give it out to others. (3) We do not give out your telephone number, credit card information or screen names, unless you authorize us to do so. And we give you the opportunity to correct your personal contact and billing information at any time. (4) We may use information about the kinds of products you buy from AOL to make other marketing offers to you, unless you tell us not to. We do not give out this purchase data to others. (5) We give you choices about how AOL uses your personal information. (6) We take extra steps to protect the safety and privacy of children. (7) We use secure technology, privacy protection controls and restrictions on employee access in order to safeguard your personal information. (8) We will keep you informed, clearly and prominently, about what we do with your personal information, and we will advise you if we change our policy. ***************************** Gail D. Taylor, M.Ed. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Human Resource Education Ph.D. Student Educational Psychology Teaching Assistant "We can't just have mainstream behavior on television in a free society. We have to make sure we see the whole panorama of human behavior." -- Jerry Springer
In light of the discussion on AOL, privacy, etc., I saw a snippet on a show called "Someone's Watching" on Discovery-Times Channel in which a doctor talked about selling the names and addresses of women who came in for yeast infections to a pharmaceutical company that was marketing OTC remedies. As I was rushing to get my son to school, I wasn't able to see more than that. Has anyone else seen this show? I'm posting because in this thread has been the mention of medical information as one class of private personal information. I would think that such actions as above are both legal and ethical violations. Is this true? Another question directly related to the thread: AOL is a subscription service while Google is free. Does this change the privacy issue at all? In other words, does the exchange of money for services with AOL place user data in a different legal framework than the free services of Google? Thanks, Jonathan Cornwell
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'Gail Taylor -
Jonathan Cornwell