Comment by leephillips
3 years ago
I don’t find it idiotic. It was the client’s decision to spy on its users. I have no sympathy for companies who make that decision.
3 years ago
I don’t find it idiotic. It was the client’s decision to spy on its users. I have no sympathy for companies who make that decision.
Why do you have to be sympathetic to the client in order to also condemn Google? If someone was selling bleach as a cure for autism through a network of distributors, do you have to be sympathetic to the distributors in order to condemn the manufacturer?
> It was the client’s decision to spy on its users.
Calling it spying is a little far-fetched I think, when the problem was the transfer ip addresses to US servers, not Analytics itself.
Like most people, I have an IP that is unique to me, and will be for weeks, maybe months, until some event causes my ISP to assign me a new one. Google can track and correlate my activity across all the websites that I visit that happen to use GA. In this way they can build a profile. If I used Gmail, they could include information from the content of my email, which they admit their computers examine. With enough data it would be a simple matter to detect when my IP changed, and continue to amass the profile. If this isn’t spying, then nothing is.
Oh, I think I wasn't clear. I meant saying that the client is deciding to spy is a bit far-fetched. Google of course.
It was the client’s decision to use the service.
Which is a decision to spy on the users.