A sense of general unhappiness pervaded over a couple of issues, with the Wall Street Journal hinting at A-list blog types not fully disclosing their relationships with startups while the Electronic Frontier Foundation blasted Google's Desktop 3 for its potential privacy threats.

The article goes on to say that with all the blogging going on, "it is difficult to discern [bloggers'] allegiances." Reaction to this, of course, was not entirely favorable. David Weinberger, interviewed for the article, thinks the reporter was reaching for something to grab:
Yes, there are stories to be written about the "murkiness" and "nuance" of the relationships of bloggers to their readers and to companies who pay those bloggers. But, Rebecca could not have picked a worse example than the Fon advisory board: We all were transparent about our relationship and not only is there no current compensation package for the advisors, we still haven't even discussed it with (FON CEO Martin Varsavsky).
Then Google announced its latest beta version of the Desktop product. I
said consumers should avoid Desktop 3.
The news release, titled "Google Copies Your Hard Drive - Government Smiles in Anticipation," claimed privacy and security are at stake for Desktop 3 users:
EFF urges consumers not to use this feature, because it will make their personal data more vulnerable to subpoenas from the government and possibly private litigants, while providing a convenient one-stop-shop for hackers who've obtained a user's Google password.
EFF attorney Kevin Bankston called it "shocking" that Google would even think users would trust more personal information to Google, now that it has become public knowledge the Department of Justice subpoenaed Google for search information.
Bankston makes the very good point that most users will not configure Google Desktop carefully enough to protect items like tax returns or medical files from being part of the Search Across Computers feature. Google has attempted to address the security issue by describing how information can be cleared from the Google Desktop Servers by users, and that the information is not exposed to anyone doing a Google search.
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David Utter is a staff writer for Murdok covering technology and business.
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