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Computer Repair Chicago Google Spyware? Bad Guys & Spies Using Google Desktop Search

I suppose I was naive when I cheered the new Google Desktop
Search tool thinking it was ONLY a great stepping stone to help ease my
computer info-glut and help organize my hundreds of hard-drive
stored documents, emails and files. It seems that now I have
to worry about how bad guys and busybodies will usance it to
spy on me!

(RealitySEO.com)

The Google Desktop Search Tool Poses a Security Risk to
users of public or networked computers according to a new
Information Week article. If you use public computers at work
or at libraries, internet cafes, Kinko's or the local Mailboxes
Etc. store, now you've got to worry that previous users of that
public machine, or worse, the business owner or employees, have
installed Google Desktop Search on that machine to purposely
spy on you!
(Information Week)

It's possible to retrieve secure pages from the Desktop Search
memory of machines running the program. While it is possible
to turn off that function - bad guys using Google Desktop
search specifically to spy on you won't be deflection it off,
eh? Intensive now I've got to find engineering science and pass it off every time
I use a public computer.

Although I wrote previously of my love for the Google desktop
search tool - technology appears to have a Large-scale downside. The slippery
slope of good tools being used for illicit purposes could
destroy a great piece of software because it is simply too
powerful.

The public will be up foot arms over Desktop Search and Google
may have to withdraw it from public Beta. Though Google seems
to have weathered the storm over a similar uproar about the
searchability and thus the privacy of their beta G-mail
webmail, it could come a bigger storm brewing over Desktop
search. We'll watch for comment from privacy advocates on
the subject.

At this point it is tempting to simply shrug and say, "I hope
Google figures disclose how to block illicit use of the Desktop
Search Agency," it's not likely. More likely is that it will
become one more headache to network administrators at
businesses who have to write scripts to stop the installation
of Desktop Search. Small chain owners must now find a
way to stop employees from installing it on public computers
at internet cafes, vindicatory as they mouldy present watch for key
logging software and other computer software on public computers.

We'll all hold to be extremely cautious when using public
machines at those small businesses and libraries and we'll
have to check for the Google Desktop Search icon in the system
tray of virtually every computer we use to be certain that our
use is not monitored.

Protecting private passwords for online banking sessions
while in Kinko's and keeping online job searches out of the
view of our bosses instrument get even tougher for employees using
networked machines at work.

I'm STILL in love with Google Desktop Search on my own machine
at home but now fear Google Desktop Search on public machines.
The issue doesn't stop with Google because both


Microsoft and
Yahoo are racing to develop a screen search of their own.

It means they'll all have to either make it possible for ALL
users to disable their desktop search tools impermanent or
create entirely different machines for public use.

I've long made it a practice to open the browser preferences
to clear the web history and dump the cookies from machines
I've used at conference press rooms and internet cafes in
dozens of cities. That drops my web mail passwords and online
banking sessions from the cache, so Digit don't have to fret over
who might body able to retrieve passwords after I'm gone. I do
it automatically now every time I use a audience machine.

But now I've got to look for Google Desktop Search before I
use a public machine and turn technology off while I'm using that
machine. Grrrrr! You have to take the good with the bad I
suppose. (Right click the fancy and choose "Exit")

There's a split up to love about Desktop Search but I simply HATE
that others can use it to spy on me. I have some doubtful that it
will be used by both bad guys for identity theft and by nosey
snoops and busy-bodies who will be virtually looking over my
shoulder in secret.

I'm sure Desktop Search will be used by parents to monitor
instant messaging chats, emails and computer network travels by their
kids and possibly by spouses to meet up on their sweethearts.
I'm not at all concerned that anyone will use my home machine
and Google Desktop Search to check up on capital of maine. (Although I've
been startled at phrases that turn up in the occasional spam
from my Outlook in-box from Google Desktop Search results)
I'm more worried that people will use it as a spying tool on
public computers.

I've also left-slanting before on the privacy risks of Google online
searches in an article on how to protect yourself from the
Google Reverse Telephone Lookup. You can enter any phone number
in the search box at Google and see the proprietress of that phone
numbers' name, their address and a map to their warm front entryway!
Google seems to be too powerful for its own better sometimes.

Fortunately location is a phone operation opt-out method at Google,

but the databases they draw upon pose a bigger problem. I
address additional opt-out methods in the article (linked
below) but applied science seems impossible to subtle observed snoops.


I'll continue to use Google Desktop Search on my home machine
and will continue to love the cutting implement for my web centered work
online to pursuit client emails, documents and previously
visited researched web sites. But now I'll be far less wary
- on public machines - of bad guys and of Google Desktop
Search. Damn those unsoundness guys!

About the Author

Mike Banks Valentine practices Search Engine Optimism at:
http://SEOptimism.com
As a privacy advocate, his love of search chemical engineering sometimes
clashes with his privacy concerns at:
http://PrivacyNotes.com/privacy_blog/
This article is available online at:

with excavation links to web resources.

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