As many may be aware, Google has recently changed its privacy policy, unifying what was previously over 60 different privacy policies from various Google services, into a single policy. Whilst there's no doubt that this makes it much easier for an end-user to by aware of their rights, the EU justice commissioner has questioned the legality of some of the changes the firm made when executing its privacy policy amalgamation.
The issue at hand is that the EU authorities believe that 'transparency rules have not been applied', where private data collected by one Google service can be freely used by another. Particular concern has been raised by users, where by default, owning and using a Google account means that browsing data will be archived and shared for improved search results and targeted advertisements, whilst forgoing the usual policy terms relating to Google's anonymising and retention of historical data.
"We are confident that our new simple, clear and transparent privacy policy respects all European data protection laws and principals," stated Google, despite the wishes of both the French and EU data authorities, to delay rolling out of the new policy whilst it is further investigated, "The CNIL and EU data authorities are deeply concerned about the combination of personal data across services," the regulator announced, "They have strong doubts about the lawfulness and fairness of such processing, and its compliance with European data protection legislation."
It is now possible to disable web history, YouTube history and even see what sites have access to your account's information from the dashboard, however it's not clear exactly how long data already recorded will remain within the Google system after it has been utilised by other services, with Google holding onto certain details for auditing purposes.