AOL has received such a request from the ACLU, Google disclosed in its brief, adding that its opposition to the subpoena was in part designed to avoid being enmeshed in precisely that kind of ongoing legal spat. That would place Google "in the witness chair, and exposes Google's intellectual...
"its legal process compliance program to ensure timely and complete responses to legal process such as subpoenas and search warrants." "the department is committed to ensuring that electronic communications providers comply with court orders to protect and facilitate criminal investigations,”...
" CEO Schmidt told a search engine conference in San Jose, California, in August. While Google earned praise from civil libertarians earlier this year when it resisted a Justice Department subpoena for millions of search queries in connection...
"Legal Process" means an information disclosure request made under law, governmental regulation, court order, subpoena, warrant, or other valid legal authority, legal procedure, or similar process. "Liability" means any liability, whether under contract, tort (including negligence), or otherwise, reg...
Administrative subpoenas, such as the one received by the Google user, differ from warrants or court-ordered subpoenas in the type of information they seek and in their enforcement. An administrative subpoena is not self-enforcing—meaning it is simply a legal request and can typically only be...
But simply drawing the lines on these slippery slopes as "what is legal in country X" creates it's own set of hazards, and I think the SE's have responsibilities that go beyond simply "compliance". Mike, I thought the literal translation of: ...
legal lawsuit FTC FTC includes Android in anti-trust probe of Google Jordan KahnAug 10 2011 - 5:14 pm PT 0 Comments The Federal Trade Commission began an anti-trust probe of various Google services six weeks ago after serving the company with a number of “broad subpoenas”. Today, source...
Administrative subpoenas, such as the one received by the Google user, differ from warrants or court-ordered subpoenas in the type of information they seek and in their enforcement. An administrative subpoena is not self-enforcing—meaning it is simply a legal request and can typically only be...