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posted by martyb on Tuesday March 21 2017, @06:21PM   Printer-friendly
from the not-that-Gary-Larson dept.

Police in a small suburban town of 50,000 people just outside Minneapolis, Minnesota, have won a court order requiring Google to determine who has used its search engine to look up the name of a local financial fraud victim.

The court order demanding such a massive search is perhaps the most expansive one we've seen unconnected to the US national security apparatus and, if carried out, could set an Orwellian precedent in a bid by the Edina Police Department to solve a wire-fraud crime worth less than $30,000.

Investigators are focusing their probe on an online photo of someone with the same name of a local financial fraud victim. The image turned up on a fake passport used to trick a credit union to fraudulently transfer $28,500 out of an Edina man's account, police said. The bogus passport was faxed to the credit union using a spoofed phone number to mimic the victim's phone, according to the warrant application. (To protect the victim's privacy, Ars is not publishing his name that was listed throughout the warrant signed February 1 by Hennepin County Senior Judge Gary Larson.)

The warrant demands Google to help police determine who searched for variations of the victim's name between December 1 of last year through January 7, 2017. A Google search, the warrant application says, reveals the photo used on the bogus passport. The image was not rendered on Yahoo or Bing, according to the documents. The warrant commands Google to divulge "any/all user or subscriber information"—including e-mail addresses, payment information, MAC addresses, social security numbers, dates of birth, and IP addresses—of anybody who conducted a search for the victim's name.

Source: ArsTechnica


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 21 2017, @07:34PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 21 2017, @07:34PM (#482341)

    There is zero need to keep any search info associated to N up or person. This shows that google for all its great talk is galati get all of our privacy for thief ad softwRe.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 22 2017, @03:41AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 22 2017, @03:41AM (#482528)
    In their defence, Google has been perfectly honest about this. They have never made any “great talk” about privacy, and their executives have even gone so far as to say that privacy is dead.
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 22 2017, @10:56AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 22 2017, @10:56AM (#482640)

      So this is not NEWS then. This is the new norm. Everyone should expect the cops to ticket you, since you exceeded the speed limits while driving with warez or google maps. Google that ultimate red light camera!