I posted yesterday on
Google's new browser named "Chrome". Today I have see a lot of news articles
and blog posts about the browser. In general the feeling seems to be that the browser
is fast, has a lot of good features, and is squarely aimed at taking market share
from Microsoft. Not only will it hurt IE if Chrome gets a lot of play but it will
also affect Windows as the browser will become the application platform.
There was a lot of talk about the EULA (you know the thing you never read but click
the "I agree" button so you can get on with installing software). In particular
the agreement granted Google a license to use anything you used in the browser. There
was a wide range of reactions from "this is standard practice to keep Google
from being sued, they would never use your stuff" to "that means they can
capture and post the details of my on-line banking session to the world. I am deleting
this as fast as I can". Whether they were intending to do anything with the data
or not is unclear to me but in an
article on arstechnica.com Google admitted it was a mistake and promised to change
the license to retroactively not grant them any rights.
There is a bigger issue though and that is the Omnibox on each tab. The arstechnica
article links to another
article on cnet.com that states "Chrome's "Omnibar" can also access
all keystrokes a user types, and Google will store some of this information along
with IP addresses". This sounds like the kind of scenario
I wrote about back in 2005 where AJAX is used to send your keystrokes to a server
even if you don't ever actually hit the enter key. I have not found any mention of
Google deciding to stop this practice in the future so I guess I will stay away from
using Chrome until I have a better feel for what privacy I am giving up. I like the
idea of having it suggest information to me, I just don't want Google storing that
information.