GOOGLE PROVEN TO HAVE LIED TO EVERYBODY IN THE WORLD – SHOCKER!!!

 

Leaked emails show Google employees MOCKED company’s ‘incognito mode’ browser – saying it’s ‘not truly private’ – as consumer lawsuit seeks BILLIONS in damages for company’s false promises

Leaked emails reveal Google employees mocked the company’s ‘incognito mode’ browser feature, saying it was not ‘truly private’ as the tech giant suggests.

In a series of emails cited in a California-based lawsuit on behalf of a million users, employees in 2018 suggested the company halt deceptive advertising of the incognito feature on Google that supposedly allows users to ‘browse privately’ to avoid others using a shared device to view the search history.

The lawsuit alleges the private browsing option that features an outline of a mysterious man with glasses and a detective hat is misleading since Google can still view consumer data, according to Bloomberg.

‘We need to stop calling it Incognito and stop using the Spy Guy icon,’ an engineer said in an email chain in 2018 after providing a study about the lack of protections on the browser.

Another engineer responded with a meme of the Simpsons television show episode where a look-alike of Homer Simpson, dubbed ‘Guy Incognito,’ was shown identical to the show protagonist but with a mustache, suit, and top hat.

The engineer joked that Guy Incognito’s costume ‘accurately conveys the level of privacy [the browser] provides.’

A judge will rule on Tuesday on whether the lawsuit will proceed. If found liable, Google may be fined to pay billions to consumers.

Google is facing a lawsuit after consumers suggested the company's Incognito browser isn't actually private

Google is facing a lawsuit after consumers suggested the company’s Incognito browser isn’t actually private

The lawsuit sites employee's emails from 2018 that suggested the company halt the false advertising of the private browsing feature

The lawsuit sites employee’s emails from 2018 that suggested the company halt the false advertising of the private browsing feature

One employee joked the Incognito icon should be a look-alike of Homer Simpson, dubbed Guy Incognito, was shown identical to the show protagonist but with a mustache, suit and top hat

One employee joked the Incognito icon should be a look-alike of Homer Simpson, dubbed Guy Incognito, was shown identical to the show protagonist but with a mustache, suit and top hat

Google’s marketing chief Lorraine Twohill emailed CEO Sundar Pichai last year on International Data Privacy Day to request the tech giant become more private, according to Bloomberg.

‘Make Incognito Mode truly private, Twohill wrote in an email. ‘We are limited in how strongly we can market Incognito because it’s not truly private, thus requiring really fuzzy, hedging language that is almost more damaging.’

Twohill’s email and other employee documentation are among the court documents that will be reviewed in an Oakland, California, courtroom on Tuesday.

Incognito mode on Google advertises that other users will not be able to view browsing history – but doesn’t say the tech giant cannot view data.

‘Privacy controls have long been built into our services and we encourage our teams to constantly discuss or consider ideas to improve them,’ a Google spokesperson said in a statement.

‘Incognito mode offers users a private browsing experience, and we’ve been clear about how it works and what it does whereas the plaintiffs in this case have purposely mischaracterized our statements.’

The lawsuit further cites an email sent to CEO Sundar Pichai last year urging to make the tech giant more private for consumers

The lawsuit further cites an email sent to CEO Sundar Pichai last year urging to make the tech giant more private for consumers

US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers will review the case. If found liable, Google could owe millions of consumers up to $1,000 per violation, according to Bloomberg.

The lawsuit also aims to hold the tech giant responsible for lacking transparency on the Incognito mode option that was believed to keep browsing private for users.

Consumers are suggesting Google change the language on the private browsing feature to make users aware that the tech giant can still gather their data.

How you can REALLY hide your web searches from Google snoopers: Tech experts reveal using a VPN, a Navy-developed browser or encryption key can shield internet history – as lawsuit claims ‘incognito mode’ is ‘not truly private’

  • Using a VPN is a good first step to becoming anonymous online, but it is bolstered by using the anonymous web browser TOR
  • TOR was developed in the 1990s by US Navy computer scientists who saw the need for an anonymous internet browsing option
  • Google is currently embroiled in a lawsuit alleging it mislead users into thinking its Incognito mode was a fully private search function
  • The lawsuit recently revealed internal emails of Google staffers mocking the Incognito mode’s misleading marketing

 

Many assume using Google’s ‘incognito mode’ means all their internet searches will be safe from prying eyes.

But newly-emerged emails from the tech giant appear to reveal engineers have access to them – and joke about some of the content.

Now, tech experts have revealed some of the ways to ensure safe web surfing without being watched by third parties.

These include using a VPN, using a browser that was developed by the US Navy or using an encryption key to shield search results.

Here, DailyMail.com picks through the most common ways to keep web results hidden from big tech companies that harvest your data.

Newly revealed internal emails from Google engineers mocking the false promises of the search engine's Incognito mode have left many wondering how exactly they can truly search the web undetected

Newly revealed internal emails from Google engineers mocking the false promises of the search engine’s Incognito mode have left many wondering how exactly they can truly search the web undetected

One Google engineer compared Incognito mode with a meme of Homer Simpson wearing a mustache, a suit, and a top hat, and joked that Homer's disguise 'accurately conveyed the level of privacy [Incognito mode] provides'

One Google engineer compared Incognito mode with a meme of Homer Simpson wearing a mustache, a suit, and a top hat, and joked that Homer’s disguise ‘accurately conveyed the level of privacy [Incognito mode] provides’

According to tech experts at digital trends, the best way to hide your identity and prevent your online data from being gathered and sold is to download a VPN onto your computer.

Simply search something like ‘download VPN’ into your web browser and select either a paid or free product – Nord and ExpressVPN offering good paid options, and Proton VPN is a good free option – and download them onto your computer.

A VPN hides your IP address (basically a personal internet identification number number) from internet service providers like Verizon or Comcast in order to prevent them from seeing what you are doing online.

While surfing the web with a VPN on your computer is nearly foolproof, you need to take a few additional steps to ensure total anonymity.

First, go into your web browser’s settings and block all cookies (which are saved passwords, usernames, etc., which can be used to track where you have been online even when in a VPN – think of it as leaving footprints in the snow while wearing a mask over your face).

Second, you need to make sure you do not log into any browser accounts like a Google account, as that opens a direct line for whichever service you log into to track you.

TOR was developed by US Navy computer scientists in the 1990s who wanted to develop a dependably anonymous way to surf the internet. It has since become registered as a non-profit dedicated to preserving anonymous internet use

TOR was developed by US Navy computer scientists in the 1990s who wanted to develop a dependably anonymous way to surf the internet. It has since become registered as a non-profit dedicated to preserving anonymous internet use

A VPN hides your IP address (basically a personal internet identification number number) from internet service providers like Verizon or Comcast in order to prevent them from seeing what you are doing online. RELATED ARTICLES Previous 1 Next Adams Tent City! Google maps creates label for New York... NYC man, 48, dies after being shoved in front of NYC subway... Share this article Share

A VPN hides your IP address (basically a personal internet identification number number) from internet service providers like Verizon or Comcast in order to prevent them from seeing what you are doing online. RELATED ARTICLES Previous 1 Next Adams Tent City! Google maps creates label for New York… NYC man, 48, dies after being shoved in front of NYC subway… Share this article Share

Third, while browsing with your VPN enabled, browse within the disgraced Incognito mode – as the rest of your bases are covered from the previously described precautions, Incognito (or whatever the equivalent is on whichever search engine you are using) will not track your history while online.

Finally, download the web browser TOR – an acronym for ‘The Onion Router’ – which hides your IP address by bouncing your internet through a series of ever-changing and random computers and servers.

TOR was developed by US Navy computer scientists in the 1990s who wanted to develop a dependably anonymous way to surf the internet. It has since become registered as a non-profit dedicated to preserving anonymous internet use.

While there are next to no absolutely foolproof ways to surf the internet completely anonymously, following the above methods should keep you basically invisible.

In a series of emails cited in a California-based lawsuit on behalf of a million users, employees in 2018 poked fun at the deceptive advertising of the incognito feature that supposedly allows users to 'browse privately' and hide search histories

In a series of emails cited in a California-based lawsuit on behalf of a million users, employees in 2018 poked fun at the deceptive advertising of the incognito feature that supposedly allows users to ‘browse privately’ and hide search histories

The lawsuit further cites an email sent to CEO Sundar Pichai last year urging to make the tech giant more private for consumers

The lawsuit further cites an email sent to CEO Sundar Pichai last year urging to make the tech giant more private for consumers

What is TOR? Navy-developed browser that hides search history through matrix of sites

Tor – short for The Onion Router – is a seething matrix of encrypted websites that allows users to surf beneath the everyday internet with complete anonymity.

It uses numerous layers of security and encryption to render users anonymous online.

Normally, file sharing and internet browsing activity can be tracked by law enforcement through each user’s unique IP address that can be traced back to an individual computer.

The Tor network on the Deep Web hides the IP address and the activity of the user.

The network has been linked to criminal activity such as drug dealing and even services to hire hit men.

Most of the web’s information is buried far down on dynamically generated sites, unable to be found or seen by traditional search engines – sites or pages don’t exist until created as the result of a specific search.

An internet search is like dragging a net across the surface of the sea – a great deal of information is caught, but a majority is deep and therefore missed.

Google’s marketing chief Lorraine Twohill emailed CEO Sundar Pichai last year on International Data Privacy Day to request the tech giant become more private, according to Bloomberg.

‘Make Incognito mode truly private, Twohill wrote in an email. ‘We are limited in how strongly we can market Incognito because it’s not truly private, thus requiring really fuzzy, hedging language that is almost more damaging.’

Twohill’s email and other employee documentation are among the court documents that will be reviewed in an Oakland, California, courtroom on Tuesday.

Incognito mode on Google advertises that other users will not be able to view browsing history – but doesn’t say the tech giant cannot view data.

‘Privacy controls have long been built into our services and we encourage our teams to constantly discuss or consider ideas to improve them,’ a Google spokesperson said in a statement.

‘Incognito mode offers users a private browsing experience, and we’ve been clear about how it works and what it does whereas the plaintiffs in this case have purposely mischaracterized our statements.’

But in 2018, Google engineers brutally mocked Incognito mode for clearly suggesting to users that they were totally anonymous when using it.

‘We need to stop calling it Incognito and stop using the Spy Guy icon,’ an engineer said in an email chain in 2018 after providing a study about the lack of protections on the browser.

Another engineer responded with a meme of Homer Simpson wearing a mustache, a suit, and a top hat, and joked that Homer’s disguise ‘accurately conveyed the level of privacy [Incognito mode] provides.’

A judge will rule on Tuesday on whether the lawsuit will proceed. If found liable, Google may be fined to pay billions to consumers.

US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers will review the case. If found liable, Google could owe millions of consumers up to $1,000 per violation, according to Bloomberg.

Consumers are suggesting Google change the language on the private browsing feature to make users aware that the tech giant can still gather their data.