If you’ve been aware this past week of the government’s efforts to subpoena web searches (and Google’s, but not Yahoo’s or MSN’s, refusal to comply), tell me you haven’t hesitated as you typed something no one’s business but your own into Google (or the others). An article in today’s New York Times describes people rightfully nervous. It begins:
Kathryn Hanson, a former telecommunications engineer who lives in Oakland, Calif., was looking at BBC News online last week when she came across an item about a British politician who had resigned over a reported affair with a “rent boy.”
It was the first time Ms. Hanson had seen the term, so, in search of a definition, she typed it into Google. As Ms. Hanson scrolled through the results, she saw that several of the sites were available only to people over 18. She suddenly had a frightening thought. Would Google have to inform the government that she was looking for a rent boy – a young male prostitute?
Ms. Hanson, 45, immediately told her boyfriend what she had done. “I told him I’d Googled ‘rent boy,’ just in case I got whisked off to some Navy prison in the dead of night,” she said.