REUTERS— A confidential, inside resource, has revealed that the U.S. Federal Trade Commission has levied a 22.5 million dollar fine on Google. The search giant broke the FTC”s privacy requirements… it secretly tracked Google searches on Safari browsers.
The $22.5 M fine will be the largest fine ever imposed on a company by the FTC. Google claims that the tracking was unintentional… and that no harm was done…
“The FTC is focused on a 2009 help center page published more than two years before our consent decree,” says a Google email statement. “We have now changed that page and taken steps to remove the ad cookies, which collected no personal information, from Apple’s browsers.”
The incident comes after ongoing speculation that Google is tracking and collecting searches made by users… As far as we know, only Safari browsers have been tracked; but it is not too far-fetched to think that Google has its eyes on other browsers.
Related articles
- Google to pay largest FTC penalty ever for violations (foxnews.com)
- Google to pay $22.5 million fine for Safari privacy evasion – CNNMoney (money.cnn.com)



Internet Explorer 10 will actually have two interfaces, one similar to IE 9 and another based on the Metro design ( as seen above), a design language developed by Microsoft. The Metro version will allow Metro apps in Windows 8 run on the browser. The interface based on the traditional IE interface (seen below) will allow plug-ins, while the Metro interface will not.

