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EU agencies say Google breaking law - Reding

EU Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding says new Google breaches EU law
EU Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding says new Google breaches EU law

Data protection agencies in European countries have concluded Google's new privacy policy is in breach of European law, EU Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding said today.

Reding told BBC Radio that data control authorities in Europe asked French counterparts to analyse the new policy.

"And they have come to the conclusion that they are deeply concerned, and that the new rules are not in accordance with the European law, and that the transparency rules have not been applied," Reding said.

Google said in January it was simplifying its privacy policy, consolidating 60 guidelines into a single one that will apply to all its services including YouTube, Gmail and social network Google+. Users can not opt out of the new policy if they want to continue using Google's services.

Reding said the policy would be breaking EU law ''in numerous respects. One is that nobody had been consulted, it is not in accordance with the law on transparency and it utilises the data of private persons in order to hand it over to third parties, which is not what the users have agreed to."

It would have been impossible for Google to instigate the policy under proposed legislation she laid out on January 25, Reding said.

"Protection of personal data is a basic rule of the European Union. It is inscribed in the treaties. It is not an if, it is a must," she said.

Google earlier posted a blog defending its policy after what it called "a fair amount of chatter and confusion". "Our privacy policy is now much easier to understand," the company said. "We've included the key parts from more than 60 product-specific notices into our main Google Privacy Policy - so there's no longer any need to be your own mini search engine if you want to work out what's going on."

Reding argued most users were unaware of what they were signing up to when they used mainstream Internet services. "70% of users rarely, or never, use terms and conditions which very often are written in small print, very complicated, not understandable for the normal user, and users are worried," she told the BBC.