The latest development marks a change in position for the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), which said earlier this year that Google only appeared to have breached data protection requirements. It declined to take further action after Google agreed to delete the data.
Google said in May that it had collected information on unencrypted Wi-Fi routers, including fragments of data transmitted by those routers. The purpose of the data collection — which occurred as its Street View imagery vehicles were cruising streets in many countries — was to improve a geo-location database for location-based mobile applications.
Google denied the data could be traced back to an individual. But the company said on Oct. 22 that an examination of the data by seven external regulators have now shown that in some instances entire e-mails and URLs were collected along with some passwords.
Earlier this year officials from the ICO who viewed a sample of the collected data apparently missed the fact that some of it could be traced back to specific people. They concluded “that the data as fragmentary and was unlikely to constitute personal data” and declined to take further action.
ICO officials looked at parts of the data that was provided by Google and also did their own random sampling, but did not find information that constituted personal data, according to an ICO spokesman.
It is not known which regulatory agency in the 30 countries examining the Street View data discovered the full e-mails and passwords, although it should eventually be revealed, the ICO spokesman said.
To satisfy the ICO, Google will be subject to an audit within nine months by the ICO and must sign a document saying they will face further action unless the company takes steps to ensure data is protected.
The ICO has mandated that the company must put programs in place to train employees on data protection and the law, train engineers on the handling of data and start a security awareness program, among other requirements.
The Wi-Fi collection program remains under investigation by agencies in several countries. In Germany, Hamburg’s Data Protection Authority (DPA) and the city’s prosecutor’s office continue to examine the data and whether collecting it broke German laws.
Last month, Spain’s Data Protection Agency said it is investigating Google for up to five infractions of its laws over the collection of Wi-Fi data, for which the company could face more than €300,000 (US$417,000) in fines. In August, South Korean police raided Google’s offices and launched an investigation into unauthorized data collection and illegal wiretapping.