Google tells lawmakers it never used Wi-Fi data

Google Inc is telling US lawmakers that it never dissected or used any of the information that it accidentally sucked up while collecting data about public Wi-Fi networks in more than 30 countries.

WASHINGTON: Google Inc is telling US lawmakers that it never dissected or used any of the information that it accidentally sucked up while collecting data about public Wi-Fi networks in more than 30 countries.

In a letter to three key members of the House Commerce Committee, the company apologized for collecting fragments of e-mails, search requests and other online activities over unencrypted Wi-Fi networks while photographing neighborhoods for its ``Street View'' mapping feature.

Pablo Chavez, Google's director of public policy, wrote in the letter that the ``collection of Wi-Fi payload data was a mistake.''

Google says it was gathering information about the location of Wi-Fi networks to improve the accuracy of location-based services such as Google Maps.
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