Consumer Watchdog

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Consumer Watchdog

Privacy

Consumer Watchdog investigations and advocacy on data privacy, surveillance, AI, and your right to control your personal information.
Picking Up The Profits After Countrywide’s Collapse

Picking Up The Profits After Countrywide’s Collapse

<p> KYRA PHILLIPS, CNN HOST: Some former Countrywide executives are mopping up some of their own mortgage messes today. Not out of the goodness of their hearts or anything, they actually found good profits in lad loans. </p> <p> JAMIE COURT, CONSUMER WATCHDOG.ORG: It's outrageous that the executives that created this mess knowingly putting people in loans they couldn't afford are now poised to make a fortune cleaning it up. </p>
Is Google Burning Its Brand?

Is Google Burning Its Brand?

The recent incident involved a privacy group called Consumer Watchdog. The organization and Google have had a history of run-ins. Consumer Watchdog has been critical of Google in terms of privacy, and has been aggressive at times in publicly challenging the search giant, <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NKybBlEjSyk&eurl=http://industry.bnet.com/technology/1000980/is-google-burning-its-brand/">as can be seen in this video</a> ironically documented on YouTube, which is owned by Google.
Stimulus Spending Is Visible Online

Stimulus Spending Is Visible Online

<p> <a href="http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2009/03/03/stimulus_online_reports/">Click here to listen to the audio of this broadcast</a>. </p> <p> Jamie Court, President of Consumer Watchdog, calls the online updates an unprecedented experiment.<br /> Jamie Court: This is I think the first time government is held accountable in any accessible way for the public.<br /> He adds the online transparency could give taxpayers more confidence in how stimulus money is being spent, and so boost their willingness to spend their own. </p>
White House website cuts tie to Google’s YouTube

White House website cuts tie to Google’s YouTube

In the face of criticism from privacy advocates, the <a href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">White House website</a> apparently has ended its ties to <a href="http://www.youtube.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Google's YouTube</a> video service.
Consumer Lawyers Fighting Against Legal Tide

Consumer Lawyers Fighting Against Legal Tide

<strong>California Supreme Court Will Decide Key Proposition 64 Case on Class Action Consumer Suits</strong><br /> "It's some kind of a twilight zone where insurance gets to live and no one can touch them," said Harvey Rosenfield, founder of the nonprofit advocacy group Consumer Watchdog and the author of the 1988 voter-approved Proposition 103, which cut insurance rates statewide. "It's very disturbing to see what the courts are doing."
Podcast: Watchdog On Facebook’s Democratic Foray

Podcast: Watchdog On Facebook’s Democratic Foray

<a href="http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10173699-2.html">Click here to listen to the podcast</a>. <p> Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced on February 26 that, from now on, the company will post proposed changes to its terms of service and other policies for member input. CBS News and CNET Technology analyst Larry Magid discuss the move with Jamie Court, president of Consumer Watchdog. </p>
Google Seeks Starvation Of Growling Watchdog

Google Seeks Starvation Of Growling Watchdog

<strong>(Semi-)Apology For Money-Snuffing Missive</strong><br /> <br /> San Francisco, CA -- Google has attempted to cut the funding of a well-known public watchdog, after the organization launched a "guerrilla" attack on its Washington lobby operation.
Google Stays Mum On EHR Privacy Provisions Of Stimulus Bill

Google Stays Mum On EHR Privacy Provisions Of Stimulus Bill

Consumer Watchdog, a Washington D.C.-based consumer advocacy group, said the additions were a victory for patient privacy rights activists. "Google and Microsoft and medical records companies are now accountable in the way HIPAA providers are," Jamie Court, president of Consumer Watchdog told The Industry Standard. "Heretofore these guys had no accountability."
Well, That Wasn’t Very Googly

Well, That Wasn’t Very Googly

Bob Boorstin, the director of Corporate and Policy Communications for Google, sent a letter to the Rose Foundation blasting Consumer Watchdog, and, er, asking that Rose defund them.<br />
Google Watchdog Battle Heats Up

Google Watchdog Battle Heats Up

Consumer Watchdog President Jamie Court wrote to Google CEO Eric Schmidt Monday arguing that his top executives must "have more important priorities than defunding a consumer group critical of your lack of privacy protections." In the letter, he laid out some observations about Google's perceived "less than open corporate culture, its opaque public policymaking division and some suggestions for change and moving forward."