On Sun, Nov 01, 2009 at 01:10:47AM +0200, Roman Kyrylych wrote: > On Sat, Oct 31, 2009 at 20:23, <fons@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > A way for Google to find out who's talkin to whom and > > what about. And then probably make money on it. Big > > Brother in its purest form. > > Well, since it is based on XMPP and open [1] > it can be used outside of Google too, > and adding encryption to it should not be a problem. The encryption (end user controlled) should have been there from the start. Can you just imagine the legal consequences of any professional bound by confidentiality regulations using this type of service ? BTW, does 'wave' have any privacy policy at all ? Or maybe a 'terms of use' one ? Didn't see anything on the main 'wave' site. > However as long as anyone using a wave is doing this via Google > - Google will be able to see the information. > But this is also true for GTalk, GMail etc. (and not only Google's services) Not GMail. Most countries have legislation as to what service providers can do or not do with emails. There's no such legislation for the 'wave' type of service, or in fact for anything that is not just email. Ciao, -- FA Io lo dico sempre: l'Italia è troppo stretta e lunga.