Presented by ProPublica

By Justin Elliott — ProPublica

The Federal Commu­ni­ca­tions Commission announced Friday it is slapping a fine on Google for delib­er­ately impeding an inves­ti­gation of the collection of sensitive wireless network data as part of the search giant’s Street View mapping project. The amount of the fine: $25,000.

That figure is, of course, barely a rounding error for the company. Google made $2.89 billion last quarter, or $25,000 in profits every 68 seconds.

Never­theless, the FCC Enforcement Bureau report announcing the fine says the $25,000 level is intended “to deter future misconduct in view of Google’s ability to pay.”

The FCC found that Google Street View cars, which were taking pictures for Google Maps, also collected pass­words, email and medical records, among other data, from resi­dents’ WiFi networks. Google has apol­o­gized for collecting the data but main­tains it was legal.

The report states that the FCC actually ramped up the fine. The base fine for the viola­tions was $12,000.

The report also notes that the commission has elected to increase fines “[t]o ensure that a proposed forfeiture is not treated as simply a cost of doing business.”

In the section discussing the size of the fine, a footnote points to Google’s vast revenue:

The FCC could have levied a larger fine, but it still wouldn’t have amounted to much for Google. As the report says, the maximum allowed by law for stonewalling the FCC’s inves­ti­gation as Google did is $112,500 per violation.

The report counts three viola­tions by Google: “failures to identify employees, produce e-mails, and provide compliant decla­ra­tions.” So, the total fine could have been $337,500, or about 15 minutes of profits.

The report says the FCC decided on $25,000 based on “the totality of the circum­stances of this case” and “our precedent in other failure to respond cases.”

An FCC spokes­woman declined to comment on how the fine was calcu­lated or how it would serve as a deterrent.

The company, for its part, disputed the FCC’s findings in a statement: “We disagree with the FCC’s char­ac­ter­i­zation of our coop­er­ation in their inves­ti­gation and will be filing a response.”

Google will have recouped the fine in less than the time it took you to read this.

ProP­ublica

ProP­ublica is an inde­pendent, non-profit newsroom that produces inves­tigative jour­nalism in the public interest. Our work focuses exclu­sively on truly important stories, stories with “moral force.” We do this by producing jour­nalism that shines a light on exploitation of the weak by the strong and on the failures of those with power to vindicate the trust placed in them.

More PostsWebsiteTwitterFacebook