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AOL loses technology chief, 2 others over privacy breach

22 Aug 2006
00:00
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(Associated Press via NewsEdge) AOL's chief technology officer left the company and two other workers were fired in the aftermath of a privacy breach that involved the intentional release of more than 650,000 subscribers' Internet search terms.

Although AOL had substituted numeric IDs for the subscribers' user names, the search queries themselves contained Social Security numbers, medical conditions and other data that could be traced to an individual.

Maureen Govern, the technology chief, will be replaced on an interim basis by John McKinley, who had held that position before becoming AOL's president for digital services. The change takes effect immediately, according to a memo AOL chief executive Jonathan Miller sent to employees.

'This incident took place because some employees did not exercise good judgment or review their proposal with our privacy team,' Miller said in a second memo. 'We are taking appropriate action with the employees who were responsible.'

The data release is among a series of breaches involving sensitive information in recent months. Unlike those resulting from computer hacking or missing laptops, however, the AOL data had been intentionally released as part of a program to assist academic researchers.

AOL apologized two weeks ago for what it termed a mistake made by a company researcher who had failed to properly seek clearances before releasing three months' worth of search data. Though the information was meant for researchers, it was released to a public site and quickly circulated once a blogger discovered it.

The company fired the researcher who released the data and that employee's direct supervisor, who reported to Govern, said one person familiar with the company's decisions.

© 2006 The Associated Press

© 2006 Dialog, a Thomson business. All rights reserved

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