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Google to hand over intercepted data to ease privacy controversy

Google will begin handing over to European regulators the rogue data it intercepted from private WiFi internet connections within the next two days, in an effort to defuse growing controversy over its latest privacy blunder.

Eric Schmidt, chief executive, said the world's largest internet company would hand over information initially to the German, French, Spanish and Italian data protection authorities, which are considering a criminal investigation into the practice. Google faced a stand-off with Hamburg privacy authorities last week over whether it would be legal to hand over the rogue data. It now appears willing to reach a compromise.

The company will also publish the results of an external audit into the incident, in which cars, photographing streets for Google's Street View service ended up also collecting snippets of personal information from unsecured WiFi networks.

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