Search engine Google seems likely to fire the bloke who
wrote the wi-fi code that sniffed people's networks.
The unnamed bloke wrote the code as part of the Google
Street Car software package and Google claims it should never have been
there. The wi-fi sniffing software had got Google into shedloads
of hotwater in the EU. The search engine
claims it never wanted that data in the first place.
However that did not mean that Google did not store the
data for future use. Apparently the
information was completed in the UK and the question is whether or not Google
did have plans to use it before it was
found out. Now it seems the poor coder will be made the sacrificial
goat for Google's cock-up.
Google CEO Eric Schmidt has admitted Google "screwed
up" and blamed a male software engineer for writing the rogue code behind
the data collection. Alan Eustace, Google's senior vice-president of engineering
and research, told the Sydney Morning Herald that an investigation was ongoing but, asked if the
engineer in question would be sacked, he replied that "anything can happen
in the future".