Connecticut asks Google for info in privacy flap


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Connecticut's attorney general, who is leading a 37-state probe of Google Inc's collection of data from private unlocked Wi-Fi networks, asked the giant Internet search company on Wednesday if it had tested the software before using it.

Attorney General Richard Blumenthal also asked for the names of the people responsible for the software, which Google has said was supposed to only use the Wi-Fi to determine location, not to download personal email and other data.

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