Microsoft takes new privacy steps

Microsoft has said it is taking new steps to protect consumer privacy in web search and online advertising and called on the …

Microsoft has said it is taking new steps to protect consumer privacy in web search and online advertising and called on the Internet industry to support it.

Microsoft said it was responding to public concern over the recent consolidation of the online ad industry as well as stepped-up interest from government regulators in its call for a comprehensive rather than piecemeal approach to privacy.

"We think it's time for an industrywide dialogue," Peter Cullen, Microsoft's chief privacy officer, said. "The current patchwork of protections and how companies explain them is really confusing to consumers."

Microsoft said it would make all web search query data anonymous after 18 months on its Live Search service, unless it receives user consent to store it longer. The policy changes are retroactive and worldwide, it said.

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Microsoft plans to store customer search data separately from data tied to people, e-mail addresses or phone numbers and take steps to assure no unauthorised correlation of these types of data can be made.

It also will permanently remove "cookie" user identification data, web address or other identifiers.

Microsoft's initiatives follow recent moves by Google, the dominant provider of web searches and the company most under fire by privacy advocates concerned at how rapid advances in search technology may threaten consumer privacy.