
Google's got a lot of enemies in Washington these days, including a few who like to dress in black cloaks and attack it in ways that can't be traced back. One recent episode was a craftypush poll funded by Microsoft. (Turns out that, if you phrase the questions right, advertisers are terrified of Google's monopoly!)
Google generally tries to stay above the fray—but it can jump in too. Including just recently ...
The story starts with Consumer Watchdog, a nonprofit group that cares about privacy. They're tenacious and aggressive — so much so that one might suspect they're funded by Microsoft or AT&T. But they're not: they get their money from the Rose Foundation, which, according to an interview with founder Tim Little, has gotten its money from California class action settlements with instructions to fund advocacy on the issue.
Recently, they've really pissed off the Mountain View company. So Bob Boorstin, the director of Corporate and Policy Communications, sent a letter to the Rose Foundation blasting Consumer Watchdog, and, er, asking that Rose defund them.
That's not very nice! Consumer Watchdog has gleefully flamed the controversy and Boorstin now apologizes. He's also sent to Wired a copy of a letter that he sent to the group in November. Here's his statement:
I have a feeling this isn't the last act in the story.