I’ve read the reports, am an active member of a handful of user groups, visit their campus bi-monthly.
So they came up with an idea, allocated budget for it, requisitioned WiFi scanners, had engineers added them to each of the vans, had engineers program the WiFi hoppers, had PM's draft consolidation procedures, prepared storage servers, logged the data locally, consolidated that data regionally, forwarded it to their headquarters, stored terabytes of this data, and this was all done by complete and total accident?!?!?!
When was the last time you used your camera and it accidentally collected WiFi data? I am going out on a limb here, but would guess your answer is . . . . wait for it . . . NEVER!!!!
There are companies/groups that would spend millions to do this if they could. There is inherent industrial value in knowing every open hotspot in the world, where its geospatially located, how its configured, what IP block its utilizing, etc etc. Basically a digital blueprint on how to use and potentially exploit that access point.
Regardless, this was all an unintentional and convenient accident. I’m sold. I agree that Google is totally innocent here, no one at Google had a clue this was going on. Corporate has 100% plausible deniability and a strong argument for innocence.
I can guarantee that if this information was collected and exploited by some international hacksquad, this story would have garnered international attention and spurred a serious discussion about data security & privacy violations. Odds are, that hacksquad would have been moved to the top of numerous terrorist watch list, and would have been vigorously pursued multiple international agencies.
So because Google is a Corporation, were safe?