The Federal Trade Commission ended an investigation into the matter in 2010 without imposing any penalties on Google.
The company displays the pictures taken by its Street View cars in its online Maps product, but collecting the WiFi data was unrelated to the Google Maps project, and was done instead so that Google could collect data on WiFi hotspots that can be used to provide separate location-based services.
Google has said it thought it was only collecting a limited type of WiFi data relating to a WiFi network's name and router numbers, but later discovered that it was collecting so-called pay-load data including email messages, website addresses and passwords. Google blamed the snafu on a piece of computer code that was accidentally included from an experimental project.
Google said that it reviewed more than half a million documents for the FCC and arranged for interviews with "everyone the FCC asked to meet." Google said that most of the delays in the investigation were due to the agency's internal processes, and that Google agreed to extend the statutory deadline for the FCC probe by seven months.
"That is hardly the act of a party stonewalling an investigation," said the letter from a lawyer representing Google.
While the engineer responsible for the rogue code would not talk to the FCC, Google said he had fully cooperated with the company's internal investigation, stating that he "believed the collection of publicly broadcast information sent over unencrypted Wi-Fi networks to be lawful."
(Reporting By Alexei Oreskovic; Editing by Gary Hill)
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