How To Remove Your Google Search History Before Google's New Privacy
Policy Takes Effect
Electronic Frontier Foundation
[UPDATE
2/22/2012] It is important to note that disabling Web History
in your Google account will not prevent Google from gathering and
storing this information and using it for internal purposes. More
information at the end of this post.
On March 1st,
Google will implement its new, unified privacy
policy, which will affect data Google has collected on you prior
to March 1st as well as data it collects on you in the future. Until
now, your Google Web History (your Google searches and sites visited)
was cordoned off from Google's other products. This protection was
especially important because search data can reveal particularly
sensitive information about you, including facts about your location,
interests, age, sexual orientation, religion, health concerns, and
more. If you want to keep Google from combining your Web History
with the data they have gathered about you in their other products,
such as YouTube or Google Plus, you may want to remove all items
from your Web History and stop your Web History from being recorded
in the future.
Here's how
you can do that:
1. Sign into
your Google account.

2. Go to https://www.google.com/history

3. Click "remove
all Web History."

4. Click "ok."

Note that removing
your Web History also pauses it. Web History will remain off until
you enable it again.
[UPDATE
2/22/2012]: Note that disabling Web History in your Google account
will not prevent Google from gathering and storing this information
and using it for internal purposes. It also does not change the
fact that any information gathered and stored by Google could be
sought
by law enforcement.
With Web History
enabled, Google will keep these records indefinitely; with it disabled,
they will be partially anonymized after 18 months, and certain kinds
of uses, including sending you customized search results, will be
prevented. If you want to do more to reduce the records Google keeps,
the advice in EFF's Six
Tips to Protect Your Search Privacy white paper remains relevant.
If you have
several Google accounts, you will need to do this for each of them.
February
24, 2012
Electronic
Frontier Foundation
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