Google's Turn To Be The Villain 835
caesar79 writes "The New York Times has an article titled "Relax, Bill Gates; It's Google's Turn as the Villain" (also evil but at least free registration required) According to the article, the "go-getting" attitude of Google is coming across as arrogance to many people in the Valley. More importantly, it draws attention to the fact that Google has drained the market of talent, caused a 25% to 50% hike in salaries and made it difficult for startups to get funding."
Villainy will be temporary (Score:3, Interesting)
So really, it isn't Google's turn to be villain, it's Microsoft's turn to be the good guys.
Hrm, did I really just say that?
--
You didn't know. [tinyurl.com]
Salaries bad for the employ? (Score:5, Interesting)
Increased salaries is bad for business and the number of employ hired, but you can't quote a 25-50% hike in salaries as a bad thing... c'mon!
-M
ironic (Score:5, Interesting)
PR at it's finest (Score:5, Interesting)
Paul Graham has an essay about this: The Submarine [paulgraham.com].
"Suits make a corporate comeback," says the New York Times. Why does this sound familiar? Maybe because the suit was also back in February, September 2004, June 2004, March 2004, September 2003, November 2002, April 2002, and February 2002.
Why do the media keep running stories saying suits are back? Because PR firms tell them to. One of the most surprising things I discovered during my brief business career was the existence of the PR industry, lurking like a huge, quiet submarine beneath the news. Of the stories you read in traditional media that aren't about politics, crimes, or disasters, more than half probably come from PR firms.
We have seen this before with anti-Linux campaigns. Nothing new.
Better story link? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Damn you Google! (Score:5, Interesting)
The startups are offering worse working conditions and so they have to pay more to tempt people away.
So let's see here... (Score:3, Interesting)
Why do we consider Microsoft evil? Is it equivalent to Google's evil? Well, no, it isn't. Stealing ideas, actively trying to destroy competition, lying in court, producing half-working crap and using a monopoly to force it down everybody's throat... is that morally equivalent to what Google is doing?
Didn't think so.
When evil is good -- life in a dynamic economy (Score:5, Interesting)
Although economies aren't zero-sum games (many activities do grow the pie, or raise the tide that floats all boats), some aspects do have a win-lose component to them. Successful companies can afford (and should afford) to pay their workers more than unsuccessful ones. This means that successful companies will inevitably harm less successful companies by "draining" the labor pool and seem "evil."
If Google is evil it is because change is evil (to some) and because competition (for money, workers, customers, etc.) can be evil -- at least in the eyes of the less successful.
Disclaimer: I'm not a Google shareholder (their stock seems very overpriced relative to the long-term risks of Google's business model and the high expected earning built into the current stock price), but they do seem to be very successful.
Google 'owns' too much information (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Damn you Google! (Score:2, Interesting)
a graphic description -
http://www.realmeme.com/Main/evilindex/index.jsp [realmeme.com]
Re:Villainy will be temporary (Score:1, Interesting)
As for "support for open source" wake when they have a Linux "Desktop Search", or Linux "google deskbar" or any of a number of other technologies they implement on Windows (and don't give source code away for). Yes, *USE* open source, and they occasional do something to give back, but this has been pretty pathetic so far, considering all the benefit they've gained from Open Source without having to release their changes.
In fact, one could say that google is violating the spirit of the GPL. They're "distributing" their software via a web server, but nobody gets to see the code behind the scenens, improve it, or fix bugs, or anything else.
Re:Industry whiners go "WAHHHHHH....." (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm pretty sick of people in the tech industry believing that they are underpaid. Just because you were once worth more to an industry, based on heavy speculation and a low supply of workers, doesn't mean you are worth that now.
Quite simply: You are only worth what people are willing to pay you.
If you're looking for intrinsic value of your labor (rather than market value), it is $0. That's correct, zero. Your labor only holds value according to the parameters of your job.
You save your company some cash by writing some clever scripts? Great, that has value to your company. Intrinsic value of that code? Nothing.
Not everyone has the right stuff to be a quality programmer, or troubleshooter, or even janitor.
But at my company, the janitor makes a bigger impact on the bottom line than any of the codemonkeys.
Google's natural monopoly isn't as strong as MS's (Score:4, Interesting)
Microsoft, on the other hand, can pretty much hold the whole computer industry hostage by virtue of having the most deployed systems hence anyone who wants to buy or write software for a computer has to obtain the MS OS to transact business. This is worse than the classic "utility" type natural monopoly -- the better analogy would be if someone owned a perpetual patent on 60Hz AC.
Google - The Old Yahoo! (Score:5, Interesting)
Then somewhere along the line, the free email accounts and home pages got so choked with ads and bloat that I couldn't stand using them anymore.
I like Google's stuff. Lots. I've just got this nagging feeling that I've been here before, and I hope I'm wrong.
Think about Google's business plan. (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Get funding through at least one huge IPO
2. Hire all the top talent you can find
3. Give away your products for free, relying on advertising
4. You can figure this one out yourself
So for everyone sarcastically crying how Google is "so evil" because they're doing this, think about it for a second. How fair is it if you have a long-term business strategy to be run out of business by an upstart that is little more than a flash in the pan? For as good as Google is (and they are good), history shows their business model not to last the long haul.
Picking up patterns (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's where everyone gets confused, though. Google isn't forcing its software onto nearly every computer manufactured. They aren't trying to force any sort of vendor lock-in or commit evil business practices so they can continue to give you "good enough" software either.
Forgive me for quoting people's gripes with Microsoft, but that's the difference between the services provided. To the end user, Google isn't costing us much of anything. People wanted a company to kill Microsoft, and now they might get it...and it scares them because the company they're tired of wanted to 'Think Big' and have big ambitions a long time ago too. People are trying to attribute the track history of MS to Google simply because of how quickly Google has taken off, and the fact that both companies were open about having great ambitions early-on.
Who hasn't? Can a company honestly succede without big goals to reach for? No.
On the other side of things, I was waiting for the day that Google would start getting bad press for anything and nothing. So far, every search engine that soared after it's IPO sunk not too long after and was quickly tossed to the wayside. Yahoo! actually survived surprisingly enough, but Google seems to be going another route: They're still worth money (and lots of it) but now some are turning from curious to suspicious about their former favorite. The little child with lots secrets can be seen as cute, the rich and powerful social elite with lots secrets must be hiding something malignant.
The only part about the negative press that annoys me is that nobody is giving Google the flexability to be a new company. They have to know how to behave like a giant from the start, and giants obviously must behave like monsters as far as the press is concerned.
you're partly right- and totally wrong (Score:5, Interesting)
And: is the same reason applicable to Google?
Well, Both MS and IBM were perceived to be bullys. They used their overwhelming advantages in one market to extend control to other markets. Typically, they cut prices in the new markets in order to drive competitors out, even competitors with superior products. The investment community saw this, and feared investing in excellent products and technologies whenever Microsoft trumpeted that they were moving into a market. I can only think of two products that survived that onslaught: Oracle and Quicken. This is the fear, uncertainty, doubt (FUD) strategy.
The other bullying tactic which both used was to offer low ball buyouts to companies with promising technologies. They would, at the same time, threaten to buy similar technologies elsewhere, and then overwhelm their target company. In many cases, Microsoft seemed to steal technology outright, both from buyout targets, as well as from partner companies. In short, they were thugs, and were known as such.
IBM has changed over the last 20 years. Bill Gates still sings the same tune that he did 20 years ago. I haven't heard those notes from Google.
Re:Damn you Google! (Score:5, Interesting)
Some of the benefits might be difficult to reproduce for smaller companies (such as the cafeteria), but there is no shortage of very nice office space in the valley nor is there any great difficulty in allowing engineers a certain amount of time and resources for their personal projects.
Re:Damn you Google! (Score:4, Interesting)
What turned me off was the interview process, the whole rediculous MS style crap; Im suprised I didnt get an ink blot test or have someone read the lumps on my skull. That tells me something very unflattering about a company, and any company that wants to hire me after one of those interviews just increased my cost 50% more than it would have been had they a more-sane interview approach.
Re:Google to Monopolize Web Applications? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Damn you Google! (Score:5, Interesting)
i think it's just stupidity. joel from joel on software has a good article about paying people in things "cheaper than money." and that in the end it's cheaper for the company, for example, to give away free drinks because employees value it more than it cost you. here's the article: http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000
Re:Google to Monopolize Web Applications? (Score:3, Interesting)
How about moving from one photo sharing service to another? That's *really* hard too, now you have to re-upload your library.
What if a new "eBay" type service comes out that is better than eBay, can users switch? Not if they want to keep their ratings.
The "The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/088
Actualyl talks about this and said the Web, moreso than the "real world" inclines itself to monopolization. (too many reasons to get into here).
Re:Google to Monopolize Web Applications? (Score:3, Interesting)
"start-ups in Silicon Valley complain that virtually every time they try to recruit a well-regarded computer programmer, that person is already contemplating an offer from Google"
I was trying to recruit a freshly coined PhD from northwestern who was specializing in the input side of AI (essential to where my company is going) but didn't have a ton of cash (self-funded). He left for google 4 days ago...
I can't blame him, hell, if I wasn't so single-minded about my own business I would try and get a job with google. But it still makes it rough to get good talent (especially in Chicago).
Give me a break! (Score:3, Interesting)
If they can't compete in Google's market, innovate in another market. This is, at least used to be, the strength of start-ups. The ability to recognize an area that needed innovation and fill that need. Google has a stranglehold in Information Management right now. Find something else.
You guys are supposedly intelligent, right?
You know how many google's I've seen? (Score:1, Interesting)
Lotus. You ever go to any of those Lotus parties in Boston back in the day? Some of the craziest shit I've ever seen, booze, drugs, women, partying like rock stars, albeit rock stars with degrees from MIT, Stanford and other upper crust institutions... Then MS squared them in the cross-hairs, they didn't quite deal with the whole windows thing and while they aren't a complete bust they went from owning the spreadsheet and acocunting world to making a glorified email/database toolkit. Notes does do some really cool things but you have to get a PhD in it and not many people are willing to do that. Never mind any of their other office products, Ami Pro used to be the balls, still one of the best word processors I've seen, a nearly perfect balance of simplicity with power and WYSIWYG.
Wordstar. Seems like the world was their to lose and somehow they did.
Wordperfect. See wordstar. They were is a two horse race and then out of nowhere this 3rd horse came in and crushed them out of existence for all practical purposes.
Corel. Had a killer product in Draw, not best of breed but close enough and priced right. Bit off more than they could deal with.. Maybe these last three should be lumped together. Bottom line is that they all did things well, they all lost it when they strayed from doing what they did best. It's not a lock that they could have been successful just doing what they were doing but I think their odds would have been better.
Borland. Practially undisputed leader in dev tool technology for a long time. MS was a joke, Zortech was pricy and had no future, Watcom was kind of specialized and pricy. Made a couple mis-steps, got confused doing things that aren't core to what they do. Not dead but not exactly killing either, they are almost at the cusp of if they were much smaller you'd never risk anything on their platforms and until more people put more risk in to them their platform will never grow. The whole Pascal/Delphi thing is great too, fabulous technology but if I'm going to buy into a single vendor's compiler why shouldn't it be Sun's JDK?
Netscape. We all know this story. They thought they were big becuase they had a nice IPO. In reality, they were bigger before the IPO and the IPO really just signaled the end.
NeXT? Built a full OS and full dev suite. Not just the gloss of an OS like other recent buzzwordy OS plays, it was internationalized, was robust, did all the font and color stuff that you'd expect, multiuser, network able, etc.. They had to do hardware to get started because the existing hardware wouldn't cut it. They had money, they had it all and never were able to capitalize even though they had a tremendous fan base. The later stages before the take-over OpenStep was lost, they had no vision, they had no hope. Put it on AIX and HPUX, put it on windows, port Step to Intel, port it to RS/6000, I don't know how many of those stupid projects were ever realized.
I want to throw Semantec and NAI in there some how too. I mentioned Zortech above, Symantec bought their technology (as well as Think or Lightspeed's if I'm not mistaken,) anyone remember when they were going to be a development tool shop? How about cafe? In fact it was a popular java product because it was bloody fast. NAI I stopped paying attention to but I do remember them buying up everybody under sun and then starting to sell them all back off. For moments they saw themselves doing more than making a virus scanner. Quarterdeck anyone? I bet Symantec or NAI bought them...
Hop even further in the wayback, it seems like Bank Street Writer should have been able to capitalize on their success and popularity. There were a lot of shareware products that should have some how managed to go furthe
Re:25-50% hike in salary (Score:3, Interesting)
Not makiing what youre worth?? (Score:1, Interesting)
How does that work exactly? There is no objective value to anything or anyones labor. Physical fallacy anyone?
If you made $60k a year 5 years ago but now cant find anyone willing to pay you more than $50k, it doesnt mean youre getting less than youre worth; it means youre worth less. Your labor, my labor, his labor, her labor...none of it is worth any more or less than what you can get for it.
Unless of course one wants to claim there is an objective value to labor, in which case one is talking religon (believing in something that doesnt exist) and thus being an idiot.
Re:Or MOVE (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Platform doesn't matter, as long as it's Window (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Damn you Google! (Score:3, Interesting)
Why is the cost of a software engineer "inflated"? I think what is going on is simply supply-and-demand curves at work.
I've heard of offshoring but - shock! horror! - you may not have heared that India also produces some pretty good managers, too, if multi-billion dollar corporations like Wipro are anything to go by...
It's not Google, it's the whole SF Bay Area (Score:3, Interesting)
People left the area in the dot.bomb, and changed professions, because they had to. But with the upswing, there's nobody here to hire anymore. So, duh, Google is interviewing nearly everyone who's on the market... the number of people on the market is way down.
Recruiting has gone from a job of filtering the stacks of resumes to really actively pursuing people again.
The funny thing about the Google accusations are that Google takes months to do an interview process and make an offer; the flip side of this whole story is Google being very frustrated that most of the people they make offers to have already accepted a position somewhere else by the time Google gets their offer in. Evil predator, which loses most of its candidates? I don't think so.
Google's a convenient entity to blame, but that's all it is. Until IT people start coming back to Silli Valli, it's going to be escalating difficulty of hiring talent and escalating salaries.
Re:I guess I'm just a money-grubber. (Score:5, Interesting)
With reference to your reply here to the post about him not giving a shit about group outings, and pizza parties...I do agree with you to a point. An outing on company expense can be fun, and team building. A happy employee does work harder and better. I worked at a place once, that had team outtings for us programmers in the business unit. I ranged from lunch and a day of bowling or laser tag....to a day at the lake where they rented wet bikes and a couple of ski boats for us. Was a blast...we even went 'tubing' down a river once...and got full days pay. It was a fun place to work. But, they started getting cheap and more corporate...and these things disappeared, especially when they didn't give raises enough to cover the loss of the perks.
Since I've gotten older...well, I tell ya, I can put up with a lot less perks...and would rather have cold hard cash. I generally can spend my time and money a lot more effectively to attain pleasure. But, a little group stuff is fun. You need a good balance...but, I lean more towards the cash thing as years go by.
Times is wrong; Google announced nothing (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Awww... (Score:1, Interesting)
I like that very much.
I guess it is inevitable that with fame comes suspicion. But that is not a bad thing in itself. It gives you a chance to prove yourself yet again:)
Re:Let's inject some reality (Score:4, Interesting)
Wait, that's new? Isn't that in every field? Like, what does a top grad from a law school make his first year compared to one in the middle of his class, or even in the top 15%.
Isn't this true in pro sports- the guys who garner competing offers generally make a lot... and so on. and so on...
The only place this isn't true is with unionized places....
Oh where to begin... (Score:3, Interesting)
The news last week that Google plans to sell an additional 14 million shares of stock, adding $4 billion to its current cash reserves of $3 billion, will only provide more reasons to gripe.
Because a tech company generating revenue and making stockholders comfortable, such that they might consider other tech companies as viable again.... is a bad thing.
"Microsoft is becoming I.B.M. and Google is becoming Microsoft."
This is how things happen in the real world. It will happen again.
"Google is doing more damage to innovation in the Valley right now than Microsoft ever did," said Reid Hoffman, the founder of two Internet ventures, including LinkedIn, a business networking Web site popular among Silicon Valley's digerati. "It's largely that they're hiring up so many talented people, and the fact they're working on so many different things. It's harder for start-ups to do interesting stuff right now."
Yes, because as we all know, everything worth inventing has already been invented, except for the relatively minute number of things that Google is currently working on. Darn them!
Google, Mr. Hoffman said, has caused "across the board a 25 to 50 percent salary inflation for engineers in Silicon Valley" - or at least those in a position to weigh competing offers. A sought-after computer programmer can now expect to make more than $150,000 a year.
And to think, a couple of years ago, we were whining that no qualified programmers could find jobs. Now we're whining that the qualfied programmers are getting snatched up so fast that we can't afford to pay their high salaries to compete. Bleed my heart does.
Why couldn't Google do what you're doing?' " said Craig Donato, the founder and chief executive of Oodle, a site for searching online classified listings more quickly.
Oh where shall I begin... A startup, with a name that is obviously intended to pick up some free indirect word of mouth advertising from Google because it's a likely offshoot of Google, has investors worried that someday Google will decide to do the same thing, only better. Imagine that.
Meanwhile, hundreds of people lined up to replace him. I doubt Google has suffered any bad press from a comment like that. Certainly can't see how it raises the "ire" of anyone. Can you imagine? "Man, this job sucks so much... they pay me too much, give me free meals and all sorts of onsite perks.. they challenge me and give me time to be creative. I love it so much that I don't want to leave at the end of the day. Woe is me."
To be fair, I can understand the concern of some people that a single company can be too powerful and disrupt the industry as a whole. After all, it has happened before. Microsoft is a perfect example. But if you must look for evil, search out the roots. Compare if you will, a company who's core principle is "Do no evil" and a company that broke into the PC market by selling a product it didn't even own yet. Compare a company that offers multiple perfectly useable and useful "beta" applications, to a company that couldn't get through a staged product demonstration without crashing the system. Worry about Google if you must, but keep your concerns in context.
-Restil
Re:Platform doesn't matter, as long as it's Window (Score:2, Interesting)
but mainly my reason for liking google over microsoft is the ease of doing what you want with its services, rather than what they want you to do.
compare gmail and hotmail... 2 inter-OS services..
Hotmail = no pop3 access, no outlook access unless you've used it for a few years already, no forwarding, annoying and slow web interface, no contacts export, no contacts import, and up until gmail very little amount of webspace (increased to 100MB after gmail), doesnt automatically save outgoing mail.
Gmail = pop3 acces, email forwarding, best webmail interface ive used (i love the conversation feature), 2.5 GB web space (and counting), easy contacts export/import plus guides on how to screen scrape from all the competitors, filters (way more manageable than folders, able to apply multiple filters), automatically saves outgoing mail.
just to name a few....
but when it comes down to it, does anybody flame yahoo about their services? no... because even there it is much easier to make yahoo mail do what you want than hotmail.
Hotmail is for the people who just discovered that AOL was a waste of time...
Re:Awww... (Score:2, Interesting)
For me at least, Chris's responce is a major reason I read Slashdot and an important factor in the open source movement. Yes, open source has several factors that make it great. However, it's being able to talk directly to the developers that holds the greatest attraction to me. With closed source software, the best you get is some out-sourced flunky, that doesn't have a clue, looking up answers in a database. Open source is a lot more personal. I remember the first time I sent feedback to a major project. I didn't really know what to say when I got a responce directly from the developer. This never happened with closed source software.
As for how this applies to Slashdot, I can go to half a dozen sites that feature comments on news articles. Slashdot is one of the very few where you get comments directly from the horse's mouth. As a good example, a while back there was an article about research being done with crocodile immune systems and AIDS. Several comments were made by the guy doing the research. You just don't find that many other places.
Perhaps Generals shouldn't go beating the bush hunting snipers. However, handing off public relations to a squad of drones is not any more appropreate. Especially when that public has a very real interest in what you are doing.