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Google Open Sources Browser Sync

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday July 10, @04:09AM
from the free-for-all dept.
Dan Berlin writes "After announcing that Browser Sync was being discontinued, a lot of people asked for Google to open source the code so development could continue. Well, they've done just that. The code for browser sync is now available on code.google.com, and a blog post about the release can be found on the Google open source blog"

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  • Server (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 10, @04:16AM (#24130929)

    What server will you trust?

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Thats a good point. With Google you knew where you stood. They might use your info to to target advertising. They might reveal it to the government if ordered to do so. They would not be likely to sell it to spammers or pass on lists of people who bookmark anti-Islamic sites to an Al-Qaeda operative.

      Without google hosting it you need to host your own or find someone you can trust.
      • Re:Server (Score:5, Informative)

        by hansraj (458504) * on Thursday July 10, @04:58AM (#24131125)

        But with your data encrypted, why do you need to trust anyone? For you it is the state of your browser, passwords etc, but for anyone else it is random bits.

        Doesn't Browser sync already supports encrypting your data? Even if it doesn't I am sure this capability can be added now that it is open-source.

      • Re:Server (Score:5, Insightful)

        by KlaymenDK (713149) on Thursday July 10, @05:43AM (#24131345) Journal

        You know, some of us would rather host our data ourselves than trust Google with it...

        • Re:Server (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Xiph (723935) on Thursday July 10, @06:26AM (#24131497)

          Might it be part of the reason they're shutting down and releasing source?
          They don't want a judge to release the data to Corporation X.

          Besides i can easily host my own browsersettings on my home computer, in fact, i'll be setting it up (or trying to) when i come home

        • Re:Server (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Alarash (746254) on Thursday July 10, @07:27AM (#24131735)
          I don't understand people. You could send your sync data to _any_ server, even your own, it will *never* be totally safe. Just *_don't_* send data that can potentially harm you if it's intercepted. Personally, I sync only my bookmarks, and I don't give a damn if anyone ever gets access to them.
    • Re:Server (Score:5, Insightful)

      by dissy (172727) on Thursday July 10, @10:24AM (#24133751)

      What server will you trust?

      One that I own and administer.

      The real question is, will I be able to get their server back end installed and working...

  • by pacroon (846604) on Thursday July 10, @04:18AM (#24130937)
    I can't imagine a company that actually does what the public asks? They must have a secret agenda!
            • Well, I'd disagree, I think we're doing fine from a kernel release perspective. We could do more, and in time, we will, but we only really started a concerted effort to release changes 3 years ago, so...not so shabby. Red Hat has been more important than Google or any linux -user- in the development of the kernel.

              Your comments about manipulation are weirdly paranoid. The original list that Greg posted was 20+ companies long, and originally didn't include us, as he didn't count Andrew to us. He fixed that, and the post I sent to you was from his talk at Google. It's part of his presentation to call out the company he visits, which is one of the reasons we invited him out.

              Google is built on software, some of which comes from the world of open soruce, and most of which was written here. To give back, we both release code from the company (a significant amount >1m lines per year), fund external code (uncountable, really) and through the summer of code, create new developers and even more code still (2.1m+ last year, at least 3m this).

              That's not too shabby, in my book. I also would point out that it is disingenuous to equate linux use with some license fee savings. If linux had initially charged a license fee, then the world of linux users would be using bsd. Linux is successful because it is free of charge and free to use and free to modify. I think it is important that we give back and the rest, and we do that, but to multiply the number of machines running linux on the internet and consider that money as having been stolen is antithetical to the whole idea behind free software and open source.

              Chris

  • by Rik Sweeney (471717) on Thursday July 10, @04:31AM (#24131001) Homepage

    If they're not going to develop it any further, they might as well let someone else have a go. Now all we have to do is convince Microsoft to release the source code to Windows ME.

  • I really liked it. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by XB-70 (812342) on Thursday July 10, @04:57AM (#24131121)
    I use a bunch of machines all over the place (mostly for development/personal interest). I use old machines, dial-up, new machines, servers - having browser sync was a god-send. It was great to be able to reference everything regardless of architecture and O/S. I agree that there are concerns about what Google would/could reveal to legislative bodies, but that's only because they are so huge that other factors come into play. Maybe this is their way of extricating themselves (somewhat) from the liabilities associated with having that much info about a person's real interests. That said, I feel that I was never 'targeted' as a result of their handling of my data, nor was there ever any 'push' marketing as a result. I think that's where you draw the line between good corporate citizen and spammer. I hope that someone who has the time can re-incorporate it into FireFox 3.x
      • by naich (781425) on Thursday July 10, @08:13AM (#24132001) Homepage
        Foxmarks is OK for syncing bookmarks, but GBS also synced your history, open tabs, passwords (if you were brave enough) and cookies. Having a synced history and cookies was very useful because you could stay logged in to the same sites across any GBS'd computer.
  • by pgillan (1043668) on Thursday July 10, @04:58AM (#24131127)
    There's no clear reason given as to why it's being discontinued, but if it's due to lack of interest, it was probably lack of advertising; I wasn't even slightly aware of this project, and it sounds like something I would have been very interested in. I use Foxmarks religiously and have trouble functioning without it.
  • Wow (Score:5, Informative)

    by Cloud K (125581) on Thursday July 10, @05:03AM (#24131161) Homepage

    I'm sure there have been other examples, but this is the first and possibly only example I can think of of a company *actually responding* to requests for a discontinued product to be open-sourced. Let alone actually going ahead and doing it.

    Bravo Google :)

    • Re:Wow (Score:5, Interesting)

      by neokushan (932374) on Thursday July 10, @05:46AM (#24131351)

      I'm sure there's better examples, but off the top of my head I know that a few years ago, there was a petition started to release the source code to Warzone 2100 [wikipedia.org], an old (yet brilliant) 3D RTS game that still stands out amongst the crowd today. After a few months (possibly a couple of years), Eidos scrambled together the source code and released it to the community.
      Since then, the Warzone resurrection project has come leaps and bounds - fixing bugs, improving what platforms the game runs at, allowing higher resolutions, improving the AI, etc.
      The only slight catch (that I'm aware of) is that the Video CODEC used in the original game was proprietary, so Eidos couldn't release the source to that and the company that owns the CODEC wouldn't allow it to be distributed any more.

  • by smartin (942) on Thursday July 10, @07:16AM (#24131691)

    And I have to say that it works much better than browsersync ever did, with the added bonus that I can host my own data.

  • by zmjjmz (1264856) on Thursday July 10, @08:11AM (#24131993)
    Open source their abandonware. The world would be a much better place, and the companies wouldn't get hurt.
    • Re:When google (Score:4, Informative)

      by daveime (1253762) on Thursday July 10, @06:03AM (#24131411)

      There's a nice little add on for Firefox called "Live HTTP Headers", which shows all requests made from the browser. This includes the actual request by Flash to fetch the FLV file, so you get the full URL of the request, paste it back into the address bar, and choose save as file. Easy.

      Let the FLV pr0n downloads begin.

    • by Firehed (942385) on Thursday July 10, @09:25AM (#24132651) Homepage

      Is Amazon no longer a third party? Granted I trust them as much as I trust Google (and from an advertising perspective, they probably have better data about me as they have actual data points for my purchases, not just my purchase-related searches) but that still seems like a rather dumb statement.