Google's Impact on the Internet 351
Kierkegaard writes "The Globe & Mail and Fortune Magazine both wrote a piece on Google, arguably one of the most important companies in the world, and its influence and impact on the Internet. In particular, they mention the effects of Google's recent new services, like Blogger and Maps, as well as their take on how Google threatens the Microsoft Corporation. "If Sergey and Larry stick to their corporate mantra -- Don't be evil -- and are able to stem degeneration into the typically corrupt corporate ethos, who knows, they may just succeed in assuming the fair and honourable dominion over the world's information they so naively set out to achieve eight years ago in their garage.""
Google important? (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Perhaps... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd not call that `changing the face of the search industry`. But I wasn't denying they've affected how some other companies, simply that it's not one of the most important companies in the world, which was the original, laughable claim to which I was responding.
Remember before Google? (Score:2, Informative)
It's possible you don't remember how painfully time-consuming were searches using AltaVista and Lycos.
Re:Remember before Google? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Remember before Google? (Score:3, Funny)
Google... heh, why back in my day, I was happy to use Archie. It sure beat doing ls -lR on every ftp server I knew.
Re:Perhaps... (Score:3, Insightful)
If thiis doesn't make it one of the worlds most important companies, what does?
Re:Perhaps... (Score:3, Insightful)
5 years ago, I spent time 'surfing the web' by using things like 'Yahoo Cool Sites' and their 'Surfers Picks.' I'd get to an interesting site and pretty much read the entire thing. Sites like 'Mississippi Mobile Homes' (pre-commercialization) and 'Avocado Memories' still stick in my head many years after I first saw them.
Now, I don't look at entire sites, I only look at individual page
Re:Perhaps... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Perhaps... (Score:2, Troll)
I'm not saying Google is the Automobile to Yahoo's horse, but your argument is flawed.
Re:Perhaps... (Score:2)
Re:Perhaps... (Score:2)
class Feedback_loop_company {};
Feedback_loop_company Google = new Feedback_loop_company();
Yeah, if we didn't have this instance, we'd have to make a new one. The fact that it's here, and taking the tortise approach to world domination, as opposed to the hare, makes Google at least interesting, if not important.
You know that the thought of their own OS distribution has to have
Re:Google important? (Score:2)
But in general (as the posting claims)? I think that's overestimating the importance of the internet as a whole, at least in the current situation.
Re:Google important? (Score:5, Insightful)
Without Google I'd have lost hours searching through wads of irrelevant and/or paid listings in yahoo or MSN.
Without Google I'd have been lost when trying to convert teaspoons to tablespoons or quarts to liters.
Without Google, we'd be lost in a sea of paid advertisements lurking as 'relevant articles'.
Only recently have I found it more difficult to pull good results from google, but even so, their usefulness is unparalleled. Google maps is easily the best web-based mapping application. Gmail leaves other mail providers in the dust (and gives free POP access, which is rare) Google local is incredibly useful for finding nearby shops and restaurants.
I can no longer imagine a world without Google, and can only laugh at your attempt to downplay their importance in todays society.
Re:Google important? (Score:3, Interesting)
Google became popular pretty quick and gets a lot of PR, but search HAS been around forever and the question in my mind is whether or not there have been other engines that were pushed out o
Re:Google important? (Score:5, Interesting)
Sergey and Brin take their job very serious. Organizing and delivering a whole world's information/thoughts/opinions is a HUGE responsibility, yet they've carried it and with dignity. I see little if any abuses of the power they hold. How many other companies could do what google does and resist the temptation to abuse their audience or subject them to slanted views/opinions or worse.
Google's only agenda is to get you where you want to be.
Re:Google important? (Score:5, Funny)
These two have done great things yes, but don't downplay the work of two other great minds, Larry and Page.
Are you serious? (Score:3, Insightful)
That part is true. However, like another poster said (the first post actually) if they didn't come around we'd all just be using Yahoo, or Lycos, or one of the other companies that would probably be bigger if not for Google.
"Sergey and Brin take their job very serious."
How do you know? You know them personally? Or is this just what you read on a news clipping?
"Organizing and delivering a whole world
Re:Google important? (Score:3, Insightful)
Google does not organize. They simply provide a good search engine.
From an information architecture point of view, the Internet is a disaster - nothing i
Re:Google important? (Score:2)
Re:Google important? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, just like if Firefox weren't around you'd just use IE, and if computers weren't around you'd just use a pen and paper, right?
ABSOLUTELY they are important (Score:5, Insightful)
If Google wasn't around, I would be using
Yahoo or whatever for my search engine.
I'd probably still be using Mapquest for maps (and cursing it).
I don't know if I'd be able to search newsgroups the way I do. Would DejaNews still be around?
I guess I'd have to use local.yahoo.com instead of local.google.com to find things in my area.
Image searching - well, I'd be out of luck.
I'd just have to figure out how to do some conversions (like celcius to fahrenheit)
And I don't even use all of Google's features. They are important, because they changed the game. They innovated, in a very simple way (to the end user). Google maps is awesome, but up until Google did it, Mapquest was "good enough". That is why they are important, because they seem to do the things they do VERY well. It would be scary to companies if Google decided to enter their area of expertise.
Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2, Interesting)
I mean, much as I hate to criticise one of Slashdot's fatted calves, and much as I recognise how innovative Google is, and what a keen grasp they clearly have of how to design user interfaces for the web, Google are answerable to shareholders, not some higher moral sense, mu
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2, Interesting)
If Google gets lazy, someone else will be willing to take over.
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2)
When I first discovered Google, sometime in 98 or 99, the number one thing that attracted me (besides good search results) was the non-obstrusive nature of their webpage.
It was nice and simple and loaded quickly because of the content (or lack thereof).
One thing that I can't stand are web pages that are so busy looking, I can't easily figure out how to get the i
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2, Interesting)
*holy crap. Is it that long already? I feel old.
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:3, Interesting)
Google may be a verb, but it doesn't control the WWW or what can and cannot be found on it.
If Google tried to censor or in any way hamper what could and could not be found on the web, there will be others who take over, and Google knows this. They'd lose ad revenue, consequently, and that's the end of them. That is why they
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2, Informative)
A "fatted calf" is fattened up because it's about to be slaughtered and eaten. A "sacred cow" is in no such danger.
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2)
While I see what you are saying and I agree due to my tinfoilhatness I have to disagree that it is "handling the email of a vast proportion of Internet users."
This is a typical Slashdotter perception. Most people outside of "techies" don't use GMail. They may in the futur
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2, Insightful)
http://www.a9.com
http://www.alltheweb.com/
http://www.yahoo.com
http://search.msn.com
http://www.lycos.com/
http://www.altavista.com/
http://www.dogpile.com/
http://search.excite.com/
http://search.looksmart.com/
http://www.ask.com/
Where are you getting this "one company"
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2)
is sure is kinda scary, but are and were are the ones that really keep me up at night...
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:3, Insightful)
The outcry would be immediate. The Slashdot story would get 5,000 comments. There would be people who said that this proved that Google was evil, after all. And there would be people who would defend them, in the con
Re:Isn't is kinda scary? (Score:2)
In that case, check out The Internet Portal [nyti.dyn.ee]. They're trying to build exactly what you're describing -- something similar to the Google 'grid' platform that they run all these distributed net-wide services upon, except it's distributed among all of its owners instead of centrally controlled
Internet barons... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yahoo's always behind safe money (see the Y! News vs G News)
And Microsoft is behind all evil,
Netscape survived as Firefox and
Macromedia just went to Adobe
That's a brief history of the web since Y2K
Re:Of course. (Score:2)
Googlewhack (Score:5, Funny)
What about the not-so-good things? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not trying to be trollish, just curious if anybody has any perspective other than the very good experiences most of us have had with Google.
-Jesse
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.marketingvox.com/archives/2005/04/15
As an avid reader of Slashdot, I think we all can find a bit of evil in this..
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:2)
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:5, Insightful)
Which one is more evil? Refusing to provide your service to a population that could otherwise benefit from it, even in its reduced capacity, or making it available, even if you might not be happy with the terms you're required to comply with?
The correct answer -- neither. Neither one is inherently evil. The first one is petty and immature, and the second one can be construed as greedy without knowing all of the details.
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:2, Insightful)
Is it better not to have slavery? Or to have slavery and abide by the law, and treat your slaves as nice as you can? I'd vote that the first one is the more socially responsible one.
Yeah, this is a bit of a stretch comparison, but the point I'm trying to make is that Google could have made a stand to say, "what you, China, is doing is wrong, and we will "do no evil." Instead, they accept the check and say, "we'll do what we c
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:2)
Scams perpetrated through Adwords/Adsense. Keywords are being bid up by the scum that can afford to--the ones that lie to make the sale. It's tough for a legit company to compete with one that will lie.
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:2)
Accounting practices (Score:2)
Re:What about the not-so-good things? (Score:3, Interesting)
I know that's hardly the end of the world but it's depresing nonetheless.
I'd love to be on the inside of this machine (Score:3, Interesting)
Give them a few years and their database of profiles will be awsome.. I just hope their not working in concert with any covert u.s. government institutions.
Look they can't be evil (Score:2, Funny)
They pretty much cancel each other out as I see it.
Google = "The Internet" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Google = "The Internet" (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Google = "The Internet" (Score:2, Interesting)
But I'd say they feel that IE is the Internet more than anything else. We recommand and install Firefox for all our clients, and I've heard remarks ranging from "Oh, other people make IE now, too?" to "Oh, IE is the best, that's why it comes with Wi
Google Beta = "The Internet" (Score:5, Funny)
To my 9 yo son, the name of the company is "Google Beta".
April 20, 2005 (Score:5, Funny)
Garage? (Score:5, Funny)
Is it just me, or does it seem every computer "revolution" begins in a garage (*ahem* apple, etc)?
*Note to self* Get a garage.
Re:Garage? (Score:2)
Re:Garage? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Garage? (Score:2)
Google a threat? (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless Google pulls a rabbit out of a hat (like a new operating system), I cant see this changing any time soon.
Re:Google a threat? (Score:3, Interesting)
Google isn't all powerful yet for a diffrent reason, they simply haven't had enough time at the top yet, yahoo, hotbot and all other search engines initially provided increadibly accurate results but were later spammed out of existance and are only now returning to functionality.
Google will likely face the same fate, the attacks on blogs has been one symptom the attack on googles adwords may be the next.
YaGooHooGle! (Score:2, Interesting)
For those of you who can't decide whether Yahoo! or Google is better...
YaGooHooGle! [yagoohoogle.com]They haven't been too evil (Score:3, Insightful)
Stay good, Google! Stay good! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Stay good, Google! Stay good! (Score:3, Insightful)
When the majority of firms are part of the 'dark side' then it makes more sense to go counter what they do and just let the integrity and quality of your work speak for you. Eventually, the people get fed up with the dark side shitting on them and then they turn to you as a shining example of how to
Their impact on the internets? (Score:3, Funny)
Google is way overestimated. (Score:3, Interesting)
Google has had very little real impact on the "Internet". For those of us who used it before Google, before the web, P2P, bittorrent, and the hordes of stupid people who populate it, the internet is about the same.
I think that if Google has had any effect it is largely negative. Google Groups has done more harm then good, Usenet used to be a place you could go for real information. Now it is nothing but complete crap.
As for searching, Altavista was acceptable before google was on the scenes. Google really offers nothing new. They simple consolidate what can be found elsewhere by any savvy user.
Don't get me wrong. I think they are a great company and I use their products every day but I also think they are just another internet company and eventually they will be replaced. Companies like these (Google, Yahoo, Ask Jeeves) tend to have a boom followed by a period of dwindling interest as it finds its niche. Google is just another niche company that happens to be in the boom stage at the moment.
Re:Google is way overestimated. (Score:3, Insightful)
I too used to go on USENET quite a bit to find out interesting tech information, but I stopped in the late ninties once surfing the web made getting that information a whole lot easier (and cleaner for tha tmatter). It's not a good thing whe
Re:Google is way overestimated. (Score:3, Insightful)
google groups has done usenet harm in a way: they've now got "google groups" and most younger people don't know their NNTP from their elbow. you can now not only post to usenet via google groups, but *start up new google groups* which obviously don't propogate out to usenet - hence a google groups user's unlikely to go and start using usenet.
usenet's signal to noise ratio is somewhat h
The Microsoft threat (Score:2)
They All Become Evil, Eventually... (Score:4, Insightful)
The same thing will likely happen to Google, though the term 'evil' may a bit overused. Google is a public company now, and like all public companies, they have a responsibility to maximize shareholder value. If the directors of the company will not do this, the board has a responsibility to put in place people who will.
That said, Google will become more like Microsoft and more like Adobe over time. They will try to protect their market share, they will try to prevent the entry of others into their market space that they perceive as a threat. And, given the world's propensity to pull for the "little guy" Google will in turn be perceived (rightly or wrongly) as a bully, a bad guy and therefore -- evil.
This is a natural progression for successful startups. Microsoft did not begin as a huge monolith, it was a small company that one could send an e-mail to the founders and usually get a reply. It was also a decent company from a service standpoint. They grew, their market grew and the service got a lot less personal and the stakes got a whole lot bigger. Thirty years later, they are thought of as a James Bond villain.
Re:They All Become Evil, Eventually... (Score:5, Interesting)
The philosophy behind "maximize shareholder value" is one that I have never been able to understand. A corporation will certainly want its stock to maintain some value - otherwise they will not be able get new capital through issuing new stock - but in the end it's not the stockholders that keep the company in business. It's the customers who keep the company in business. (And in the case of Google, the "customers" I'm referring to aren't the people giving Google money, they're the people using Google to search - although in Google's case some concessions must be made to advertisers.) A company that has customers who are happy with its products will probably maintain or increase the value of its stock (not to mention customer loyalty and word-of-mouth's affect on profit margins). A company that is increasing the value of its stock artificially (by stock buy-backs, for example), is probably not a company that is keeping its customers happy.
I'm not trying to say companies that are trying to maximize shareholder value are evil. I'm trying to say that I think the belief that maximizing shareholder value is a good business practice is misguided, as it's something that will happen naturally if the company is being run properly.
I know I'm probably talking out my ass and will be flamed for it, but that's the way I feel.
--Ender
Re: you're sort of right (Score:2, Interesting)
Additionally, the stockholders are the owners. They're the ones who have money invested and want a return on that investment.
I'll agree 100% that Wall Street dances and finagling with the stock in artificial manners isn't in the best interests of either the stockholders or the company, but the goal of a company at the end of the day is to earn the owners money.
After all, if you sta
If Sergey and Larry stick (?!?!) (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't be evil (Score:2, Funny)
Don't forget to be the best search engine (Score:2)
Google is just the best until it gets too big, too bloated and the right information doesn't pop up at the top of the list but rather adds related to your search. The next best search engine is just waiting to happen.
One of the most important!?! (Score:2, Insightful)
Huh??? What about, oh, I don't know... oil companies, food companies, telecom companies, drug and health industries, transportation.... I could go on, perhaps just consider companies that have been around for, oh, longer than 10 years or so for some companies that are vastly more "important" than some search engine.
The internet is not the entire world, people, much as we sometimes wish it were. If it magically went away today, the vast maj
Just wait (Score:2, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wow (Score:2)
I disagree with your statement: "...., In the grand grand scheme of things I would say that it is barely even relevant...."
A company (or person for that matter) doesn't have to be curing a disease to be important... It merely has to be important. And Google is that! And, we can argue the nuance of how important, but for me any company that can "verb" its own name has done something (especially considering contextually the verb "Google" is a benign, even good construct, not an expletive).
Google may not p
Innovation vs Popularization (Score:5, Interesting)
What it comes down to me is the fact that Google seems to actually care about pushing new ideas and new technologies. Microsoft has always been about giving the user as little as possible until someone else innovates, and then sinking cash into bringing it to the popular market.
Microsoft's impact on the Internet exists because most people are browsing from a Microsoft platform. If Google can introduce a platform to browse to all their services easily (Google branded Knoppix, perhaps) they might just remove the element of: "I'll use Microsoft Internet services because it must work smoothly with my OS".
And yet, the frogies are up in arms (Score:2)
Please Post Fortune Article (Score:2)
So, could someone with a subscription do us all a favor and cut n' paste?
Social processes corrupt organizations. (Score:3, Interesting)
From the Globe and Mail article: "If Sergey and Larry stick to their corporate mantra - Don't be evil - and are able to stem degeneration into the typically corrupt corporate ethos,
I find that interesting. I have come to the same conclusion, that there are social processes that cause organizations to become corrupt. I doubt that the leadership of Google has much theoretical understanding of those processes, so I worry that Google will eventually lose its ability to be successful.
Don't bother reading the Fortune Magazine "article". It is the typical Fortune Magazine hack job. In my opinion, Fortune Magazine's business plan is just to tell rich people what they want to hear. Also, the article is an advertisement to give money to the magazine, not the full article.
The Fortune Magazine article is called "Gates vs. Google". However, Microsoft has never been successful competing in areas where the company does not have a virtual monopoly due to proprietary file formats like those in NTFS and Microsoft Word.
In my opinion, Microsoft so lacks the ability to compete honestly that the company tries to steal [google.com] what it cannot create. Microsoft is more a troublemaker than a competitor.
do not be evil? (Score:3, Funny)
RTFA (Score:3, Informative)
Google's creating a rich container wih Firefox (Score:4, Interesting)
An enhanced version of Firefox freely downloadable from Google for all operating systems would be their own platform which, besides being able to view standard web pages, would enable then to distribute richer applications in a brand (Firefox) that has mindshare and user buy in.
Think! Mac applications are cool because of the contained environment that is OS X (except Apple did not create enough of their own native applications). Microsoft is successfull with their applications because they built a container that is at least perfect for them -- Windows. The same will apply to Google with what I am convinced will be the enhanced browser environment based on Firefox.
Why is Linux not gaining on the desktop? Because there is no "perfect Linux desktop container". The properties of such a container is that it should be standardized, easy to accept new client programs, have easy to use services and a well known API that is well documented and defined so that programmers can easily write to it.
Instead we have a bunch of fragmented containers (KDE, Gnome, lots of lesser known desktop environments) that are incomplete and immature. Heck, its a pain the ass sometimes to get simple brain-dead stuff such as printing and mounting a drive working. So you have projects like OpenOffice having to write their own container!!! And Miguel (bless his heart) making a version of Microsoft's .NET container (Mono) for Linux that is still incomplete and sits with an incomplete container -- Gnome, which is sitting on top of an incomplete desktop container -- Linux.
I know this is a rant, but my shop recently switched back to Windows from Linux desktops (about 40 people), why? Because the new CEO (and me too), were sick and tired of people trying to get things to work together properly. We were sick of not having an Exchange replacement (don't get me started on the open source once now "available"). And new hires and our clients were just plain used to using the dominant containers out there (windows/mac).
So Google is moving in the direction of best of all worlds. They are creating their own perfect container for their applications, that can run on imperfect operating systems. Genius! I don't even have to wish them luck, because its a great idea which has to work -- unless they get Evil.
Been there done that (Score:3)
I love the Forbes article (Score:4, Insightful)
Seriously, what did MS do first? The association 'MS = cool new technology' makes not sense to me. They almost missed the Internet by their own admission. I think BillG isn't pissed that didn't come up with a cool search engine but because he can't kill Google like he did with numerous others.
Re:I just wonder... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Don't Be Evil? Don't Make Me Laugh. (Score:2)
Reportedly, Google have announced plans for Mac and Linux versions of Desktop Search, and Desktop Search recently gained support for Trillian logs, Firefox cache (that's even out of the box), even if we're conveniently skipping the plug-in API a