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Google Businesses The Internet Technology

Google Striking Fear into the Corporate Masses 295

SpectralDesign writes "The New York Times reports that Google is striking fear into the hearts of even unrelated industries. From the article: 'We watch Google very closely at Wal-Mart," said Jim Breyer, a member of Wal-Mart's board. In Google, Wal-Mart sees both a technology pioneer and the seed of a threat, said Mr. Breyer, who is also a partner in a venture capital firm. The worry is that by making information available everywhere, Google might soon be able to tell Wal-Mart shoppers if better bargains are available nearby.'"
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Google Striking Fear into the Corporate Masses

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  • Monopolies (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Crouty ( 912387 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @07:36AM (#13962260)
    Jim Breyer is not against monopolies, he is just against monopolies that others have. This small-minded businessman is for the right thing for the wrong reasons.
    • Re:Monopolies (Score:4, Interesting)

      by LostCluster ( 625375 ) * on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:40AM (#13962425)
      Google's near-monopoly in search doesn't bother Wal-Mart, it's the fact that Google has apparent interest in supplying data to shoppers while they're inside Wal-Mart.
      • Re:Monopolies (Score:3, Interesting)

        by whovian ( 107062 )
        Google has apparent interest in supplying data to shoppers while they're inside Wal-Mart.

        There are instances where WalMart doesn't have the lowest prices. Obviously, items on sale is one case. However, in my area the WalMart checkers will price-match if you mention another store's sale price. (Don't know if that's company policy or not.) The other case I've noticed is where one chain store's private label is priced a few cents lower than WalMart's.

        But all retail stores should be wary, particularly when cit
        • Re:Monopolies (Score:3, Insightful)

          by LostCluster ( 625375 ) *
          I can't begin to tell you how often I have wanted to price-compare Best Buy vs. Staples vs. Circuit City vs. OfficeMax when standing in any one of those stores.

          And Best Buy, Staples, Circuit City, OfficeMax, etc. all can't begin to tell you how much they enjoy the fact you can't.
        • Re:Monopolies (Score:3, Insightful)

          by doormat ( 63648 )
          I can't begin to tell you how often I have wanted to price-compare Best Buy vs. Staples vs. Circuit City vs. OfficeMax when standing in any one of those stores.

          Same here. However, Best Buy has computers hooked up to the internet, just sitting there in the open for anyone to use. I go and browse to OM, OD, CC, Newegg, ZipZoomFly and Monarch for the item I was looking to buy. It was quite funny and informative. And just go jab the blueshirts a bit, I left Newegg up on the browser.

          I tell ya, the next killer ap
    • Re:Monopolies (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DrHanser ( 845654 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @09:11AM (#13962527) Homepage

      I'm not sure why this is modded insightful. As a member of Wal-Mart's board, it is his job to do what's in the best interest of Wal-Mart and its shareholders, not the general public. Railing against a businessman for doing what makes sense for his business is more than a little silly.

      I'm no fan of Wal-Mart by any stretch of the imagination, but I'm a capitalist at heart, and seeing comments like these make me scratch my head in confusion.

      • Re:Monopolies (Score:2, Insightful)

        Many of the people who loudly oppose WalMart as a big monopoly, are proponents of a former powerful monopoly. One that in the past wielded as much or more power than WalMart. I am, of course, referring to the Unions of retail clerks, food handlers, etc. who are being badly beaten every time WalMart opens a new store that sells groceries, produce, and meat.

        They're just pissed because someone else is eating their cookies now.
      • Re:Monopolies (Score:5, Insightful)

        by czarangelus ( 805501 ) <iapetus.gmail@com> on Sunday November 06, 2005 @10:28AM (#13962819)
        So when IBM worked with Hitler to exterminate the Jews... the fucking shareholders, man! Think of the fucking shareholders!

        This is a rhetorical example, but seriously. There have got to be limits to what a corporation is allowed to do in pursuit of the almighty dollar, but you never hear any of the Ayn Rand-types talking about that. But capitalism is no magic utopia where the invisible hand stops pollution, disposes of hazardous waste properly, or ensures that children are fed and cared for even if their parents are drug-addict deadbeats. Time and time again, corporations show to us that they are untrustworthy on their own, and will always do the most profitable thing, no matter how many lives they destroy in the process.
        • Re:Monopolies (Score:4, Insightful)

          by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @03:16PM (#13964350)
          Pure capitalism works great if individuals have well developed social values. Communism works great if individuals have well developed social values. Individuals don't. Both systems don't work well. And no, the US isn't a pure capitalist system. For that you'd have to look at Britain, Germany and France at the beginning of the industrial revolution. You know, where they used children to mine coal because they were smaller and could fit through the tunnels more easily. Not to mention being in plentiful supply, and therefore cheap.
    • Re:Monopolies (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DoraLives ( 622001 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @09:32AM (#13962599)
      for the right thing for the wrong reasons

      As it's shaping up right now, Google, monopoly or not, is beginning to look like the only thing that might possess the throw-weight to successfully counter the otherwise alarming trend that has recently manifested itself among almost all large capitalist enterprises, and that is the trend of restricting and choking access to information/data/operating code to the point where no one is able to access/use/employ that information/data/operating code without the considered permissions of whomever "owns" it.

      We now live in a VERY dangerous time in which the scales seem to be tipping in favor of an Orwellian outcome where all information is locked down tight and any attempt to look under the hood or otherwise perform any "unauthorized" operation on any information/data/operating code is met with a draconian response of severely criminalizing those who would attempt to do so.

      As it stands now, Google seems to be the only large capitalist entity that would further its interests by tearing down any and all restrictions on information/data/operating code.

      As loathsome as the business of political lobbying may be, it is now incumbent upon Google to get cracking in the seats of political power to ensure that information/data/operating code is kept as open and free as possible.

      No one else has the clout that Google now possesses, and therefore no one else has a prayer of achieving the absolutely vital goal of keeping information open and free.

      Should this endeavor fail, some very dark times await us.

      That Google may be a monopoly is, at present, something that we're just going to have to ignore. We can't have our cake and eat it too, so we must, unfortunately, cheer on Google as it becomes even larger and more powerful.

      Should the battle to free information/data/operating code be won (and it is by no means a certainty), then and on then may we turn our attentions toward Google itself with an eye toward reducing such excesses of size as exist at that time.

      For now, Google is the enemy of our enemies, and is perforce our friend.

      • Re:Monopolies (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Crouty ( 912387 )
        the enemy of our enemies, and is perforce our friend.
        Talking of dangerous times, this is the most dangerous concept I know. Like in "the Shiites are the enemies of our enemy Saddam." There are plenty of search engines out there, some already very good (like vivisimo) and even ones under open source.
        • There are plenty of search engines out there, some already very good (like vivisimo) and even ones under open source.

          You are absolutely right, of course, but unfortunately none are well-endowed with potential political power to reverse the present day trend towards the suffocation of information.

      • For now, Google is the enemy of our enemies, and is perforce our friend.

        "The enemy of my enemy is my enemy's enemy. No more. No less."

        - Rule #29, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Pirates [schlockmercenary.com]
      • Power (Score:5, Insightful)

        by twitter ( 104583 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @10:44AM (#13962875) Homepage Journal
        For now, Google is the enemy of our enemies, and is perforce our friend.

        No, Google is your friend. Google seeks to create and share information others create. As long as they believe in and fight for the right of others to do the same, they are your friend. This is the exact opposite and the cure for the insane but inate will to control others you see. The truth does set you free.

        We now live in a VERY dangerous time in which the scales seem to be tipping in favor of an Orwellian outcome where all information is locked down tight and any attempt to look under the hood or otherwise perform any "unauthorized" operation on any information/data/operating code is met with a draconian response of severely criminalizing those who would attempt to do so.

        Ah, true, but you do not go far enough in your understanding of collective oligarchy and current law. Creating and sharing information is also against the rules by the DMCA, a very real law. You are supposed to mindlessly consume information fed to you, not examine, share or even remember it. Control of information is key to establishing an Orwellian society. That society proves it's existence to itself through suffering. The result is a society that exists to make you misserrable.

        In the pathetic WalMart example you see the motivation and an indication of how absolutely that motivation is applied. They are paranoid. Perfect information might hurt their sales and ability to take your money. Walmart is also freaky about taking pictures in their stores and other petty details. It's all about power and control. The small scale of this power and control is a good reason to be afraid. It indicates that no detail is too small to be controlled and manipulated. Power demands absolute power and the will to power is part of human nature. Small minded people get a kick out of such petty control but it's part of all of us and it's implications are much larger.

        Orwell recognized this about human nature. He drew his conclusions from experience in the colonies of the British Empire, as a tramp in Paris and London, a witness to communist revolutions in Spain and the second world war. These were all terrible experiences where the ordinary rules of conduct were removed and people were free to do oppress each other in any way. So, I'll quote the master [online-literature.com]:

        'The rule of the Party is for ever. Make that the starting-point of your thoughts.'

        ' You understand well enough how the Party maintains itself in power. Now tell me why we cling to power. What is our motive? Why should we want power?'

        He knew in advance what O'Brien would say. That the Party did not seek power for its own ends, but only for the good of the majority. That it sought power because men in the mass were frail cowardly creatures who could not endure liberty or face the truth, and must be ruled over and systematically deceived by others who were stronger than themselves. That the choice for mankind lay between freedom and happiness, and that, for the great bulk of mankind, happiness was better. That the party was the eternal guardian of the weak, a dedicated sect doing evil that good might come, sacrificing its own happiness to that of others.

        'You are ruling over us for our own good,' he said feebly. 'You believe that human beings are not fit to govern themselves, and therefore --'

        He started and almost cried out. A pang of pain had shot through his body. O'Brien had pushed the lever of the dial up to thirty-five.

        'That was stupid, Winston, stupid!' he said. 'You should know better than to say a thing like that.'

        'The Party seeks power entirely for its own sake. We are not interested in the good of others; we are interested solely in power. Not wealth or luxury or long life or happiness: only power, pure power. ... The German Nazis and the Russian Communists came very close to us in thei

        • Re:Power (Score:4, Insightful)

          by DoraLives ( 622001 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @01:24PM (#13963675)
          Ah, true, but you do not go far enough .....

          Well spoken. Well quoted. Well worth extended consideration. You further elaborate my position for me nicely, and for that I tip my hat to you, sir. But I will continue to closely watch Google anyway. Times and men have a habit of changing, and I feel confident that Google is not somehow shielded from the currents of change and the unknown ways and places that they may lead to. That said, for now, Google is indeed my friend.

  • nnnnnGoogle ! nnnnGoogle!

    Now get me some shrubberies...
  • by Sacarino ( 619753 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @07:37AM (#13962264) Homepage
    Hell, I can tell you a better place to buy crap than Wally World... It's called Costco.

    They don't treat their employees like EA coders, and you can still buy cheap.

    I didn't even need Google for that.

    • What if you're more than 50 miles from a Costco (actually, more like 100 miles, guessing based on the locations of the closest ones - nothing showed up in the search results for my zip code cranked out to the max of 50 miles), and within 20 miles of a Wal-Mart?
    • Hell, I can tell you a better place to buy crap than Wally World... It's called Costco.

      Except you have to pay $45 a year to belong, you have to have a warehouse to store all that bulk stuff, and there's a lot of stuff they just don't have. And you absolutely, positively, cannot go on a Saturday. A Costco trip won't last under 3 hrs then.

      So there's still room for Wally in the grand scheme of things.

      • Sam's Club membership cost me $20 a year, and comparing it to my friend who has a Costco membership, I'm not missing anything. And yeah, Sams has better deals than Wal Mart, even as a single guy in college you can make use of it (5 pounds of cheese doodles? hell yes! more seriously though, meat in bulk... parcel it up and freeze it, save a few bucks here and there and the membership pays for itself a few times over)

        -everphilski-
    • If I ever have 8 kids like Dick Van Patten, I might need to buy things in the quantities that Costco sells. I checked them out once - you can buy cantaloupes there, as long as you want five of them. For now, I'm sticking with Wal-Mart for disposable crap and Target for things that I could conceivably still be using in 6 months (because Wal-Mart crap usually doesn't last that long).
    • A- you are nuts. Costco and the other "members" stores are a huge scam. I find the exact same products (sans their "store branded") at other places for the same or less most of the time.

      Bissel Steam cleaner, MSRP $299.00, Costco $195.00, Target $192.00

      therefore target is much cheaper because you did not have to shell out a "membership fee" to buy it. Food is overpriced at Costco and is of no better quality.

      The only things I find cheaper there is digital photo and photo developing to prints and their "bl
    • Try Sam's Club.
    • one doesn't need Google to find better deals at all. All you have to do is open your Sunday paper to the ads and use your Target ad which always beats Wal-Mart's price. Wal-Mart being "cheap" is only true with wal-mart brand ie "generic" products.
  • wow! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Janek Kozicki ( 722688 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @07:37AM (#13962265) Journal
    funniest reason to be scared, ever.

    they are saying: the cheapest on the whole world, are they lying? No, it's simply not possible

    btw, castorama (like wal-mart in europe, but smaller and focuses only on things that people may use when building/renoving a house) gives warranty on their prices. Their ad is: "if you find this thing cheaper anywhere, we will return to you the price difference". I've never tried if this actually works.
    • There are some conditions though, mainly on the distance to the competitor with lower price (and i'm pretty sure online sellers don't work).

    • Wal-Mart says if you find it cheaper before you buy, you get either 100% or 110% (I forget which) of the difference.

      After you buy, you're on your own.

      I know HH Gregg (an "electronics" store - big screen TVs and clothes washers and dryers is pretty much all they sell) has a 110% up to 30 days AFTER purchase guarantee.
    • Bunnings do the same in Australia, but even if I did find a packet of screws 5c cheaper somewhere else I would not be first in line to claim my refund. Whatever happened to caveat emptor?
      • Re:wow! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by loucura! ( 247834 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @09:31AM (#13962595)
        Whatever happened to caveat emptor?

        Price-matching isn't about the consumer, it's about competitors. When a retail store announces that it will match prices, it is telling its competitors that it wants to end a price-war. When the competitors follow suit, the price-matching serves as a mechanism so the corporations in question can see who is breaking the "terms" of their cartel action. In essence, price matching is collusion to keep prices higher.
    • In a way, Walmart has a guarantee too. It's called:
      "If we found out some other retailer is getting a cheaper price on something from the same distributor/manufacturer, our purchasing price will drop below theirs retroactively"

      Basically if you (as a manufacturer or distributor) want to do business with Walmart you have to sign a contract (standard operating procedure). That contract states that if you sell a product to another company for less than x cents more then what Walmart pays, Walmarts purcha
    • "if you find this thing cheaper anywhere, we will return to you the price difference". I've never tried if this actually works.

      Well, for the one electronics chain that I know off that has the same policy, the catch is the definition of "anywhere".
      That's "anywhere in a reasonable area" (probably the same city) so they don't have tom compete with online stores for example.
      Also, most customers don't bother to check so it's a relatively cheap promise.
      Example: Some older movie DVDs were/are almost twice as
    • by wowbagger ( 69688 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @09:16AM (#13962553) Homepage Journal
      Many stores, including to an extent WalMart, will offer that guarantee. However, while on the face of it the offer is good, the reality is that the offer is meaningless, as they have a trick to get around it.

      Example:

      You go into Z-Mart, and you see a Ricaroni 5 CD changer for $15. You pick up a Z-Mart flier showing the price.

      You now head over to Q-Mart, and locate what initially appears to be the same Ricaroni 5 CD changer for $20. Since Q-Mart offers a "200% price difference" offer, you figure you are going to get the CD player for $10.

      But wait! When you go to claim your offer, the friendly Q-Mart manager points out that the Z-Mart flier is offering a Ricaroni model #5551212-a player, and Q-Mart's is a Ricaroni model #5551212-b - a different model number. He then points out that their offer only applies to "the same model", and since this is NOT the same model number, it is not covered under their vaunted "200% price difference" offer.

      Now, if you were able to check, you would find out that the only folks who have the model #5551212-a are Z-Mart, and the only folks who have the #5551212-b are Q-Mart. Moreover, if you could go to the Ricaroni manufacturing plant, you would see that the only difference between the model numbers is the model number sticker - they are otherwise the same unit.

      Then why the model number difference? Because both Q-Mart and Z-Mart insist upon the model numbers they sell being unique - so that their "200% price guarantee" trick can work.

      I've changed the names to protect the guilty, and obviously this trick isn't played on every item sold in every store, but it is played enough to allow the stores to offer tricks like this. And before you ask why the manufacturers go along with this - because when you are dealing with customers with the buying power of WalMart, BestBuy, and so on, you do what they want, or you don't sell product.
      • This happens in many consumer markets. The one that springs to mind is the "duty-free shopping" products.

        The duty-free shops almost always have products that can NOT be found in regular consumer shops outside of airports. It specifically is to prevent comparison shopping. I have a friend who produces wines and champagnes, one set of labels for most of the products, another set of labels specifically for duty-free. The same thing happens with most of the products, like perfumes, chocolates, alcohols and elec
    • "Their ad is: "if you find this thing cheaper anywhere, we will return to you the price difference". I've never tried if this actually works."

      A similar price promise at Sainsburys Homebase (a DIY store in the UK having its ass kicked by Wilkinsons) turned out to be false -- they would only refund 9/10 of the difference between the two prices.

      For example, I bought something for £4 in homebase that cost £3 in wilko. In return for going back to the homebase store, taking them up on their price pro
  • by httpamphibio.us ( 579491 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @07:41AM (#13962274)
    unlikely...

    cheaper than walmart online? yeah, but it's not just froogle that lets us find that out.
    • Google has no interest in becoming a retailer, but has interest in telling you what the price is elsewhere. Imagine a Froogle Local that you could access by showing the barcode to your cameraphone.

      With Wal-Mart having a history of kicking out of the store people who dare to write prices on a notebook, they most likely won't like people doing that. But how can they stop it?
      • I work at Wal-Mart while I'm completing my education, and I have never ever seen a person kicked out of the store for writing down prices. Hell, people open a package of cookies, eat 2 or 3, and then throw it on the ground and the managers do nothing.
        • Hell, people open a package of cookies, eat 2 or 3, and then throw it on the ground and the managers do nothing.

          Here in Amsterdam the staff might kill you [lycos.nl], or at least beat you up, for behaviour like that. We have had quite a number of cases of excessively violent citizen arrests by staff in the last few years.
    • by fermion ( 181285 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:47AM (#13962450) Homepage Journal
      Many years ago Walmart was a bit cheaper. They now are often much cheaper as they now have the power to pressure suppliers and rent factories to produce thier own branded products. This is a defacto national brand that competes with other national brands through the advantage of not having to run seperate ad campaigns.

      However, like other companies that started on the bottom rung by being cheap, they now need to learn a new trick or become irrelevent. Walmart needs customers with money, customers that are not going to shop at a cheap place that depends on illigal immigrants and desperate mothers. Shoppers that are going to value reasonable working conditions over wide aisles.

      And it is going to be hard for Walmart to keep prices low, unless they start looking at ineffeciencies in management and other overhead. These ineffeciencies, according to Forbes, is why Costco is a better company. And these ineffeciencies are why Walmart is vunerable even at the brick and mortor level. Historically a firm that competes just on price, or just on style, are not good long term prospects.There are a few national chains, like Target, that are competeing heavily on quality of life issues, and those chains will likely do better as Walmart is forced to sacrifice price to attact the more affluent customer.

      Walmart has already shown no dedication to a particular community. There are empty husks of building all over the country left as Walmart moved 10 miles up the road to cheaper land. With the price of gas, we may again be reaching a point where a 5 mile trip to the safeway is better than a 10 mile trip to the walmart.

  • by subitophoto ( 758415 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @07:43AM (#13962281) Homepage
    Is Walmart supposed to have the better prices... Always ;)
  • Lame... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Douglas Simmons ( 628988 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @07:45AM (#13962284) Homepage
    Competition historically has been a good thing, but here are two companies, public i should add and /not/ that completely disconnected in terms of their respective industries, that could improve each other's customers' satisfaction. But once in a while, as in this instance, things get too adversarial and people stop working and start fighting.

    If this were kindergarten, they'd be given time-out to stare at a wall. I'm not going to suggest that there's any conspiracy with Microsoft pulling some wal-mart puppet strings, so I'll just some other paranoid poster take care of that.

  • That works both way (Score:4, Interesting)

    by trollable ( 928694 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @07:46AM (#13962291) Homepage
    Yes, Google will tell you if there is cheaper somewhere else but it will also bring you customers if your offer is the cheapest. However this is not new: many services like that exist (Kelkoo [kelkoo.com]), but they are limited to online shops. Google already has Froogle [google.com]. The wave is reaching the mortar shops. Fine for me.
  • Ah . . . (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Ph33r th3 g(O)at ( 592622 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @07:47AM (#13962294)
    . . . so capitalism is best with perfect information. Wal*Mart no doubt would like as close to perfect information about its customers and what they might be willing to pay in a given market. But they cry foul when the tables are turned and their policies of discriminatory pricing based on region and neighboorhood might be in jeapordy. Go figure.
    • Somebody other than Wal-Mart having a database of Wal-Mart's price offerings could put Wal-Mart stores in competition with each other, as the consumer from home can decide whether they want to go to the Wal-Mart to the North or the one to the South.
  • Sad (Score:5, Funny)

    by chrisgeleven ( 514645 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @07:48AM (#13962303) Homepage
    Oh the horror, someone telling me that I might get a better price somewhere else!!!
  • by NigelJohnstone ( 242811 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:00AM (#13962333)
    I doubt its Walmart that should be afraid, more likely brands like Nike, Reebok and Gucci and not only that they should be afraid of the information thats out there not the search engines that find it.

    Let me explain:

    A quick quiz:
    Gucci is an Italian Fashion product maker right? Tick tock tick tock ..... times up.
    Wrong! Gucci are an Amsterdam company that buy in practically all of their products that makes *brands* (Boucheron, Balenciaga...) they say they buy shoes from Italy, according to this guy, the Italian high-fashion shoe industry get most of the shoe from Romania and China now and as a result Italy is Europe's biggest shoe importer:
    http://www.brandchannel.com/features_effect.asp?id =179 [brandchannel.com]

    Quiz:
    Nike are a high quality manufactured brand, Reebok are a high quality manufactured brand, Pan Shoes Bangkok are some crappy Asian brand? Right or wrong, tick tock tick tock... Wrong. Bangkok Rubber company make Reeboks for Reebok, Nike's for Nike and Pan Shoes for Pan Group (which owns Bangkok Rubber Company).
    http://www.pan-group.com/ [pan-group.com]

    CAT Footware (From Caterpillar):
    http://www.catfootwear.com/Main.aspx [catfootwear.com]
    Cat Footware are American made and 'Authentic since **1904***' (from their website)? Correct or not?
    Tick tock tick tock... Wrong.

    Cat brand products are made by Wolverine World Wide.
    Here is the information saying they signed up the CAT brand in ***1994***, not 1904:
    http://www.wolverineworldwide.com/brands_cat.asp [wolverineworldwide.com]

    Here's their annual report:
    http://www.wolverineworldwide.com/investors_report s.asp [wolverineworldwide.com]

    So where are CAT brand shoes made? Read the 2004 Report, page 29.
    Risk factors:
    "reliance on foreign sourcing and concentration of production in China; the availability and price of power, labor and resources in key foreign sourcing countries, including China;"

    Made in China.

    It's not the search engines, its the information they should fear. Look at the CAT thing, I simply clicked on their financial details and did a search for 'China' to locate the information. Nothing to do with Google or Yahoo.
    • Indeed. Just back from Bangkok and, looking at, for instance, the authentic-feeling copies of Swiss-branded chronometers, there, I couldn't help wonder how the Chinese/Taiwanese could come with such perfect reproductions of products originally designed and made elsewhere.

      I suppose I know now; it's coz they manufacture them.

    • Yes, but society at large doesn't really care about the "Made in China" thing anymore. If we did, nobody would be buying the stuff. I think people would begin to care if the following chain of events occurred however:
      • China attacks Taiwan (which they are already threatening [cnn.com] to do)
      • The U.S. supports Taiwan's military (which it already does [pbs.org])
      • China restricts export trade or places embargoes against the U.S. in retaliation
      • Prices on Chinese imported goods shoot through the roof

      I suppose the U.S. could cancel thei

      • China attacks Taiwan

        They've threatened it, but they won't. They're incapable of taking the island. The Chinese Navy doesn't have enough amphibious transports to put enough troops onto the island fast enough, air drop of troops only works when you have air superiority (the Chinese wouldn't, even without our help), and the majority of their troop transports are from the fifties and sixties - they're likely to lose a significant percentage of the invading force on mechandical trouble alone (lose in the sense t
    • Do you honestly think that the majority of consumers care about where their products are made? I know very few people (one, and he's an anarcho-socialist vegan millionare [honest!]) who really pays attention to that type of information. Information about manufacturing is not what brands need to worry about.

      What most people care about is getting stuff, and artificial intelligence and the internet (which is really what this article is about, not Google per se) is making this cheaper by stimulating competition
      • I *know* they care (Score:5, Insightful)

        by NigelJohnstone ( 242811 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @10:46AM (#13962885)
        " Do you honestly think that the majority of consumers care about where their products are made? "

        Oh yes, I think they do. That's why I think these brands link themselves to American products/ US Atheletes etc. to give the impression of being a US product (Or Swiss or Italian or whatever).

        "What most people care about is getting stuff, and artificial intelligence and the internet (which is really what this article is about, not Google per se) is making this cheaper by stimulating competition."

        I say this again and again, price isn't everything, value for money is. If you can't tell if an Italian Luxury handbag is really an Italian Luxury Handbag and not just a Chinese bag with some finishing done in Italy to qualify for the "Made in Italy" label, then how can you determine value for money? Any search you get from Froogle doesn't help with that.

        Plus how much can you save? Is it worth the extra drive and extra time? I really don't think Walmart has much to fear there.
    • Man. Talk about an annoying way to make your point. Next time, just skip the "Quiz" "Tick Tock" crap and make your point already.
  • by lord sibn ( 649162 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:00AM (#13962336)
    Just a few years ago, Google was nothing. Now entire industries are shitting their pants, because they are incapable of understanding Google's business model.

    Google has become ubiquitous; They make products people want to use. And they don't even feel compelled to say "customer satisfaction is our number one priority!" on every sign, railing, and even doormat in the building.

    While other companies (and even industries) are struggling to lock consumers into their own little slice of the marketing pie, they have not figured out a way to get people to stop going to google for products or services. And that scares the bejesus out of them. It's not that hard; run the business and stay in the black. Give people what they want, instead of offering them a product and telling them that they want it because you want what's best for them.
    • No. They are afraid because Google is a company with billions of dollars in reserves. That's all. All companies just want to make money. If Walmart figured out a way to do anything such as DVD rentals, selling food, selling cars, they will do it. Business is not just about trying to fill a niche. Business is also about trying to make as much money as possible. When people spend money to buy ads for their blog at google, that money could have been spent in Walmart stores. This is normal.
      • by xintegerx ( 557455 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:45AM (#13962444) Homepage
        What you are thinking of is Walmart trying to be stationary and not adapting to the real world. You are thinking that Walmart executives are like government employees who would just want to sit and do the same exact job for 50 years. In THAT case, you are right, Walmart would be afraid of Google, a fast-moving company, taking over Walmart, a company that just wants to be stagnant. But, that's just not true. Walmart, and any other #1 company in their field, gets their company from a $0 income a year company to a billion/year income company in no other way than by always advancing and always saying, I want my share of the pie! So, I am sure that the Corporate world is looking at Google, but not in that sense. They are thinking more along the lines of, "all that money people are investing into Google, that could be money the consumers could have spent at Walmart." In other words, big companies look at each other as competitors regardless of whether they are in the same niche or field, simply because they all want that consumer $dollar. Doesn't mean they are afraid, it just means they set goals that they want that consumer's $ to go to them and not google. Even if the 2 companies have nothing to do with each other. Finally, there are a lot of great small businesses out there, and just focusing on Google like it's a god is not fair. There is a Google story on slashdot every hour and rarely about any other company.
      • I believe there is a good chance you missed my point: Google is beginning to directly compete with a lot of major big-time players. Google sprouted up virtually overnight, and is already stealing marketshare from companies that have sprawled out their empire over the course of decades. This is an unprecedented level of growth, and Steve Ballmer is royally pissed that he hasn't found a way to compete with them yet. Wal*Mart is scared as well, because what if it's true? What if Google successfully leads
  • start competing with FedEx.
  • by Biotech9 ( 704202 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:05AM (#13962348) Homepage
    Wal-mart could also see a glass half FILLED with milk, Google would be able to tell customers that Wal-mart have a better deal than their competitors. That's all google can do, is spread information. It's not ever going to act by itself, it's just going to allow people to make better decisions (assuming the information is accurate).

    Some customers might spend a while looking at froogle.com and find that the cheapest Speakers only cost 50 quid at Wal-mart, and that'll keep Wal-mart and the consumers happy.

    Others might spend time with google.com and find the best speakers are from Genelec and buy them, keeping Genelec and the consumers happy.

    More information = more informed people = less bad purchases. It can only affect Wal-mart (and others) badly if they are not offering what their target market wants.
  • Healthcare (Score:5, Insightful)

    by wralias ( 862131 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:12AM (#13962359)
    The worry is that by making information available everywhere, Google might soon be able to tell Wal-Mart shoppers if better bargains are available nearby.

    What they really should be worried about is workers finding out that other companies actually pay living wages and provide good health coverage, unlike Walmart.
    • by radarsat1 ( 786772 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @10:38AM (#13962852) Homepage
      One thing I never understood about this whole thing is why do workers feel the need to strike and unionise? If I were working at a job where I felt undervalued, I wouldn't do any of the above... too much work! I'd just find another job...

      I'm not saying this to be mean, but I've just never understood the need to strike. I mean, don't like the job? Find another one!

      (Yes, sometimes that's easier said than done, but putting in the legwork of finding another job is a better way to use your energy in the meantime, no?)

      If enough employees quit, the corporation would get the picture... but instead all the see is a "bunch of ungrateful fools"..

  • by AngryNick ( 891056 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:14AM (#13962362) Homepage Journal
    Wal-Mart's fears are very close to reality. It doesn't take an MBA to figure out that:

    maps.google.com + froggle.google.com = "She's a witch!"

    Wal-Mart should look forward to this day...or do they not really have the lowest prices?

    • What's "Froggle"? Google's pricing site is "Froogle".

    • Wal-Mart should look forward to this day...or do they not really have the lowest prices?


      It's not that simple. It's possible for any one store to have
      all the lowest prices because of something called loss-leaders.

      Each store has it's own loss-leader(s) every week - something which
      they sell at a loss to get more feet into the store - their hope
      is that people will buy other stuff which will translate into profits.

      If one store had to compete with the loss-leaders sold by all other stores,
      they would be selling a
  • get used to it (Score:5, Interesting)

    by idlake ( 850372 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:17AM (#13962368)
    Google isn't even the leader in web-based price comparisons. This is going to happen, Google or not.

    I expect the main channel of delivery in the future will be via cell phones anyway: SMS, MMS (photo of product bar code), and cell phone browser.

    I guess what he doesn't like is that, for a while, there was an information imbalance between sellers and buyers, with sellers being able to use sophisticated computer systems for pricing, but buyers being left clipping coupons. Well, that imbalance is going away. That's a good thing for a market economy and capitalism. You like market economies and capitalism, right?
  • Big corps = bad (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Elixon ( 832904 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:19AM (#13962370) Homepage Journal
    Google, Microsoft, Wall-Mart, Nestle... all of them are the same - they tend to grow too much. As the Nestle grown behind the Europe and Google grown behind the USA all became a real threat to small businesses in its segment... And wors think is that super-large corporations try to "diversificate" the risks by expanding (better "attacking") unrelated segments of business. :-) War of monopolies. The bad news for us: there will be less and less monopolies as the globalization expands.

    Huge companies has too much money so they can buy all the important konwledge (I mean patent it) and thus prevent you from being succesfull. How you will climb up if they patented the rope and even the idea of "generic way going up" ;-)

    I see google becames the same threat as microsoft is (or any other superdominant company).
  • by Animaether ( 411575 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:32AM (#13962399) Journal
    Dear WalMart,

    Why are you so afraid that Google might tell (potential patrons that there are better prices available nearby - when you, too, could be making use of this technology ?

    As soon as you spot a better price nearby, drop your prices at that location - now YOU have the better price.

    Sincerely,
        Common Sense

    -----

    Not entirely off-topic... there was a grocery store chain here in The Netherlands that would set up a mobile grocery store bus right outside a competing grocery store and let patrons of that store compare prices for the articles they had just bought by scanning the bar code. That way, they could easily tell people how much they could have saved by comparing the register stubs. More on-topic with what I wrote: *if* a product would actually have been cheaper at the store they're parked outside of, they would pass this on to corporate HQ. They, then, could issue an update to all their registers across the nation to bill that product more cheaply - the goal being to be cheaper than the competition once again.
    • Because WalMart is rarely the lowest price in an area. They only claim they are...especially when you take into consideration instant/mail-in rebates. They simply can't beat those prices...but even on much simpler products like new release DVDs, they are often $4 or $5 over the lowest priced competitor...
  • Perfect Markets (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Varitek ( 210013 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:39AM (#13962419)
    In an ideal world, a transaction between buyer and seller would be done with full information and with satisfaction on both sides. That is, it's not a zero-sum game - the buyer gets a product they're happy with at a price they like, and the seller makes his profit.

    Unfortunately, we don't live in an ideal world. The motives of companies do not always co-incide with those of the consumers. As we can see here, not only does the customer suffer from imperfect information (a market inefficiency) but the companies actively fear an increase in this information, and also actively seek to restrict the flow of information that is required to become closer to market perfection (remember the copyright arguments about the posting of special offers on third-party websites). They don't want the kind of transaction I mention above; if they think they could get away with it, they screw the customer.

    What's my point? Information is *good*, and if companies attempt to mess with the market by restricting this flow of infomation, they need to be regulated until their pips squeak. We need to realise that when businesses whine about regulation restricting the market, they're usually whining because *they* want to to mess with the markets to distort them in their favour.
  • For sure, he said "...right now, Google will do anything except cure cancer...", in a recent interview I found at http://www.zdnet.com/ [zdnet.com]
  • by alchemist68 ( 550641 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @08:57AM (#13962477)
    This is great for the consumer because is balances the economics further in the consumer's favor, makes true on the generality the "knowledge is power", and allows the consumer the keep the economy pumping by having more money to purchase other goods and services.

    Case in point: I just purchased a Power Mac G5 with Mac OS X Tiger on it. I downloaded a slew of Dashboard Widgets from Apple's website, one of the more important ones being "GAS". By typing my zip code and specifying a radius in miles/km around the zip code, I can locate the lowest price gasoline in the immediate area. If I happen to be going in a particular direction, or the price is so ridiculously low, I will go out of my way to save money on gasoline.

    Once again, this is a balancing of the economics in favor of the consumer. There is absolutely no rationale for gasoline prices varying from street corner to street corner other than to eek-out a much profit from the consumer. And with gasoline prices in the U.S. being so high and Exxon-Mobile reporting over $10 bollion in 3rd quarter profits, the approval rating polls for the Bush Administration and Republican party seem to reflect that these people are not looking out for the better good of the American people.

    I've heard that Konfabulator available for both PC and Mac is similar to Apple's Dashboard and there should be available an equivalent to "GAS" for that graphical environment. If so, get it, you won't regret the $30 shareware fee for Konfabulator.
  • We already know Wal-Mart is bad for small business [pbs.org], merchant exploitation, [corporatewatch.org] competition [businessweek.com], and even larger suppliers [fastcompany.com], so I am in favor of anything that might allow good companies like Vlasic retain their ability to meet profit margins and pay their workers. I personally abhor and refuse to visit any of the Wally World constructs (or any of the other Mega-Lo-Marts) in favor of internet shopping and my wife's constant pursuit of the 1/2 price grocery store trip via coupon and sale shopping (not there yet, but g
  • by sl4shd0rk ( 755837 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @09:21AM (#13962569)
    (fade in, dimly lit alley in back of walmart. 2am. Near dumpster)

    Don Casalano: "Vinne, I'm glad you could meet wit' me at dis hour. we need too doo sumtin about dis.. ah, shall we say, dis 'discouragement' - dis..goooooo-gull"

    Vinne: "You got it Don Casalano. Any'ting you say - you want meeta' whack um?"

    Don Casalano: "Not yet Vinnie. First we send him a message. A short but to-da-point message. A message dat says stop interferin' in our biznizz. We don't need no help rollin' back da prices."

    Vinne: "Wit all due respect Don Casalano, we aint had to send nobody dat message since Jimmie da Whip cut dat deal with Microsoft when we was sellin' them plain wrappa linux box--"

    Don Casalano: "Vinnie, you're a sma't boy but don't get too sma't. Dis goooo-gul is irritatin' me like a boil in da crack'a my ass. If dey are gonna play, dey are gonna pay - now you go deliva dat message. I gotta call dis Ballma' guy back and see how his meetin' went.. I wonder if he t'rew da cha'ir like I told im to..."

  • Google might soon be able to tell Wal-Mart shoppers if better bargains are available nearby.

    Ya, good luck beating Walmart. I think that worry -- for Walmart anyway -- shouldn't be a problem. As for Google being worrisome to Walmart's competitors, there's the ticket. Soon our citys towns and even villages will just be Walmart buildings and nobody will use Google's shopping service because it will *always* point to Walmart.

  • by salesgeek ( 263995 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @10:17AM (#13962779) Homepage
    Last week I had a series of meetings with attorneys and accountants about a new software product. It really helped me understand the corporate mindset that pervades the industry:

    * IP, in and of itself is valued by attorneys because it generates huge ammounts of billable work. No attorney in his or her right mind would recommend using anything that resembels an open source license. Too many barriers to litigation and legal fees. No huge lawsuits, no complex negotiations.

    * Accountants like IP because it is valued however you need it to be.

    So when I threw out the idea of GPLing the software, the result was almost comical:

    * One attorney tried to explain how he needed to read the GPL. And bill me hours to do so. (not going to happen)
    * One attorney suggested I'd be giving away a cash cow. I asked him: yours or mine. And the answer was a "what do you mean by that?" (struck a nerve here)
    * My accountant said the intangible asset would be useful at the end of the year, and that an open source license may dilute the value of the asset.

    It's very clear to me now why most business people see Google as a threat: intellectual property speculation has replaced the bilking investors with electric lemonade stands and WebVans full of irrational exuberance of the late 90's as the trendy way to make money out of thin air. Reality is going to be absolutely harsh to IP squatters & speculators:

    * Innovation renders entire swaths of intellectual property useless. In the case of copyright, style and fashion relegate properties to the clearance bin or worse.

    * For every piece of prime real estate, there are thousands of acres of desert, swampland, uninhabitable mountain terrain and tundra. Investors, many of which think the latest biotech idea will pay off in 10-15 years will find out that their idea isn't the winner - and will find out that a worthless patent is about as useful as an EPA superfund site is a location for a strip mall.

    * Easments, emminent domain and the like have not been established in the IP world, and for the public good they will have to be. And the best ideas are often the ones that will eventually be taken via emminent domain. After all, if I can take your office park in NJ because I can put a bigger one up that will generate more tax revenue, why not take, say your one click buy or miracle drug patent because I can put it to better use for the common good?

    I hope that Greenspan's last act parallels his cooling of the internet bubble: throwing a barrel of icewatter on the out of control party that the current IP feeding frenzy has become.
  • by Hosiah ( 849792 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @11:13AM (#13963012)
    With Google, readers could search for other comments more insightful/informative than mine. Then those other comments would get the mod points instead. Who needs all that competition?
  • by zappepcs ( 820751 ) on Sunday November 06, 2005 @11:15AM (#13963019) Journal
    There is a conspiracy theory concerning WalMart: First, Clinton opened trade with China... where is he from? Arkansas. Where is Walmart headquartered? Arkansas. Where is most of the stuff you buy from Walmart made? This is the biggest outsourcing project of all time, and government funded no less. Now, add to that that both Walmart and China are restrictive of information and its time to put the tin-foil hats on!

    I have never been a fan of Walmart, and I don't think that Google is the altruistic god of geekdom, but I do wonder about such links as described above. Besides that, its time for someone to have a site that tells you where the best deals in town really are. I'm talking about a voice link service, maybe you tap in the store name and bar code and the service tells you where the best deal is, so that while you are in the store shopping you can decide if that is where you want to spend your money. Of course, I'd also like the service to tell you where the best deal on US made parts/items are too, so you get the choice of supporting your home country or having your dollars shipped overseas, but that is another matter.

"The great question... which I have not been able to answer... is, `What does woman want?'" -- Sigmund Freud

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