Sergey Brin Says Google 'Failed To Be on the Bleeding Edge' of Blockchain (cnbc.com) 133
At an event over the weekend, Google co-founder Sergey Brin said that the internet giant missed its chance to be at the forefront of blockchain technology. From a report: Brin, who currently serves as president of Google parent company Alphabet, joined blockchain technology leaders and researchers on a panel at Richard Branson's exclusive Blockchain Summit. "We probably already failed to be on the bleeding edge, I'll be honest," Brin said. Although Google may have missed out on early adoption of the distributed ledger technology, Brin suggested that blockchain is within the wheelhouse of X, the company's semi-secret research division. "I see the future as taking these kind of research-y kind of out there ideas and making them real -- and Google X is kind of like that," Brin said.
Google is turning into yet another big corporation (Score:5, Insightful)
Google was innovative when it was growing. Now, it's a huge conglomerate (or rather, Alphabet, it's parent, is). They don't innovate anymore. They wait for someone to innovate and then either buy them or, if that fails, throw a shitload of money into a competing product to muscle them out of the business.
Yes, that doesn't by accident sound like Microsoft. That's how big tech corporations work. Sergey, sorry to tell you, but Google has become too big to innovate. Innovation takes flexibility and the ability to risk something, both features large corporations lack.
Re:Google is turning into yet another big corporat (Score:5, Informative)
They don't innovate anymore. They wait for someone to innovate and then either buy them or, if that fails, throw a shitload of money into a competing product to muscle them out of the business.
And that's new how?
Android? Bought
Google Maps? Bought
Blogger? Bought
AdSense/Adwords? Bought
Picasa? Bought
Google Analytics? Bought
Google Docs? Bought
Youtube? Bought
The list goes on and on...
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What innovation have they done with email? Apart from reading other people's, that is - and Yaboo and Snotmail were probably already doing that.
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They don't innovate anymore. They wait for someone to innovate and then either buy them or, if that fails, throw a shitload of money into a competing product to muscle them out of the business.
And that's new how?
Android? Bought.
Kinda like what Opportunist wrote, eh?
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No, because Google has been acquiring companies for products since 2001. Their claim is this is something new when it is not.
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No, because Google has been acquiring companies for products since 2001. Their claim is this is something new when it is not.
Innovation and acquisition are not mutually exclusive
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I'm no (longer a) fan of Google, but I'd disagree with a few of those inclusions. Sure, they may have bought them, but they don't serve to prove that Google doesn't innovate.
For instance, the Google Maps project may have been jumpstarted via an acquisition, but the thing they bought was a desktop application written in C++. Google Maps itself was actually highly innovative and influential when it launched, but not for any of the reasons that made the acquired product what it was.
You might recall that prior
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This.
In the cases of Google, Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, etc., the owners sold the companies to public investors.
Shareholders don't give one good goddam rat's ass about anything except revenue.
When I worked at Mobil Oil years ago, I asked a new hire, "What business are we in?"
She said, "Selling hydrocarbon-based products."
I said, "Wrong! We are in the business of selling stocks."
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What is supposed to be new about Google acquiring companies for products/services?
https://en.wikipedia.org./wiki... [en.wikipedia.org]
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This a joke? Never heard of Adwords, AdSense, Google Maps, Youtube or Android? All acquisitions.
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It's better than the opposite (Score:5, Insightful)
It's better than the opposite: applying blockchains to anything you can think of, like most companies are doing currently, when it is only suited for very specific and limited tasks...
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There are not very many use cases where that is applicable.
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Blockchain is a secure method of posting transaction history for public review while limiting the ability to change the transactions in an unauthorized manner
Most accounting systems do the same thing without the 'feature' of allowing public access to the transaction log
As a result, internal transaction processing systems have little use for blockchain
Publicly reviewable systems, on the other hand should see opportunities with blockchain, I for one would like to see what is possible in applying to voting sys
Waaah we missed the bubble. (Score:2)
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I wouldn't say we missed it, Bob...
The Apple model... (Score:1)
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You can tell when Chris is lying or is nervous. He starts spelling shit wrong. Dead giveaway sweet tits.
More like I don't give a shit because I'm multitasking at work.
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Itâ(TM)s kind of weird that slashdot is your main social outlet [...]
I only have 18.9K tweets for the last ten years and 23.4K impressions over the last 28 days on Twitter.
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Blockchain and electricity consumption (Score:3)
Is there any blockchain system that is not the absolute electricity hog that is Bitcoin? Modern cash registers and credit card swipe machines use a trivial amount of electricity. The world cannot afford to dump a substantial fraction of its available power into bitcoin-type computations.
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We need more safe clean power, not people complaining about useful new technology that consumes power.
People had the same bleats about aluminum processing back when the Bessemer process got going. Nobody needs airplanes!
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Bessemer process is used to make steel. It replaced the open hearth process and both makes higher quality steel and is more efficient in energy and pollution than open hearth.
Manufacturing of aluminum always required electricity - there is fundamentally no other way known to do it so the cost is acceptable. Particularly given the recycleability of the material once refined. There are many other more efficient ways to process cash transactions than Bitcoin, so no need to use the energy hog.
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A solution in search of a problem? (Score:5, Insightful)
I see a lot of people hyping blockchain technology for non-cryptocurrency uses, but I have yet to see an application to which it is better suited than current transaction systems. I understand that a distributed ledger potentially lets you do away with things like reconciliation transactions. But there are some downsides with that: every participant has to keep a full copy of the ledger, and participants still have to use double entry accounting, which means essentially keeping two sets of books. And while the ledger itself may be secure and tamper-proof, there still has to be some way to turn entries into actionable financial transactions, which requires another system that can itself be compromised (e.g. the Bitcoin exchanges that have experienced some famous security breaches).
Maybe I'm just not looking at it right?
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No it doesn't.
Unless you're Greek.
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I see a lot of people hyping blockchain technology for non-cryptocurrency uses, but I have yet to see an application to which it is better suited than current transaction systems. I understand that a distributed ledger potentially lets you do away with things like reconciliation transactions. But there are some downsides with that: every participant has to keep a full copy of the ledger, and participants still have to use double entry accounting, which means essentially keeping two sets of books.
From a transactional database perspective, the chain removes some validation overhead you'd otherwise need to implement everytime. Double entry is a form of that validation.
And while the ledger itself may be secure and tamper-proof, there still has to be some way to turn entries into actionable financial transactions, which requires another system that can itself be compromised (e.g. the Bitcoin exchanges that have experienced some famous security breaches).
Maybe I'm just not looking at it right?
That is the crux of money not properly backed by real world assets. Diamonds, Gold, oil, etc. It's all electronic now but wasn't before, there is no gold changing hands nor diamonds. The physical assets sit in vaults, there's nothing to stop a country from lieing about their reserves either esentially allowing them to print paper b
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What have reserves got to do with it? It's the productive power of the issuing state's economy that matters and if that's out of alignment with the [nominal] money supply the markets will figure it out pretty quickly. Isn't that right, Zimbabwe?
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You left out leverage, best-of-breed, and synergy.
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Uh, that rambling blog with absolutely no details on how he is going to use blockchain to page nurses (lol, there are so many questions here), is about as good as it gets folks.
If you still have IBM stock for some reason, sell it now.
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I read about that here [psfk.com]. I'm not sure what benefit blockchain brings to the table here. Nothing in the description of how it works is particularly groundbreaking - it requires users to upload identification to prevent sockpuppet accounts, it ties tickets to individual purchasers, etc, all good features but nothing exclusive to blockchains. Not sure what this company is doing that can't be done faster and better with web services and RDBMSs.
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The ledger isn't tamper proof. You can do whatever you want, so long as you can meet the requirements to validate it.
For bitcoin that means you need to convince half the computational power to agree with you. For a proof of stake system it means you need to convince half the (weighted) shareholders. For a private system, guess who's probably got override and veto powers to do whatever they want?
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For a private system, guess who's probably got override and veto powers to do whatever they want?
Exactly. You can either tie your system to a public blockchain like Bitcoin's and experience all the delay and computational requirements that brings, or you can host it yourself at which point it's really just another database.
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And while the ledger itself may be secure and tamper-proof...
It's neither of those things. Anyone controlling over half the computing power on the chain can do whatever the hell they want to do to it. It would just take a lot more electricity than doing the exact same thing with a relational database.
Blockchain is today's snake-oil.
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Kind of contradictory (Score:4, Interesting)
Google's motus operandi is about amassing piles of stuff :
getting (initially) a huge index of the web,
piling large collection of data to train their IA (training voice recognition from their snippets of google voice),
piling large amount of private personal to better target ads,
etc.
Whereas, the whole key purpose behind all *distributed* ledger systems is to remove the needs of a central authority.
Google and blockchain are on the exact polar opposite of the decentralization scale.
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What's that supposed to mean? Small dot of working? Something about a three-armed alien?
When was Google ever at the bleeding edge? (Score:2)
Even with search, they were late, with a pretty bad search engine that just managed to be the biggest one after a while.
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Back when I started (in the dial-up days, onion on belt etc) AltaVista were best. All of a suddent and for no discernible reason they went shite. Google were in the right place to recover the fumble.
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Back when I started (in the dial-up days, onion on belt etc) AltaVista were best. All of a suddent and for no discernible reason they went shite. Google were in the right place to recover the fumble.
Excite was my search engine of choice in the dark days before Google. As much as I love to bash google, they vastly improved on anything that came before them and even to this day, there is no search engine that is better.
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Same here. No idea what killed the excellent AltaVista though. Probably management stupidity.
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I'm old enough to know within 2 years they were superior to all competition, and no internet-facing search engine is better.
Please don't reply if you're part of unwashed masses who only types in words and doesn't know how to refine google searches with operators and prefixes
Re:When was Google ever at the bleeding edge? (Score:5, Insightful)
Meh! Get back to me when they allow you to use regular expressions.
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they'll need a bit of storage for the alternative indexing to accommodate that, everyone has to donate a usb stick.
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Search engines were a disaster in the late 90s and early 2000s when Google rose to prominence. They weren't very clever, indexed only a subset of the Internet (when it was tiny by today's standards), and were full of spam links because their algorithms were easily gamed. Look up PageRank. It was a big deal.
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You can have my Dogpile when you take it from my warm, smelly hands!
shitty distributed database (Score:2)
there are other ways to verify and sign records in a normal distributed database, the blockchain ledger system are constipated and bottlenecked, "poor scalabliity" and why transactions take so long.
google doesn't need such a thing, most businesses don't need such a thing.
blockchain is mostly a fad outside of crypto currency where it's a bottleneck
I'll be honest, blockchain will wither on the vine (Score:1)
When you look at it from an historical perspective, blockchain technology is merely a passing phase, to be replaced by less power-intensive methods that provide similar results.
It's kind of like the Stirling Engine, which was a thing for a while until we realized there were better ways to do things.
Blockchain will also be replaced. Think of it as early ECMAscript, or other coding languages, that have for the most part already been replaced.
Who is the winner? (Score:2)
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What company thrives on blockchain today?
Advertising, PR and marketing companies, I imagine.
It's just a small investment for google (Score:2)
If they're not into the distributed ledger technology yet it means they don't care about it. As if no one at Google isn't aware of it