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Google Fights Back (stratechery.com) 161

Ben Thompson, writing for Stratechery: For a company famed for its engineering culture, you wouldn't expect a video at Google's annual I/O developer conference to have such emotional resonance. And yet, just watch (I have included the context around the video in question, which starts at the 2:33 mark): "I liked that very much." This was the most direct statement of what was a clear theme from Google's entire keynote: "Technology, particularly Google's technology, is a good thing, and we are going to remind you why you like it."

As he opened the keynote, CEO Sundar Pichai, as he always does, repeated Google's mission statements: "It all begins with our mission to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful, and today, our mission feels as relevant as ever." Pichai, though, quickly pivoted to something rather different than simply organizing and presenting information: "The way we approach it is constantly evolving. We are moving from a company that helps you find answers to a company that helps you get things done... We want our products to work harder for you in the context of your job, your home, and your life, and they all share a single goal: to be helpful, so we can be there for you in moments big and small over the course of your day."

In short, the mission statement may be the same, but what that means for Google and its products has shifted: "Our goal is to build a more helpful Google for everyone. And when we say helpful, we mean giving you the tools to increase your knowledge, success, health, and happiness. We feel so privileged to be developing products for billions of users, and with that scale comes a deep sense of responsibility to create things that improve people's lives. By focusing on these fundamental attributes, we can empower individuals and benefit society as a whole." This set the stage for the rest of the keynote, including the video above: Google spent most of the keynote demonstrating -- both with actual products, and whole bunch of vaporware -- how Google could take a much more proactive role in its users' lives in ways they ought appreciate.
Further reading: Sundar Pichai's op-ed on the New York Times. A NYT columnist adds: "Someone asked me today why Google gets less privacy flak than Facebook despite collecting more (+ more intimate) data. My theory is that Google takes people's data in exchange for useful things (maps! docs! mail!) while FB exchanges data for things that make them sad and angry."
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Google Fights Back

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  • by BringsApples ( 3418089 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @12:14PM (#58558298)

    ...Our brains cognitive ability?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If they're being legit, then:

    - bring back the + symbol to mean "this word MUST appear just as typed"
    - make verbatim 'sticky', such as 'people can go https://actual.things.I.search.for.google.com' url, and it's always verbatim
    - stop breaking verbatim all the time (I've had "Jonathon" show up for "jon" when using verbatim)...
    - actually respond to search terms with preferential treatment to words-as-you-type, eg "Tom != Thomas, debian != ubuntu, fedora != redhat" and on and on in searches
    - allow people to mix

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Remember when search engines used to support boolean queries? You could use and, or, not, and parenthetical groupings.

      Of course like so much, that too was sacrificed on the alter of idiocracy.

    • by Megol ( 3135005 )

      A global "do not track me you invasive vermin" setting would be nice.

    • by skids ( 119237 )

      ...or a case sensitivity option. They won't, because the money is in targeting you based on profiles rather than actually helping you find what you are looking for. That's what the sources of their "monetization" say they want, and that's what they get.

      You might as well ask: "Google, if you're listening, if you could find the 6 years of missing tax returns, I'm sure our media would reward you greatly!"

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @12:19PM (#58558338)

    It's creepy. It's arrogant. It treats its users as shovelware.

    There are /some/ good points for Google. But not many.

    I avoid them as much as I can.

    (So. This was emotional too, although I'm a techie. But it was deeply felt, as well)

    • There's not really a good alternative to gmail.
  • Google fights back... against what?

    Beware of geeks bearing gifts.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Google fights back... against what?

      Dissent.

      Beware of geeks bearing gifts.

      There's a good chance it contains an undocumented microphone.

    • Against the idea that they are now evil and becoming incompetent. Both of which seem more true every day.
    • by jrumney ( 197329 )
      Against people who remind them what their mission statement used to be, and point to the Evil privacy invading, China-appeasing, tax dodging corporation that they have become. They are trying to convince the world that their mission statement has always been "to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful" just as Eurasia has always been at war with Oceania.
  • by rlp ( 11898 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @12:21PM (#58558362)

    Really? Since when was facilitating censorship by the government of China "a good thing"?

    https://theintercept.com/2019/... [theintercept.com]

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      It's a messy choice either way. The gov't there is going to hire/allow somebody there to fulfill that role. If it's not Google it will be somebody else who may be even more of a jerk than Google. (Yes, such level of jerkativity is possible.)

      • by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @01:48PM (#58559170)
        And the nazi's need concentration camp guards. If not you, then who, right?
      • It's a messy choice either way. The gov't there is going to hire/allow somebody there to fulfill that role. If it's not Google it will be somebody else who may be even more of a jerk than Google. (Yes, such level of jerkativity is possible.)

        You're literally invoking Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt.

        It could be a bigger jerk than google, it could even be somebody like you!

        But it could also be somebody better. So there is that.

        • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

          But it could also be somebody better.

          And if not, it would probably be too late to change. The devil you know...

      • If it's not Google it will be somebody else who may be even more of a jerk than Google. (Yes, such level of jerkativity is possible.)

        Its name is Baidu.

    • In a land that is already censored, introducing an ever increasing number of players effectively makes that censorship more difficult. That is a "good thing".

    • Google has been censoring search results in America for years & years. Why is anyone surprised when they adapt their censorship product for sale to other repressive governments?

  • does not require collecting and aggregating data on the worlds' citizens that make all the spies and political wingnuts drool in envy.

  • by magarity ( 164372 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @12:28PM (#58558452)

    The thing I don't get is Google vs China. On the one hand they don't directly do any business there and claim to not want to cave in to that government. But try to download offline Google Maps for anywhere in China and it's blocked due to some unexplained reason. But if you're in China and have a VPN, Google Maps works great.

    • Because they don't do business in China, they have to buy the map data from some 3rd party instead of collecting it themselves and there are probably messy licensing issues with downloading it.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      "Works great" is a bit of an exaggeration. The maps available are not very detailed and often just wrong.

      The download thing is also disabled elsewhere, it depends on the who provided the mapping data and if Google's contract with them allows offline use.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @12:34PM (#58558522)

    "To organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful" does sound better than "we collect as much of your information as possible to more effectively provide services to advertisers".

    But seriously, Mr. Pichai, which of those statements more accurately reflects how your company earns its money?

    • we collect as much of your information as possible to more effectively provide services to advertisers

      On the way home today I quickly became alerted by an increase in time to destination and was advised to take an alternative road. Since Google knows how quickly my house heats up it was also less than 1deg off by the time I got home.

      TIL: I am actually an "advertiser" since clearly that is a prerequisite to using a Google service.

    • "we collect as much of your information as possible to sell it to repressive governments"

      FTFY

  • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @12:54PM (#58558656) Journal

    On my way to work, NPR played a tidbit from the Google conference, and it happened to be the part where the presenter was trying to show off their AI assistant. The person asked the AI to play some jazz music. The assistant answered with:

    Sure, check out this jazz music station on YouTube Music

    Note it didn't simply play music, it gave a long-winded, unnecessary diatribe about something which wasn't asked. Imagine having to listen to this every single time you ask it to do something.

    I would hope Google has a way to disable this, otherwise having to be bombarded with gibberish will get old very quickly, not to mention frustrating. If I had an Android phone (fortunately I don't), I would want it to do what I tell it, immediately. Just do it (to use an old phrase). No backtalk, no sales pitch, no anything else. Just do what I tell it.

    • by bartle ( 447377 )

      Now when I open Google Maps, the bottom half of my map is an "Explore nearby" tab. Why would I want that? 99.9% of the time, I'm opening Maps near my home or work and am already familiar with my surroundings - far more familiar than the Maps app is. It is a nuisance and a timewaster, no different from the diatribe you describe.

      In both cases, I believe we are starting to see Google really flexing their advertising muscles. For Maps, they are starting to try to redirect motorists towards paid advertisers. The

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If he wanted to be ethical, he would shut Google down forthwith and delete the massive troves of data they have collected on virtually every technology-using person in the world. (Even on those who have tried to stay away from Google).

    Then the entire Google upper management would self-report to prison.

  • so we can be there for you in moments big and small over the course of your day

    In other words...
    "So we can monitor and monetize every digital aspect of your life on a daily basis"

  • is to sell more ads.

    Everything else is just a smokescreen.

  • What dropping the "do no evil" value? Fuck you. I don't trust you anymore. You are evil, progressive libtard facists... EABOD.
  • Love Google (or Apple) or not, one of the most important insights I think Thompson has is this idea of a strategy credit. Something that you can claim as a deep philosophical underpinning for your company that's really just borne out of a particular situation that you're in. For Apple, Privacy is a strategy credit because they don't and have never needed your data. They can take the high ground not necessarily because they love privacy so much (though they might), but because your information is kind of irr

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