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The Man Who (Really) Makes Google Tick

An anonymous reader writes "Like his friends Sergey Brin and Larry Page, Craig Silverstein abandoned his PhD studies at Stanford to become employee No.1 and technology director at Google. While building the search engine in a garage, never in his wildest dreams did he think Google would become what it is today. Not only is it the envy of software giant Microsoft, Google continues to redefine the technology market with its creativity and tenacity. In this in-depth interview, Silverstein discusses a wide range of issues including the backlash against Gmail among privacy advocates, the company's cultural changes and its shifting reliance on PageRank."

9 of 250 comments (clear)

  1. Re:The problem I see with Gmail privacy by ckswift · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Email never has and never will be a secure form a communication. Nothing is currently stopping the government from snooping on your email from other mail providers (e.g. yahoo, msn, aol). If you truly care about the privacy of your email, you really should be encrypting it.

  2. Re:The problem I see with Gmail privacy by CptSparrow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, but the other providers aren't archiving your messages, and providing a nifty interface to search and sort them. If they want to read my mail, they're gonna have to work at least a little bit for it!

  3. From the Article: by DaveKAO · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He says: "I think that understanding language is kind of the last frontier in artificial intelligence, and then talking to a computer will be just like talking to a reference librarian, because they will both be equally knowledgeable about the world and about you. "

    Now I love Google and don't mind the privacy implications of Gmail, but for the PR nightmare they just had you would think he'd be a little more careful. I am not sure I want computers to be knowledgeable about me (individually).

  4. Elaborate Please by KidSock · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Google continues to redefine the technology market with its creativity and tenacity

    Really? I don't mean to be a troll. I like google and all but what have they done differently since the first day they opened for business. They're search engine just works great and that's it. They're in a position to do more but what? Does gmail constitute N billion in market capitalization they're going to pull in when the IPO goes through? Makes one wonder what they're going to do an not be "evil".

  5. Re:The problem I see with Gmail privacy by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >at least the Government needs probable cause

    Times have changed. Google for "Section 215" of the USAPATRIOT Act, and for the phrase "national security letter".

    GMail is great even if you're heavily into privacy: imagine storing all your mailing list traffic on it. Automatic threading, user-controlled keyword assignment, high-speed search.

  6. Re:Google Overated ? by Ziviyr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A clean page and what used to be some nice results sold me.

    Biggest selling point it that they haven't driven me off with obnoxious ads and really stupid search results.

    Google hasn't been blatantly evil to me yet.
    In fact have they been provably evil at all, outside of designs on lunar domination?

    --

    Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
  7. actuall, it probably was a bad career choice by hak1du · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Drop the PhD study where right now he would probably be teaching at a college to kids who really couldn't care...

    There are plenty of Ph.D. drop-outs that signed up with other companies that looked just as promising as Google and didn't make it. This sort of career choice is basically a lottery ticket with a rather high cost of entry--even if you ever manage to get back to grad school after your failed stint at a startup, it's going to be hard to get back into research.

    If you want to make money, a Ph.D. is the wrong choice to begin with--go into business or finance or something like that. If you change your mind about getting a Ph.D. halfway through, again, there are far better career choices than to get involved with some startup.

    Sign up with a startup in a technical capacity only if you feel passionate about the product or the work.

  8. Re:The problem I see with Gmail privacy by tricops · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I agree with the rest of your post, but this...

    ... with Gmail or Yahoo you have none other then to bend over and hope you deleted anything that could harm you.

    How about not emailing/doing stuff that could provide evidence/harm you in the first place?
    There may be worries for some situations, but for the majority of people... don't break any laws/talk about it in email, and there yah go - no concern.

    --
    (\(\
    (^v^)
    (")")
    This is the cute vorpal bunny virus, copy to your sig or runaway, runaway in fear!
  9. Re:Secrecy by sirsnork · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You wouldn't be saying that if it was Microsoft with the mysterious aura

    --

    Normal people worry me!