Google Releases Google Browser Sync Extension
Pneuma ROCKS writes "Google has just released the Google Browser Sync extension for Firefox. This extension allows you to save your bookmarks, history and passwords on Google servers, effectively giving you a 'roaming profile,' which you can sync on any computer running Firefox (and the extension, of course)."
This says nothing about whether the data is encrypted in transit or, more importantly, on the servers. I don't like the idea of Google or anyone who might hack in snooping on this data.
i am a soviet space shuttle
If you trust Google then this could be great! if you don't then feel free to bash this as a blatant grab for yet more personal data.
Either way you cant say Google aren't pushing to see what users want, and integrating it into whats good for Google. My opinion? I don't know, I like and trust goggle as much as I trust any corporation, but do I want them to have yet more information about me? Probably not. So personally I will give it a miss, although it might be useful in the future, and if it takes off in internet kiosks (and why not) then all the better. It has some serious benefit to people who travel regularly and don't own laptops and PDA's.
Cue the "tin foil hat" posts, closely followed by the "there is no privacy anyway" posts possibly followed by some random "I don't like the new layout" posts.
Google can already follow you around the 'net using their ad network. Blogs, photos, news sites, etc., all have Google Adsense. That same cookie builds up a wealth of data about you. If this offends you, putting your bookmarks up on Google shouldn't be any worse -- what could you possibly be telling them that they don't already know?
(Besides your passwords to other sites...)
For more information, click here.
He's actually right. If your main source of revenue is advertising dollars, your biggest asset is your "client base" and all the information you have about them - basically a big database about who likes what and how you can contact them. Put those two things together, and you have a goldmine for corporate marketing/advertising departments. They even have a very ubiquitous software application called "Goldmine" (a CRM app).
Joe Q. Public likes Jessica R. Abbit, but he's a high-schooler on a budget. Instead of sending him the add for the Tacori Diamond bracelet, let's send him the advertisement for the CVS box-o-chocolates. He's more likely to respond to that ad, which results in increased revenue for GOOG.
Information is valuable. Organized information that no one else has is "invaluable"!
Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
Any information Google can collect, MS can collect. They own the OS remember?
evil is as evil does
If you look at the settings, next to every checkbox for "sync this", there is another check box for "encrypt this".
Literally everything it can sync can be encrypted.
Second, it syncs much more than bookmarks.
I for one, enjoy having my history, tabs, and windows saved between the laptop and desktops I work on.
When he says "any computer" he means "any computer except the 95% running Windows." Just clearing that up for you. :)
Comment of the year
This can really be interpreted in 2 ways:
We, Google Server, will use your PIN to unlock that information
OR
We, Google Client App, will use your PIN to unlock that information.
I personally don't see why Google would ever need to unlock the encrypted information on their side (unless they want to be evil), and obviously, it won't be you who's unlocking the information, but the firefox extension (we, google client app) will be.
HD Trailers
Yes, because nothing protects your bookmarks more from the prying eyes of the world's biggest web-crawler than dropping "bookmarks.html" into a publicly-viewable web directory...
;-)
(I just tried it on your site, Roberto Sanchez; noticed you haven't done it
What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
Personally I have been copying my bookmarks.html to ~/public_html for years.
This is precisely what a "home page" originally was.
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