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Google Envisions Free Cell Phones For All

Salvance writes "Google's CEO Eric Schmidt envisions a day when all cell phones are free if the user agrees to watch targeted ads. While he provides no specific plans for Google to give away phones, the implication is that he expects such moves in the future given Google's current pilot successes with delivering text ads on phones." From the article: "Schmidt also said his company was working on how to allow users to maintain basic control of their personal data. Currently, Google stores consumer data on hundreds of thousands of its own computers in order to provide additional services to individual users. The company is looking to allow consumers to export their Web search history or e-mail archives and move them to other sites, if they so choose."

15 of 164 comments (clear)

  1. When your only tool is a hammer by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Everything looks like a nail.

    When your only revenue is advertisments, everything looks like sticky eyeballs.

    1. Re:When your only tool is a hammer by joshier · · Score: 5, Funny

      Are you saying... We are all nails living in a hammer world?? AHHHHHHHHH!!!!

    2. Re:When your only tool is a hammer by arun_s · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That's okay. It'll probably take less than a week after release before the adblockers come around. Its survival of the fittest from there. The gaudy flash advertisers will be first to go, and I probably wouldn't mind the less intrusive ones if I was getting a phone for free.

      --
      I can explain it for you, but I can't understand it for you.
    3. Re:When your only tool is a hammer by FirienFirien · · Score: 5, Funny

      It could be worse... it could just constantly be hammer time...

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      Browsing with +2 to insightful posts and a higher threshold makes the average post seen seem a lot more ingenious
    4. Re:When your only tool is a hammer by alienmole · · Score: 4, Funny

      Can't touch this!

  2. Ads on phones? by LokiSnake · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For a (smart)phone used for web communications, I can understand how they'll target ads, but for a phone that is only used for voice communications, how can targeted ads be implemented? There has been a trend of Google venturing into print, TV, and radio ads, and those can be done successfully through advertisers bidding for related spots on each medium, since newspapers/periodicals have separate sections, and TV and radio have set programming, but what about voice communications? Will they target ads by looking at your contact information? Or perhaps capture keywords in your spoken words? I doubt that, since they will never do any evil, but how else would this work (without text to analyze)?

    1. Re:Ads on phones? by supersat · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Three words: location, location, location.

      Carriers can already determine your phone's location (thanks to the Wireless E911 mandate), and third-party companies like Navizon are already beginning to do the same thing independently of carriers.

      Now, imagine you're Google, and you own the service. You notice that it's lunch time and the user hasn't stopped for lunch, but they're near a fast food advertiser. You could send an SMS with a coupon to the user.

      Now, I don't know that they'll necessarily follow this model, but there's plenty of things to analyze and target without being much more invasive than current carriers.

  3. Just the "device" ? by kihjin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I could be wrong, but it seems this only means that you would get the device for "free," not the service. This is hardly a revolutionary idea; cellphone providers have been "giving" away devices for free (along with those nasty catch-22's) for ages.

    This is not to say I'd go long with this anyway. I'd be very annoyed if my phone beeped every 10 minutes, only to discover that I've received an advertisement.

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  4. What the hell by jlarocco · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Am I the only person who hates advertisements? I don't want to see ads while I browse the internet. I don't want to see ads while I'm watching movies or TV. I don't want to hear ads on the radio. And I sure as hell don't want ads on my cell phone.

    Charge me for your product or service, then leave me the fuck alone.

    1. Re:What the hell by Wizard+of+OS · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Isn't that the reason that you can:
      - still buy a mobile phone that doesn't have advertisements?
      - get pay-tv where you can watch movies without interruption (at least here in the netherlands)
      - become a slashdot subscriber and NOT see the ads anymore.

      This is a new businessmodel, for those of us who don't want to pay for the product or service but instead want to view ads. If you don't like it, don't use it. There are (and will be) plenty alternatives for you.

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      If code was hard to write, it should be hard to read
  5. What kind of company? by DerekLyons · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Which reveals in stark relief what sensible people have been saying for a while - Google isn't a search company, or a technology company - it's an advertising agency.

  6. Judging from my usualy phone calls... by dartarrow · · Score: 5, Funny

    ..my 'targeted ad' would be for V1@GRA and 'how to ease your debt'

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    I love humanity, it is people I hate
  7. Re:Comments by clickclickdrone · · Score: 4, Funny

    >Will there be a 911 and other emergy number exception?
    Almost. You'll get a YouTube ad for clips of Police beating up suspects.

    --
    I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
  8. Advertising Madness by ajs318 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The business world seems to have gone advertising crazy!

    People don't want adverts. People do not want adverts on TV; that is why we used to have VCRs, before the advent of DVD+RW and Sky Plus. Anything worth watching got recorded, and the advertisements got the fast-forward button. With Sky Plus you can start recording, wait ten minutes or so (the total amount of advert breaks in the programme minus the anticipated amount of time spending re-watching good bits), start watching from the beginning, and fast-forward through the breaks.

    People do not want adverts on the radio, which is why it's so good that Radio Two is the first station up from the bottom of the dial.

    People don't want adverts in magazines and newspapers, and will turn the page and miss a good story rather than see an advertisement.

    People don't want adverts on the internet. Hence the popularity of various advert-blocking and flash-blocking Firefox extensions, the use of "block images from this server" and {for the full-on geek} Squid. Even people without advert-blocking software will navigate away from a site which tries to bombard them with images.

    I don't think I'm alone in saying that I would much rather pay cash up front for the phone calls I am going to make, than watch advertisements.

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  9. Talk about targeted by ZoneGray · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, it should make for some interesting ad targeting.

    Let's see, we'll just dial here... Nine One One... Send..... "ring, ring... Your call will be connected shortly. Did you know, Kidde fire extinguishers come with a full lifetime guarantee...."

    ARRGGHHH!

    Hmmm, try again. Let's call a Corvette dealer.... dial the number here.... "ring, ring.... Your call will be connected shortly. Did you know that you can order Viagra from the privacy and comfort of your home? Press 69* for more information."