Google's Continued Growing Pains
eldavojohn writes "The Mercury News is reporting that Google's 500 percent growth since its IPO hasn't come without a cost. With the purchase of DoubleClick, Google is facing antitrust charges in both the United States and the European Union. And with their rising success, there are open source alternatives springing up."
OpenAds (formerly known as phpAdsNew) may be open source software, but it mostly relies on 3rd party ad sellers. It will allow you to sell ads on your own site, but as long as no advertisers are buying your ad space you have to rely on things like AdSense.
Also, open source software for rotating banners with click/impression counting has been around for ages, it's not new. phpAds was created in 1999.
Open source search engines. Well, the source might be open (just like htdig has been open source for ages). But it's not like any end user of search engines is going to run their own search engine, it's simply impossible for consumers to run their own search engine. Website operators may run their own search engine, but usually limited to their own site.
So the whole reference to open source "competitors" to google products is complete bullshit.
I'm sure that the reason companies have been pouring billions and billions of dollars into advertising for decades isn't that it works, but that nobody even though to check.
I used to share your misconception. My undergraduate was Computer Science, however now I have had some graduate level marketing classes and I was surprised to find out how quantitative professional marketing is. There is massive experimentation to determine what works and what does not.
Apparently Yahoo! is catching up to Google, at least in terms of customer satisfaction, so I really don't think Google's dominance in search is that big of a deal. In advertising, maybe, but that's why the FTC and EU are looking into possible antitrust violations ... nothing particularly special there. Now, if they actually stopped the merger because of antitrust violations, THEN that's news. Until then, it's just hypothetical bullshit and dreams.
The article does manage to make on good point, though, which is that sooner or later the market would manage to break Google's (hypothetical) monopoly. Heck, there's already countless startups all hoping to displace Google. Google does not come close to enjoying the dominance that Microsoft once did, which is why all this concern about Google shutting out the competition seems premature, at best.
Thanks for the correction, Phil, although I notice that they do say "in the coming months" and, since the blog post was made in July, there's no indication of when the policy kicks in. They also fail to mention what happens to users who already have the long expiry cookie on their system.
Don't get me wrong, Google is the best engine out there, period. Tinfoil aside, I simply think that people may have misconstrued the motto; "Do no evil" and the unwritten subtext "because we are watching you" extrapolated from their actions seems to be an admonition rather than a corporate statement of ethics.
Resistance is futile. Reactance buggers it up.
Yep, I don't get the 'googleisthenewmicrosoft' tag in this article. People hate Microsoft because they make shoddy products, and still dominate the market. If they made decent products, people really wouldn't care so much. I wouldn't anyway. A good product deserves to dominate. Poor products dominating purely through marketing and underhanded tactics is what is disgusting, but google's products are actually pretty useful, stable and have decent interfaces.
which is totally what she said
What they say about Microsoft?
Google didn't do ANY evil to me, it is a free service for me.
Google won the search engine market by simply serving the best search results.
If i don't like Google, i could try other search engines.
Why do I still use Google? Because it is the best.
M$ on the other hand provides its mediocre software force-fed to me.
I cannot avoid it even when I want to.
Most software types already exist on Linux, but games are still scarce.
Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
This is probably true for small advertising budgets - everywhere, all the time, good salesmen are selling bad businessmen stuff they don't need.
But for just medium-sized ad budgets and up, there is some serious metering going on (as with any other non-trivial investment). And as someone occasionally working in the metering end of a pretty big advertising budget, I can guarantee you that either (a) all 10.000 persons that respond positively to advertising are currently customers of the company I work for, or (b) advertising works.
You can't (unfortunately) expect big companies to respond so quickly to so radical markettrends. But look at iTunes. No-one believed that digital-only distrubution of music over the internet would ever work just a few years ago, and now we've even got non-DRM files. A similar model will emerge for TV shows any time now.
Oh, and I'm more than happy to look at google's sponsored links. Even if there was a paid model (which there is, look at the APIs), I wouldn't take it. I often search for products and services, and I often find what I'm looking for in the sponsored links section.
Join Majestic 12 and contribute to an alternative search engine. You can have your machines index a certain amount per day and contribute the result to the index.
Having alternatives is what keeps companies honest. Government regulation just makes the regulators a target to be corrupted.
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Personally, I'd be happy to just pay a couple bucks per show, or a penny per search, or whatever.
In the last 14 months, according to Google Web History, I've done 6707 searches. If that was at a penny a search I'd not be pleased...
Interesting the speed of which they claim Google to be a monopoly.