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Doctorow: Rivalry Keeps Google From Doing Evil

An anonymous reader writes "Writer and activist Cory Doctorow says competition keeps Google behaving ethically because it believes there are benefits to be had. However, as it moves into sectors where it faces fewer rivals this may not always be the case. 'It actually seems to be a quality metric. They believe they can attract customers, independent software vendors, resellers and an ecosystem around them by not being evil,' he says. 'Where they operate in narrower, less competitive markets — like where they’ve become an Internet service provider, for example — they abandon those commitments.'"

113 comments

  1. Monopoly by PlasmaEye · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, they are acting like any other company when faced with the same market situation?

    1. Re:Monopoly by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Informative

      With reading TFA, I'm assume their fiber business is being referred to and their blocking 'Servers', which most other ISPs do. If that's the objection, it seems that that rule is only so a subscriber with an unlimited bandwidth plan does not run their own ISP on their connection. It seems quite fair, although there are probably a few other ways to enforce that than the more general ban, which I understand they do not enforce (also like most other ISPs).

      I've rarely seen Google approach evil other than some of the push with Google Plus, which I think is at least bordering on it, like embedding 'join Google Plus' function in a YouTube 'play' button.

    2. Re:Monopoly by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So, they are acting like any other company when faced with the same market situation?

      While that is true, what's different is those other companies generally get reamed when they pull a switch like that - Google, on the other hand, gets a free pass from lots of people.

      We see it happen here on Slashdot all the time.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    3. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Google... gets a free pass from lots of people.

      Google, the Obama of the internet.

      Microsoft is the 'Bush'. They get blamed for everything that goes wrong

      Apple is a mix of Gore, Nader, and Perot on camera... Behind the scenes they are Kissinger and Rumsfeld.

    4. Re:Monopoly by retech · · Score: 1

      The difference here is that the almighty all-seeing all-hipster voice of the doctorow said this. While it is nothing that anyone with an IQ over 95 and a smidgeon of common sense would be able to see and just say "meh" to; when the all wonderful doctorow says it the internet stops and takes notice.*


      *by "taking notice" it is understood that only BoingBoing and /. actually post or comment on the great doctorow. The rest of the world just does not give a shit.

    5. Re:Monopoly by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

      So, they are acting like any other company when faced with the same market situation?

      Actually, no. Most corporations that size, in the rare cases where they're faced with competition, look for unethical ways to stop it.

      Google's made some effort to be ethical, but the ways in which they fall short are becoming harder to overlook. They're one of the few companies with the resources to resist the NSA for example, even if only to fight the gag order that's been placed on them regarding the level to which they have been served national security letters. If Google doesn't fight, what chance does a smaller company have? That's one of the areas in which Microsoft has actually acquitted itself pretty well.

      Which reminds me that Doctorow recently recommended that web companies use "dead-man switches" to respond to NSA spying. By putting up a single sentence, "We have not been contacted by the NSA to turn over data" and leaving it up as long as it's true, they could fight against the despicable practice that the NSA, DEA, even the CFPB has, of demanding companies play ball and then forbid them from telling customers about it.

      A company like Google could get a whole lot of public love if they just took one small step in fighting back against the encroaching police state. Other, smaller, companies have done it. Now it's their turn.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    6. Re:Monopoly by west · · Score: 1

      You're sounding awfully bitter that a moderate number of people with limited amounts of time and energy pay more attention to Cory Doctorow than they do to you or me.

      Why? Outsourcing news filtering to those we've given some authority to is not a crime. It's how we function.

      Personally, I outsource my filtering to newpapers, TV, friends, family, experts who happen to get media coverage, etc...

    7. Re:Monopoly by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Which frankly blows my damned mind, its like "do no evil" is some sort of RDF instead of just another slogan like "think different" and "where do you want to go today?".

      I mean from the nasty stuff we are learning from Snowden to the locking down the backend (where is the public API for Google+? Last I checked it didn't exist) to their using spammer techniques with Chrome like tying it to unrelated third party software which I would say is not only evil (because Joe and Jane don't know how to reset the default browser) but seriously douchey time and time again we have seen Google act just as nasty as MSFT and Apple yet...crickets. Hell it doesn't matter what they do, even ripping off the old "Requires IE" bit not only will people refuse to see this as nasty you will often see them charge to DEFEND whatever douchey thing Google does! When I pointed out on one forum that Google was using the old toolbar spammer trick of tying Chrome to programs like CCleaner and Defraggler I even had one defender say "Well I downloaded Chrome and didn't get CCleaner" because he was so fucking desperate to defend an obviously scumbag behavior he was grasping at any straws he could find!

      I don't know, maybe I'm weird but I don't believe in "flying the flag" of ANY company, especially not the megacorps. If they make a good product like Win 7 or Android 2.x? I'll be happy to give credit where credit is due. If on the other hand they put out a product I think is crap, like Win 8 or those proprietary as hell and NSA wet dream ChromeBooks? I'll be the first to start passing out the rotten tomatoes. I honestly do not understand this whole "corporations as ballclubs" mentality, first I thought maybe it was a form of buyer's remorse, you have invested all this money into something you really don't have a use for so you defend and try to justify it like the gal I saw struggling to use an iPad for a grocery list, but then you have the free products like Chrome and Google Search that are just as militantly defended...I don't know, maybe I'm one of the last sane guys in the nuthouse but jumping through flaming hoops to defend some supermegacorp that would happily shove them under a bus if it made the stock bounce 8% is just insanity to me.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    8. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, both Google and MS went campaining for transparency over NSLs only after Snowden's bomb hit the news - you can either read that as damage control, or as sincerely hoping to ride the wave to get it done, depending on your cynicism.

      Re: dead-man switch - I don't think going against the intent, not the letter, of the law is looked at kindly, especially when talking about something as removed from usual justice system as NSA. "But we were ordered to NOT tell anyone about your orders, not keep silent about not receiving them!" will surely fly no better than "Yes, I was ordered not to approach her closer than 50 feet, that's why I used this lens with rangefinder to keep at 51 feet all the time!"

    9. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What blows my mind is how "Don't be evil" is always chanted by Googlehate fans, not the other way around.

      It always goes "Google does this or another" - "Ha-ha, don't be evil, my ass! Are you going to tell me it's still true?", not "Google does this or another" - "See, you guys, they're still not doing evil as they promised!"

      Meanwhile, I, and others, just keep using what's convenient for them and evaluate things on case by case basis, not trying to paint it all by a nice soundbite.

      It's a fucking big corporation, they're not a person to be good or evil, but they're made up of people who do all kinds of things, bad and good.

    10. Re:Monopoly by Kernel+Krumpit · · Score: 1

      +10

      --
      May the lies we live by make us strong, healthy, happy and wise - Kurt Vonnegut.
    11. Re:Monopoly by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      well, they're just as full of bullshit as everyone else. ..but wave their dicks around like they weren't.

      can you imagine if Ford had come out with the slogan "Do No Evil" in 1996? would have been fucking laughed out of the states.

      it's such a fucking empty slogan anyways, since the opposite would be just hysterical as a sloga.

      KKK could take a lesson in feelgood marketing and adapt the slogan "Don't rape!". sure, has nothing to do with the business of KKK but it's generally acceptable, unlike KKK's actual policies. if they would have had some real balls google would have adopted more definite policy, like "Don't snitch our customers away." - something that would actually work as a plan of action.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    12. Re:Monopoly by hedwards · · Score: 2

      Most other ISPs do? I don't think any of the ISPs I've ever used have wasted their energy doing that. They stopped giving out static IPs for free a long time ago and they've never guaranteed the kind of uptime or bandwidth necessary to make a server useful. And many ISPs cap the connection anyways.

      For people who care about those things, a residential plan is just not going to cut it. Now, a personal server for something that's only of interest to the extended family isn't likely to be something that's going to cause enough trouble to be worth worrying about.

      Now, maybe in parts of the country where there's FiOS service or uncapped connections capable of more than 5mbps that's not the case.

    13. Re:Monopoly by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Informative

      Every ISP I've ever used has had a "no servers" clause in their TOS. They also don't tend to enforce it, as I generally run SSH, etc. From what I can see, Google is no different other than having what looks like a well funded FUD campaign targeted at them. It's good to keep an eye on them, but I think they get a lot more abuse and a lot less praise than they deserve, compared to pretty much everybody else at least.

    14. Re:Monopoly by Nerdfest · · Score: 0

      What exactly is evil about not having a public API for Google+? Did they promise one or something?

    15. Re:Monopoly by Antonovich · · Score: 1

      All they need to do is get Glass right quick and then basically make everything run through G+. Facebook problem solved. Sure there'll be plenty of "backlash"... just like everyone stopped using FB when they found out how ridiculous their fine print was. Or not...

    16. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > All public corporation have a legal and I believe moral obligation to maximize returns to their shareholders, the owners.

      Well, no, they don't. FFS, you even just now contradicted yourself here - giving to charities doesn't quite "maximize returns to their shareholders". Really, citations are sorely needed on this requirement. I can't find any cases, can you? I can find things like: "directors of a corporation . . . are clothed with [the] presumption, which the law accords to them, of being [motivated] in their conduct by a bona fide regard for the interests of the corporation whose affairs the stockholders have committed to their charge", which says nothing about shareholders' returns. Not being a dick and creating a long-term positive public image is surely in the interests of corporation, and converse is surely failing that.

      Bury this fucking meme already, every corporate assholery is met with consenting nods of this bullshit: "Ah, but see, they have to be assholes!" They are not nearly assholes enough as they would be required by this literal reading. They're just assholes because they're assholes.

    17. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, they're far, far more ethical than other companies would be in their situation. They have the most popular search engine, mobile OS, and browser out right now - the potential to block competition is STELLAR, but let's see what they've done:

      Search: competitors are shown prominently. A search for "search", for instance, brings up Yahoo and Bing first. A search for "travel" brings up Kayak and Travelocity first. A search for "email" brings up Yahoo mail first.

      Mobile OS: Unlike their main competitor, Google makes no attempt to lock down functionality from their users - they provide ridiculously easy ways to use other apps instead of the defaults for everything from email to keyboards. Other app stores are welcomed and usable. Plus, it's open source, so anybody can do whatever they want with it.

      Browser: All sorts of havoc could be wreaked here, but they do not restrict the user at all. The code itself is open sourced, so people can do whatever they want with it. The biggest criticism I've seen here is that they've added new functionality to the web that isn't in a standard yet, but all of the code for these features is open source as well!

      It's hilarious some of the things that people are considering "evil": "They don't allow servers on their ISP!", "They don't have a public API for G+!". Seriously? If these are the best instances you can think of - the company not being quite as good as they possibly could be - you don't realize how good you have it.

      Can you imagine how bad things would be if Microsoft or Apple were in the positions that Google is in? Without Google, the internet would objectively be a much, much shittier place.

    18. Re:Monopoly by Clarious · · Score: 2

      Let me recounts recent events....
      - They axed any services that compete with G+ (Google Reader for example, together with its community)
      - Everything must be tied with G+, back then I can add my comment on Google Play, now I need a G+ account
      - They 'upgraded' Google Talk to Hangout, removing XMPP Federation in the process which makes Hangout a walled garden (Gmail/Gtalk users constitute one of the biggest XMPP network).
      - After your 'upgrade' to Google Hangout, you will lose your ability to disable chat logging from the gmail web interface, that can only be done with official Hangout client. And you can only disable per contact, not completely.
      - They did not respect Do not track setting.
      and many more....

      I feel that Google now is no longer the one I loved, I shutdown most of my google services, took out all my data, blocking cookies from Google. Now the only Google service that I still is gmail, as I am looking for a good alternative, paid service like fastmail.fm is fine too.

    19. Re:Monopoly by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Reader wasn't used enough to matter to them.

      Everything was previously tied to your 'Google' account, now you have to ... I don't know, click 'Join G+' then skip a few times to not give it any extra info? You already have an account with them, what exactly are you freaking out about? And how exactly did reader compete with G+?

      XMPP federation still works perfectly fine, I use it every single day.

      Theres a checkbox on a settings page somewhere that you can turn off chat logging, I know this because I once turned it off and then forgot where the hell it was to turn it back on. Took me a while.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    20. Re:Monopoly by the_B0fh · · Score: 2

      It's port 25 and 80 that they block. What I've noticed is inbound 80 being the predominant one.

    21. Re:Monopoly by the_B0fh · · Score: 1

      Mobile OS: Unlike their main competitor, Google makes no attempt to lock down functionality from their users - they provide ridiculously easy ways to use other apps instead of the defaults for everything from email to keyboards. Other app stores are welcomed and usable. Plus, it's open source, so anybody can do whatever they want with it.

      And so they do. Why do most people who use Android phones complain about crapware? Why isn't anyone doing anything to stop that? Because "anybody can do whatever they want with it" and so they do.

      Sometimes, a little bit of control is good. Stopping all the crapware and other shit carriers foist on the users is a good thing.

      On the other hand, you're right, having an open platform allows a lot more things to be done. Choices... which shall it be?

    22. Re:Monopoly by the_B0fh · · Score: 2

      Everything was previously tied to your 'Google' account, now you have to ... I don't know, click 'Join G+' then skip a few times to not give it any extra info? You already have an account with them, what exactly are you freaking out about?

      You missed the nymwars then I take it? Killing accounts for weeks, including emails and everything else because they didn't like the name you used for G+

      That was my watershed event. Before that, I was very pro-Google. After that, they have lost my trust.

    23. Re:Monopoly by the_B0fh · · Score: 1

      They're one of the few companies with the resources to resist the NSA for example, even if only to fight the gag order that's been placed on them regarding the level to which they have been served national security letters. If Google doesn't fight, what chance does a smaller company have? That's one of the areas in which Microsoft has actually acquitted itself pretty well.

      While I agree Google did OK, Microsoft *DID NOT* They bent over backwards to provide access. Outlook.com has builtin backdoors for these things, as do skype.

    24. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What blows my mind is how "Don't be evil" is always chanted by Googlehate fans, not the other way around.

      Maybe, just maybe, because that's Google's OWN GODDAMN SLOGAN?

      It's a fucking big corporation, they're not a person to be good or evil, but they're made up of people who do all kinds of things, bad and good.

      Yes, and that's what your "Googlehate" fans kept trying to tell you, Google had done enough bad things, just like all other big bad evil corporations.

    25. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you even read the conversation? You're here with exactly the kind of "THIS IS WHAT GOOGLE FANS ACTUALLY BELIEVE" I was just speaking about.

    26. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Shutting down services is not evil. Companies do that to products that aren't profitable / don't meet their needs. Plus, the Reader shutdown was far more complicated than "it competes with G+".

      2) So? Part of Google+ is identity, why would it be surprising that for reviews tied to your identity, they want you to use G+?

      3) Thus sucks, but again, it's a far cry from "evil".

      4) Again, sucks, but not even close to "evil".

      5) They repeatedly stated that they were waiting for further details / implementations before taking action. They've supported it for almost a year now. ... still not seeing the evil.

    27. Re:Monopoly by sFurbo · · Score: 1

      Which reminds me that Doctorow recently recommended that web companies use "dead-man switches" to respond to NSA spying. By putting up a single sentence, "We have not been contacted by the NSA to turn over data" and leaving it up as long as it's true, they could fight against the despicable practice that the NSA, DEA, even the CFPB has, of demanding companies play ball and then forbid them from telling customers about it.

      A similar idea was suggested by some librarians some years ago (back when national security letters were new, I think). IIRC, the best legal advice said that removing the sign was a punishable non-compliance with a gag order, so I don't think that would work here, either.

    28. Re:Monopoly by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      the best legal advice said that removing the sign was a punishable non-compliance with a gag order, so I don't think that would work here, either.

      Which is exactly why Google has to do this, because they have the resources to fight it in court. I'd like to see a court case where the NSA and US Govt try to assert the right to force a company not to take something off their web page.

      If we're going to have this fight, then we have to have this fight.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    29. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Running a server != running an ISP.

    30. Re:Monopoly by DuckDodgers · · Score: 3, Informative

      The problem is that they don't clearly define "server". If I use Bittorrent to download a Debian release, other downloaders are pulling the data from me. Will I be blocked? If I'm hosting a Minecraft server, will that be blocked? What about ownCloud, Tonido Plug, Gotomypc.com. Are they blocked? What if my home security system allows remote access, can I use that without violating my terms of service? What if I set up a simple S/FTP server for me and a few friends to access? I can understand an argument that I shouldn't run a node for newegg.com out of my basement, but I think Google should delineate more clearly between what kinds of home service are forbidden on a consumer plan - and if they really mean everything, it sucks.

      And in terms of Evil, Google complained that they couldn't query public posts on Facebook while Bing can, but can Bing or anyone else query public posts on Google Plus? Of course not. Are they opening Google Plus APIs to third party app developers so users can cross-read and cross-post content and comments from other networks? Of course not. I strongly suspect that Google circa 2005 would have done differently. But now that they've settled further into their position as an juggernaut, they've started to take pages from the Microsoft play book.

      I still trust Google more than I trust Microsoft. But the gap in credibility between the two companies is narrowing.

    31. Re:Monopoly by TheSpoom · · Score: 1

      where is the public API for Google+?

      Right here: https://developers.google.com/+/api/

      Perhaps you have a different meaning of "public" than I do.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    32. Re:Monopoly by nobaloney · · Score: 1

      Now, maybe in parts of the country where there's FiOS service or uncapped connections capable of more than 5mbps that's not the case.

      5mbps is qite enough to run many small servers. In our datacenter, for example, we average approximately 1.2 mbps per server, when we measure across all systems in a given cabinet. 95th percentile billing (look it up).

    33. Re:Monopoly by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Because they are pushing the living fuck out of Google+ (seriously you can't even watch a Youtube video if you haven't tied your REAL NAME to Google+ without it bugging the piss out of you, its gotten bad enough I use a different browser for YouTube now) and preached on and on AND ON about how "FOSS Friendly" and "you can always get your data out" they were yet the thing they are ramming down everyone's throats to tie EVERYTHING together is proprietary as fuck and has NO WAY to get your data out?

      I would point out that MSFT plays nice too...when they are losing, its when they are on top they try to lock the living hell out of everything and that is EXACTLY what we are seeing with Google, the old stuff when they had competition? Open. the new stuff? Just as proprietary as anything Apple makes. hell you seen the new ChromeBooks? The ONLY way you can install another OS on what ONCE was a completely bog standard X86 laptop is to 1.- Throw it into "dev mode" via a page and a half of hoop jumping, 2.- After that you can ONLY use one of a half a dozen HACKED Linux distros, all of which are supported by a couple of guys...yeah I wonder how long before that is abandoned?

      I'm sorry Googleites but Google the past 24 months have been shown time and time again to be just as douchey, maybe even more douchey, than Apple and MSFT yet the crowd chants "do no evil!" likes its a magic shield. Well the emperor is bare assed folks, there is ZERO difference between Google,Apple,and MSFT, and you mark my words as the battle for mobile gets ever hotter you'll see Google going for ever nastier lock ins on the data. After all that data isn't YOUR data, its THEIR product which they sell to advertising firms...think they gonna give up that golden calf in the name of some dumb slogan? Not a chance in hell.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    34. Re:Monopoly by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      I just wanted to say thank you, its nice to see i'm not the only one screaming "WTF people?" from the rooftops. Ever since G+ and Brin gave his infamous "privacy is dead" speech Google has been just as big a douchebag when it comes to lock in and walled gardens as the other two, more and more the "FOSS friendly" and "You can do what you want with your data" are looking as bygone as the Woz upgrade friendly days of Apple, yet because somebody comes up with a stupid slogan that works as an RDF to deflect any and ALL criticism of the company? Honestly if you like Google then I think that you should hold it to a higher standard, after all if there is zero difference between Google,MSFT,and Apple WTF is the point of using Google? Its just another walled garden "corporate working against the user" supermegacorp in that case.

      You mark my words, within the next 24 months we are gonna see more and more services that aren't ingrained in G+ get axed or so tightly integrated it'll be unusable unless you use G+. BTW it wasn't just offensive names that got blocked or hassled, I don't know how many times I've had G+ pester the shit out of me for not letting it tie everything to my real name, its gotten bad enough that I now keep a separate browser for YouTube so that there is no Gmail account access in that browser. But mark my words the old "FOSS friendly" and "open data" days are gonna be killed as dead as openness at Apple yet thanks to that stupid slogan Google could replace the search background with a Goatse and the flag wavers would be trumpeting their "dry sense of humor". To me the most ironic part is you could take any press release announcing these changes, replace a few words so that its Apple or MSFT doing them? And watch the pitchforks come out, but because of that magical do no evil RDF Google will get praised for doing the same shit that the other two get crucified for doing.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    35. Re:Monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will they be blocked: no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, and fuck no. None of this shit is blocked, it's there in the TOS so if you host tons of torrents / porn they can shut you down justifiably, nothing more. Get the fuck over it, exactly how many people have *ever* been shut down even?!?!?! Maybe zero, I've never heard of any yet.

      Re Google Plus being a closed, I guarantee you if FB agreed to let them index if FB could index Google Plus, google would take that deal immediately.

    36. Re:Monopoly by someSnarkyBastard · · Score: 1

      If you decide to get a $19.99 bargain bin android from one of the major carriers then it will probably loaded to the gills with crap-ware. Why? Because you only paid $20 for the phone and they need to make money on it somehow - enter third-party crap-ware vendors that pay to be preloaded onto your phone.

      You want a crap-ware free phone? Suck it up and buy a Nexus, yes they are $350 but in exchange you get a bare as-vanilla-as-you-can-get OS with nothing aside from Google Apps loaded onto it. The fact that it's trivially rootable and gets updates direct from Google, guaranteed, is icing on the cake.

      You want to have a crap-ware free phone but don't feel like shelling out the cash for a Nexus, fine, root the phone you have. Install an AOSP (Android Open Source Project) ROM like CyanogenMod and call it done.

      TL;DR you get what you pay for.

    37. Re:Monopoly by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

      I don't expect Facebook to offer indexing Google Plus, or vice versa. But what about the thousands of little third party clients that could benefit from indexing Plus? Sorry, not permitted - because Google is now an industry giant and will behave the same way as Facebook and Microsoft when it comes to blocking the next generation of innovators.

      If Google has specific thresholds for what's allowed and what isn't, they should make that explicit in the terms of service instead of just saying "No servers". The problem with a blanket ban is that it leaves them the option to change the actual policy on a whim.

  2. Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What else is to be said, they are not stupid, they hire the smartest, and some of the smartest are crooks.

    1. Re:Duh by Anachragnome · · Score: 0

      "... they hire the smartest, and some of the smartest are crooks."

      Hire? They buy you out. You are now them, only you have no real tasks but spending the millions they just gave you to keep you on the bench and off the playing field...and your mouth firmly shut.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_acquisitions

      Rivalry, my ass. The only rivalry I see is from Microsoft, leaving us the old "lesser of two evils" scenario. In other words, no choice. It's a good cop/bad cop routine meant to keep us in a state where we have no options.

      Think back to the list of major players that Snowden exposed, then look at the following lists of acquisitions and you'll see just how much of the tech world has been compromised.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mergers_and_acquisitions_by_Apple

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mergers_and_acquisitions_by_Facebook

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mergers_and_acquisitions_by_Microsoft

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mergers_and_acquisitions_by_Yahoo!

      And take a close look at Twitter's acquisitions--Bluefin Labs and Whisper Systems, in particular.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mergers_and_acquisitions_by_Twitter

  3. Except when it comes to China. by sethstorm · · Score: 0, Troll

    Unless they get hurt, they'll deal with anyone and anything evil - China being the prime example.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    1. Re:Except when it comes to China. by gmuslera · · Score: 2

      By now US is the prime example. China may be evil with its own population, but US is with the entire world's one.

    2. Re:Except when it comes to China. by plover · · Score: 1

      They originally hoped that they'd bring uncensored information to China. When that got silenced, they switched to telling their customers they were being censored, bringing attention to the censorship. When that was silenced, they left.

      At the high level, (and from a Western viewpoint*,) those are not evil actions. The rest of their dealings with China and the Chinese market may have been less than angelic, but their overarching framework had noble foundations.

      * I qualified that statement because there is a Chinese viewpoint that a harmonious society (even if it is built on polite fictions) is better than individual freedoms that lead to disruptions. We may find that dishonest, repulsive, repressive, and tyrannical, but ours aren't the only ideas on the planet.

      --
      John
    3. Re:Except when it comes to China. by hedwards · · Score: 1

      What else did you expect them to do? Other than not even try, they took the only other reasonably option other than fully complying.

      It's not different from the US. See how long you can operate a server that provides child pornography and methods of taking down a plane before the server is shut down and confiscated.

      The law is what the law is in the country and until and unless the policy isn't enforced you're options are to not go there, to leave or to fight. And fighting is often times not viable in countries like China where the party makes the laws and enforces them.

    4. Re:Except when it comes to China. by sethstorm · · Score: 1

      The problem with that is the US has a much higher threshold for such activities - whether in the US or across the world.

      That said, the US has (without apology) an empire to maintain and that it should not have to be made to submit to the world.

      --
      Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  4. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Providing free internet to individuals, schools, and libraries, and increasing paid broadband speed by 100x without raising prices is evil?

    1. Re: Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That whooshing sound over your head is the main point of the summary.

  5. Google Do Do Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Their bottomless pit of an appetite for people's data that can be used for Advertising is IMHO pure evil.
    THen there is there slurping of data from their cars. I don't buy that their capturing of WiFi data was an accident.
    When they were photographing places why did they need to detect WiFi signals? They didn't.

    Google will do as must as they can to get data on the people who use their system.
    The can proclaim their 'goodness' as long as they are less evil than FaceBook.

    1. Re:Google Do Do Evil by Sir_Sri · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's kind of it. Their business is in selling adwords and they do that by trawling as much data as they can about as many people as they can. All of their other businesses are either amusing side projects they haven't figured out what to do with yet, or they do evil in support of their main advertising business.

      Anything that can't either boost adsense revenue or make money directly is eventually going to get cut.

    2. Re:Google Do Do Evil by Animats · · Score: 1

      Right, Google's problems with evil are more on the ad side. They had to pay $500,000,000 as a penalty to the Department of Justice to keep Larry Page out of jail when Google was knowingly running ads for drug dealers. (It wasn't about "Canadian pharmacies"; Google was caught in an FBI sting operation involving a fake representative of a Mexican drug lord.)

      After that, Google started checking out advertisers in the drug area more closely. But they continued to run ads for fake "foreclosure prevention" services and other rather flaky outfits.

      Google's advertiser vetting is very weak. They don't even check whether there's a real business behind the ad. We used to run an automated check on this, and for about 36% of Google advertisers (by domain name), there was no identifiable real-world business behind the ad.

    3. Re:Google Do Do Evil by tlambert · · Score: 4, Informative

      Right, Google's problems with evil are more on the ad side. They paid extortion to the tune of $500,000,000 as a penalty to the Department of Justice to keep Larry Page out of jail when Google offended the pharmaceutical industry cartel. That amount was sufficient to match the bribes paid by the pharmaceutical industry, and since it shut down most internet pharmacies being found via google, they didn't pursue the matter further.

      There, fixed that for ya.

  6. could he be referring to the fact of no servers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    on google Fiber? because to me, that's reasonable.

    1. Re:could he be referring to the fact of no servers by Chemisor · · Score: 1

      So evil is ok as long as it's reasonable?

    2. Re:could he be referring to the fact of no servers by tlambert · · Score: 2

      So evil is ok as long as it's reasonable?

      Well, a TOS statement that has yet to be enforced against anyone on the assumption that the customer also isn't evil is a hell of a lot less evil than an asymmetric rate for upload/download speeds or upload caps as a technical enforcement measure.

      PS: Got your own ISP to lift their RIAA/MPAA imposed download cap yet?

    3. Re:could he be referring to the fact of no servers by hedwards · · Score: 1

      The problem is that opting out of the ToS is a non-starter in many areas. Around here I get two viable choices for internet, I have to sign with one of them if I want to have an internet connection and I don't have the opportunity to negotiate the terms of the agreement.

      What we really need is for the courts to start recognizing that these aren't contracts, these are demands placed on people with limited options and in some cases all of the options contain the same fine print.

    4. Re:could he be referring to the fact of no servers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do they also forbid you to rent a VPS?..

      While "no running any servers whatsoever!11" is dumb (and usually not enforced - my log collecting mail server at home's running for years without complains from ISP), I know there's difference in traffic between business and home use. If your neighbor starts selling VPN access stuffing the tubes so that your Internet slows to a crawl, you sure won't be pleased.

    5. Re:could he be referring to the fact of no servers by hedwards · · Score: 1

      If they wouldn't oversell their capacity to such a drastic degree that wouldn't be a problem. Bottom line here is that the ISPs aren't exactly writing the ToS in a neutral fashion, they're writing it in a way that disadvantages the subscriber and where the subscriber has basically no say other than to opt out completely.

      Right now, I can sign with Comcast, that can't keep a stable connection; Centurylink that's OK, but slow; Hughes Net, which has satellite latency and Clear that has it's own bandwidth problems.

      Now, if I had real choices and the contracts were more dissimilar it would be different. But, the ISPs oversell their capacity and fail to do anything to make things better. Meanwhile I have the choice of a 5mbps uncapped connection or one that's somewhat faster but has a cap below what I use some months.

  7. Or it could be the opposite. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It could be that the incentive to do evil is stronger in competitive markets. It would seem the incentive to to whatever it takes to be profitable in competitive markets would be even stronger.

    Whether a company decides it's a better strategy to be more competitive by trying to attract more customers by offering superior products (including ideologies like green, ethical, etc) or finding legal or illegal ways of exploiting society for higher revenue seems incidental.

    I am not saying google is good or evil. I am only saying that I don;t see the rationale to necessarily be good in competitive markets and bad in noncompetitive markets. If anything being bad in any sphere would seem to nullify Google's image as an ethical company and ruin any advantages such a reputation would have in markets where ethics were it's primary selling point.

    I think all companies try to be profitable and ethical. Where these 2 ideals are in conflict some companies have a higher willingness to overlook ethics in favor of profit. I don't think market competition is as relevant a factor as this article implies.

    1. Re:Or it could be the opposite. by Holladon · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Trying to tie this to "competition" seems like trying to force it into a preconceived argument when there's a much, much simpler explanation: Google, like all companies, tries to minimize its costs and maximize its revenues, and it's done so while more or less keeping its nose fairly clean vis-a-vis the consumers of its products and services. Having a good image all-around, sure, tends to give you a slight edge in any market with any competition -- including, by the way, the employment market, which, even in an economy as shitty as this one, is by definition ALWAYS competitive absent legalized slavery. But expanding into a relatively less-competitive market doesn't result in a cost-benefit analysis whereby you are suddenly more willing to tarnish your brand; the obvious explanation for the different position on net neutrality is that, as an ISP, Google now has costs that are directly impacted by net neutrality, rather than only benefits. If you change the cost/benefit analysis for a given policy position, hey how about that, you may find that you now come down a different way on it. It's nothing to do with "competition" and everything to do with a completely different type of business. Google wouldn't magically not care about the possible burdens of net neutrality as an ISP if there were many more ISPs out there competing with it.

  8. Ethics? Evil? by iggymanz · · Score: 1

    Such words have varying definitions by person, your evil may be my good.

  9. Re:Ethics? Evil? by oodaloop · · Score: 2

    Exactly. You're going to find that many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view. That's what I learned from Star Wars.

    --
    Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
  10. Human flourishing is the ultimate "profit" by Drinian · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Generally speaking, it's almost always more profitable in the long run to be ethical. As in most things, there are exceptions. Also, profitability has to be thought of in a broader way to accurately understand this issue. Human flourishing is the ultimate "profit" which includes wholeness in relationships which is always destroyed by being "evil".

    1. Re:Human flourishing is the ultimate "profit" by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      It depends on how you view your ingroups and outgroups. If your ingroup is the whole world, then the most profitable thing to do is to be a socialist/philanthropist. If your ingroup is your family and your fellow shareholders, then ethics may not play such a big part in your ability to be profitable.

      By vowing not to be evil, Google is effectively claiming a larger ingroup than is typically expected of a corporation.

      Many people are perfectly content with their flourishing coming at the expense of the misery of other less fortunate people.

    2. Re:Human flourishing is the ultimate "profit" by Drinian · · Score: 2

      It is true that people may be content to advance at the expense and misery of others. In fact, it is rather common today, even in cultures that have a history of other-centered ethics (virtue), to glamorize such behavior (precisely because in those cultures there is an active abandonment of the foundations that produced them). And it is all done with the logic you suggest: "What is me and mine is right and good."

      The problem with that is how we treat the one is how we will treat the many, and people know this. So, if you can abuse someone we both think is in our mutual "outgroup" I quietly know that you have the capability to do it to anyone, even those in your "ingroup" which includes me. "Us four and no more...and it might only be three of us."

      Evil has a corrosive effect that cannot be limited to my "enemies." That's why integrity really does matter.

    3. Re:Human flourishing is the ultimate "profit" by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      So, if you can abuse someone we both think is in our mutual "outgroup" I quietly know that you have the capability to do it to anyone, even those in your "ingroup" which includes me.

      This is probably true of shareholders in a company who find themselves with common interests for the moment. I think there is probably a deeper bond between other sorts of ingroups. I wouldn't assume that a man would be willing to murder his own son, because he was able to murder a stranger for money. I wouldn't assume that a soldier would be willing to kill his fellow soldiers because he was willing to kill an enemy soldier.

  11. That ship sailed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "competition keeps Google behaving ethically"

    ? I thought that ship sailed as soon as the "Do No Evil" paint dried.. Or at least after they hired their first of many "ex" NSA members...
     

  12. How to remain Google... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ...after hiring so many people coming from other companies that never though being evil was something to be avoided?

    Not to pick on Microsofties, but how many of them can you hire without turning your company into Microsoft?

  13. Strong competitors are really important by iampiti · · Score: 2

    And that's why is so important that a company has strong competitors. If they don't, they have fewer incentives to be ethical.
    I love Android, but Google needs strong competitors so that they make it good for consumers and not only good for themselves.

    1. Re:Strong competitors are really important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point.

      However the majority of Fandroids out there want to see NO competition. i.e. they want Apple, BB and MS to die a horrible death.
      The totally grok the mantra 'Google Can do no wrong. Google is Good. Everyone else is Bad.;

      If that happens then no one will be able to do anything on the internet or on thei phone without the Chocolate Factory knowing all about it and advertising it to you.

  14. Google isn't beneath a little semi-evil lying when by DougDot · · Score: 2
  15. I guess you forget the main reason ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... for the investment: COLLECTING PRIVATE DATA

    Google's profit depend on collecting your data and selling it to the highest bidder (same as Facebook).

    1. Re:I guess you forget the main reason ... by hedwards · · Score: 1

      That's not true. They don't collect the information coming down the pipe. They collect the information the same way on their network that they do on the network in general. The profit motive for them to provide the improved connections is more impressions per hour. As well as fewer people blocking ads because of slow connection speeds. And hopefully scare the other ISPs into improving the connection speeds so that it happens all over the place.

  16. I remember this story by tuppe666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    http://tech.slashdot.org/story/13/07/30/2322253/google-argues-against-net-neutrality its a dupe. Its the same dumb points from anonymous cowards. Google want to charge businesses for attaching servers to the internet...and yet this has been twisted into a Net Neutrality argument, by changing the definition of Net Neutrality "discriminating or charging differentially by user, content, site, platform, application, type of attached equipment, and modes of communication" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_neutrality . I'm just shocked its not an Ars Technica...maybe they are still defending the iPhone launch.

    1. Re:I remember this story by jdogalt · · Score: 1, Informative

      http://tech.slashdot.org/story/13/07/30/2322253/google-argues-against-net-neutrality [slashdot.org] its a dupe.

      The original complaint I filed with the FCC, then the Kansas Attorney General, and then back to the FCC is here-

      http://cloudsession.com/dawg/downloads/misc/kag-draft-2k121024.pdf

      Another slashdot echo of the EFF's take is here-

      http://tech.slashdot.org/story/13/08/13/2148245/eff-slams-google-fiber-for-banning-servers-on-its-network

      Its the same dumb points from anonymous cowards.

      Ad hominem much tuppe666? My name is Douglas McClendon.

      Google want to charge businesses for attaching servers to the internet...and yet this has been twisted into a Net Neutrality argument,

      Here is my twist, I'll just post a paragraph from 10-201 (aka 'Net Neutrality')

      FCC-10-201 Paragraph 13 (see appendix B for the entirety) ...
      (Under Section Heading:)
      The Internet’s Openness Promotes Innovation, Investment, Competition, Free Expression, and Other National Broadband Goals
      13.
      Like electricity and the computer, the Internet is a "general purpose technology" that enables new methods of production that have a major impact on
      the entire economy.(12) The Internet’s founders intentionally built a network that is open, in the sense that it has no gatekeepers limiting innovation and
      communication through the network.(13) Accordingly, the Internet enables an end user to access the content and applications of her choice, without
      requiring permission from broadband providers. This architecture enables innovators to create and offer new applications and services without needing
      approval from any controlling entity, be it a network provider, equipment manufacturer, industry body, or government agency.(14) End users benefit
      because the Internet’s openness allows new technologies to be developed and distributed by a broad range of sources, not just by the companies that
      operate the network. For example, Sir Tim Berners-Lee was able to invent the World Wide Web nearly two decades after engineers developed the
      Internet’s original protocols, without needing changes to those protocols or any approval from network operators.(15) Startups and small businesses
      benefit because the Internet’s openness enables anyone connected to the network to reach and do business with anyone else,(16) allowing even the
      smallest and most remotely located businesses to access national and global markets, and contribute to the economy through e-commerce(17) and
      online advertising.(18) Because Internet openness enables widespread innovation and allows all end users and edge providers (rather than just the
      significantly smaller number of broadband providers) to create and determine the success or failure of content, applications, services, and devices, it
      maximizes commercial and non-commercial innovations that address key national challenges -- including improvements in health care, education, and
      energy efficiency that benefit our economy and civic life.(19)

      http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-201A1_Rcd.pdf

      by changing the definition of Net Neutrality "discriminating or charging differentially by user, content, site, platform, application, type of attached equipment, and modes of communication" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_neutrality [wikipedia.org] . I'm just shocked its not an Ars Technica...maybe they are still defending the iPhone launch.

      And here, I will emphasize a quote from Vint Cerf, about what IPv6 _ought_ to enable

    2. Re:I remember this story by maccodemonkey · · Score: 1

      http://tech.slashdot.org/story/13/07/30/2322253/google-argues-against-net-neutrality its a dupe. Its the same dumb points from anonymous cowards. Google want to charge businesses for attaching servers to the internet...and yet this has been twisted into a Net Neutrality argument, by changing the definition of Net Neutrality "discriminating or charging differentially by user, content, site, platform, application, type of attached equipment, and modes of communication" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_neutrality . I'm just shocked its not an Ars Technica...maybe they are still defending the iPhone launch.

      Seems like it fits Net Neutrality perfectly to me. Google is discriminating based on content, right?

      If Google is universally looking down on servers, they're going after people hosting things from Starcraft servers to running Bittorrent, right? If those are allowed behaviors, then they're discriminating based on type of content.

      Google basically said "If you run a Starcraft server, that's ok. If you run an HTTP server, shame on you!" The irony is that an HTTP server is probably lower bandwidth than the other kinds of servers they allow. That's the sort of discrimination an "evil" company would do just to profit more of business use, the sort of thing that's not really grounded in common sense.

    3. Re: I remember this story by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      The thing about the no servers policy isn't about the letter of the law, it's the spirit.

      I used to work for a few ISPs, and the point of the server clause isn't to bust people for running generically anything termed, "server", it's a matter of managing use scenarios(a home user maxing out bandwidth 24/7 is generally a bad idea), and service expectations. Last thing anyone ever needs is for some idiot to call the support line bitching that he's losing business because residential service conked out(this is so frequent it's a joke among some folks I know), too.

      Maybe the rules should be more specific about use case and so forth, but it's rarely if ever enforced. Only when you're caught running a BitTorrent tracker or something does it ever really get used.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    4. Re: I remember this story by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Just to be clear about the comment about people losing money, this usually refers to people doing eBay, or some scam or another. It's never been a case where service was used to host servers.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  17. Google moved into Internet service provider .. by codeusirae · · Score: 1

    'Where they operate in narrower, less competitive markets — like where they’ve become an Internet service provider, for example — they abandon those commitments.'

    Like where, give examples ...

    1. Re:Google moved into Internet service provider .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:Google moved into Internet service provider .. by bbsalem · · Score: 1

      'Where they operate in narrower, less competitive markets — like where they’ve become an Internet service provider, for example — they abandon those commitments.' Like where, give examples ...

      OK, despite Google Docs and the ability to host web pages on Google if you have a Gmail account, the service contains incumbrances that violate standards such as web standards. You cannot upload HTML and CSS to their web host and expect it to run. I accept their effort to make web authorship easy for people who can't hand code their HTML and CSS, but if you wanted that much control over your web pages, even just static web pages, then what Google offers is not a full hosting service, not by a long shot, and it favors their products, some of which are broken, but it misrepresents what it is. It is not open hosting, but a closed document system.

      Google Books is broken, terribly broken. It is laughable how broken it is. A few months ago I looked for and found free sheet music, public domain music scanned and available as is in "free", but in point of fact the resource was useless, obstructed. Google advertises that free books can be downloaded as PDFs. In fact generating PDFs has never worked, and the viewer is broken and not usable for following music from a recording or for reading it at the piano. It is useless.

      Listen to corporate slogans as their negations. "Do no Evil" sets a pretty high standard, when in fact "Do some evil" is closer to the mark and even though Google's defenders rush out to say that it doesn't do as much evil as other corporations is only a comparative statement about the overpowering urge to do evil. So Google's slogan, like most other such slogans is that they are silly efforts to conceal exactly what they are doing, but most shadow, that is, disavow, when doing that is an essential part of their existence.

      So what is evil about Google? Sponsered links appearing on search pages, more of them, and often repeated on every page, so that a page containing about 20 hits now have about 5 sponsored links that repeat. In Google Books, doing the implementation of the service so poorly that it is basac;ly a tease; the intent was never to provide access to books, not even free books, but to make the experience so bad that you would go and pay for the copyright version, anyway. Provide a closed document system that porports to meet cloud document needs, but into which you can'r really import or export content. It is a captive market stretegy, which might be justified in a purely business sense, but we don't have to buy into it, do we? I was able to diagnose this pretty quickly and I have kept my investment very small, because once there, my stuff isn't mine.

  18. you dont take over the world by.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    starting off with saying "Ok here is our plan guys step 1: search, step 2: ?, step 3: world domination.

  19. Domestic Surveillance Market? by cookYourDog · · Score: 2

    Can we consider Google of being 'good' in the crowded market of domestic surveillance?

  20. Except He's Wrong by brit74 · · Score: 2
    Except that I don't recall any of the telephone companies stopping the NSA. And it's been claimed that Qwest lost out on US government contracts because it put up resistance to the US government.

    When Qwest refused the NSA’s illegal request that it hand over its customers’ data without a warrant, the NSA wasn’t happy. According to former Qwest CEO Joseph Nacchio, the government hit back for the telecom’s refusal by denying them lucrative contracts worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2007/10/qwest-ceo-nsa-punished-qwest-refusing-participate-illegal-surveillance-pre-9-11

    Here's the thing: when there is competition, the government can play favorites with whoever does their bidding best. Remember the whole Yahoo-China thing? China could kick Yahoo out of China so Yahoo had to roll-over so that they could keep their marketshare. And Yahoo fought against the NSA in court as well, but they lost. What did Marissa Mayer say about that again?

    "Yahoo chief Marissa Mayer said she feared winding up in prison for treason if she refused to comply with U.S. spy demands for data. Her comments came after being asked what she is doing to protect Yahoo users from "tyrannical government" during an on-stage interview Wednesday afternoon at a TechCrunch Disrupt conference in San Francisco."

    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2013/09/12/yahoo-ceo-fears-defying-nsa-could-mean-prison/

    * Congrats, Cory. You've gotten on Slashdot several times in the past few weeks. Remember: it's important to keep your name in the news so that you can sell more books. Too bad your analysis is overly simplistic.

    1. Re:Except He's Wrong by cookYourDog · · Score: 1

      Absolutely frightening.

    2. Re:Except He's Wrong by west · · Score: 2

      Cory's service to the community is not in providing nuanced analysis of issues. It's using his fame to bring issues to light that would simply be ignored by the more mainstream community.

      We've got dozens of people with blogs to provide cogent, deep analysis. We've got precious few people with enough name recognition that they can get important issues put on the agenda.

      I love in-depth policy analysis, but I'm well aware it's the kiss of death if you want to actually get things done in the real world. Simply put, nuance makes things too complicated for those who have only the slightest of interest in issues that we consider important - and they're the ones that make the decisions.

    3. Re:Except He's Wrong by casings · · Score: 2

      Cory's service to the community is not in providing nuanced analysis of issues. It's using his fame to bring issues to light that would simply be ignored by the more mainstream community.

      And how exactly is that relevant here? You think the community needs another Google circlejerk?

    4. Re:Except He's Wrong by west · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I should have quoted the relevant line I was responding to.

      Congrats, Cory. You've gotten on Slashdot several times in the past few weeks. Remember: it's important to keep your name in the news so that you can sell more books. Too bad your analysis is overly simplistic.

  21. Evil = Capitalist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .. when the raison d'etre of *any* organisation is based upon a capitalist structure, i.e ."lets make more money than last year.." - Google being a defacto entirely capatilistic enerprise after their flotation - yup, then ethics goes out the window first. The rules of capitalisatism simply do not allow them to act otherwise.

  22. What switch are you talking about? by linuxguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Can you provide an example to back up your claim?

    I am also curious about the switch you are talking about? If you are talking about their no server policy, can you provide a link to where they said servers were OK at some point and then later went back on their word?

    1. Re:What switch are you talking about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. Just read any story about Google doing something bad. There are dozens upon dozens of fanbois doing spin doctoring and damage control.

  23. just one thought by FudRucker · · Score: 0

    what part of "Spying for the NSA" is not evil?

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
  24. I figured Google would turn out to be more evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I figured Google would turn out to be more evil, simply because they said they wouldn't be. Most corporations don't try to snow you about that right out of the gate. EVERYBODY is evil; but a real sociopath manages to convince people they are saintly. Once that ideas is fixed into enough pretty little heads, you can get away with a lot more...

    1. Re:I figured Google would turn out to be more evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You have to be trusted by the people that you lie to, so that when they turn their backs on you, you get the chance to put the knife in."
      Pink Floyd

  25. Good or Evil ... by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2

    ... I'd just be happier if I could get Google to serve up search/result pages without suggestions, instant, sidebars, Javascript, safe search etc... Sure, I'm able to kill most of that using cookies, Proxomitron (strip code, bake cookies...) and NoScript but it's a PITA. I just want simple Google searches w/o all the crap. Just my $.02.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    1. Re:Good or Evil ... by iampiti · · Score: 1

      I'd be happy to pay for their services (search/gmail/drive...) if that guaranteed me that they don't store any info about me and that doesn't feed AdSense, and I get no ads. Just put a reasonable price on it and I bet many people would pay

    2. Re:Good or Evil ... by The+Conductor · · Score: 1

      You may want to consider using DuckDuckGo for searches. It anonymizes your search (until the G-men show up, of course) and doesn't tie into any other services.

    3. Re:Good or Evil ... by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      You may want to consider using DuckDuckGo for searches...

      Thanks, I'm looking into that - and Startpage - now. They both offer desirable, easy display customizations.

      I don't really care about Google logging/using my search data, but it pisses me off that I can't (easily) customize the search experience on their pages. I was able to kill most of the annoying bits like suggestions and instant using NoScript and not allowing Javascript. Using Proxomitron was able to filter cookies and HTML to remove the redirection links, Tools bar and ensure other things were set/cleared, but *that* requires an http connection and - for some reason - I'm now getting redirected to https at home but, strangely, not at work (both while signed out as I never actually sign into Google) - Heavy sigh.

      I'll probably try playing with Greasemonkey to see how that goes. However, I really liked filtering through Proxomitron as it also works for IE and other applications... I suppose I could always add a hosts entry "216.239.32.20 www.google.com" to hit "nosslsearch.google.com" instead.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  26. Yaaay! Bashing strawmen is fun! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, GP said it's evil but he's ok with it?

  27. Nice theory, but is it practiced? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 2

    A couple of non-nerd friends and I were talking a few weeks ago, and the topic of various Internet services came up. Without any prompting from me, both of them (one an Android user, the other a dumbphone user) mentioned that they were trying to get away from Google services like Gmail, Google+, GTalk, and even Android because of the creepy factor with how Google is using their data these days. No mention of PRISM or the NSA or the like until after I asked about it. They were simply bothered by the fact that they were being tracked as much as they were by Google.

    Now, I know an anecdote does not a trend make and that we can't extrapolate to the population at large, but still, having non-nerds both aware of and caring about this stuff enough to vocalize their desire to leave a company's products behind is pretty damning, and I was shocked to hear them volunteer that opinion, since I had thought that nerds were the only ones who cared enough about the topic to suggest taking such action.

  28. but then again... by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

    competition keeps Google behaving ethically because it believes there are benefits to be had.

    perhaps it's the fact that they started the company under the mantra of "don't be evil." come on, Microsoft had to compete when it started out and they did a lot of douchebag things. remember how windows 3.1 wouldnt run on DR-DOS because MS sabotaged it.

    David Cole and Phil Barrett exchanged emails on 30 September 1991: " "It's pretty clear we need to make sure Windows 3.1 only runs on top of MS DOS or an OEM version of it," and "The approach we will take is to detect dr 6 and refuse to load. The error message should be something like 'Invalid device driver interface.'"

    so dont tell me that competition keeps businesses honest because it's the biggest load of bullshit i've heard in a long time. there is plenty of competition in the tech market and everyone seems to be going with the sue the competition into oblivion form of competition. microsoft has their smartphone OS but everyone is using Android so they decided to extort money from everyone.

    Google is honest because it was the plan from the very start.

    --
    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
  29. Ask Skyhook Wireless... by Rational · · Score: 1

    ...whether Google behaves ethically. I frequent the BoingBoing site, so I'm used to Doctorow's inane drivel, but this probably takes the biscuit.

    --
    "Be nice, veer left, and never stop thinking" Iain Banks - Walking On Glass
  30. All good people work to promote trust by bug1 · · Score: 1

    No company or individual can "do no evil" when living under the thumb of "security" agencies that demand they betray the trust of their customers/friends, under penalty of treason.

  31. Public relations by Livius · · Score: 1

    Evil versus non-evil is image, not morality. A positive image is an asset in a competitive situation, but irrelevant for a monopoly. Evil without being caught is just as good, but Google understands the Internet well enough not to try that.

  32. The basic fallacy of a market economy by funky_vibes · · Score: 1

    Isn't this the basic fallacy of capitalism where competition keeps corporate behaviour in check.
    But of course no solution is offered for when a company reaches near dominance in one area, not to mention multiple areas.

  33. Hmm, maybe it's not as complicated as it looks by Jade_Wayfarer · · Score: 1

    "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity". Maybe Google just sucks at being evil?

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    Absence of proof != proof of absence.
  34. Hardest problem by obtuse · · Score: 1

    I have often said that this is the hardest problem Google faces: How not to be evil, and how to make that an ongoing legacy. It's just possible as long as the founders retain control, but after that it becomes truly hard.

    Assuming they take this seriously, I hope they dedicate resources to this, and do not underestimate the complexity of the problem.

    --
    Assembly is the reverse of disassembly.
  35. Apparently moderators forget about PRC too easily by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    Except when it comes to China., posted to Doctorow: Rivalry Keeps Google From Doing Evil, has been moderated Troll (-1).
    Except when it comes to China., posted to Doctorow: Rivalry Keeps Google From Doing Evil, has been moderated Overrated (-1).

    Google was willing to deal with China, a country willing to silence someone for much less than the US. In spite of that, some people may have been quite angered at having that pointed out.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  36. sounds like Republican 'principles' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not a principle if you only adhere to it when it's to your advantage. (The Republicans also have another kind of principle -- things that they want *other* people to adhere to, but don't themselves, but they don't come into play here.)