Please support our Site Management advertiser: Affiliate Marketing
Apr 7th, 2007, 2:01 am
What appears to be a brand new feature of our beloved Google is the ability to "Note" any URL which turns up in the search results. Noting a URL adds it to your personal notebook, which works like a scrapbook ala bookmarks. Pretty interesting ... although I'm still a fan of IE favorites, browser history, and the back button.
This blog entry was written by cscgal. It has received 2,096 views, 6 comments, and 6 linkbacks. 1 voter has rated this entry 4 out of 5 stars. It was promoted to featured status Apr 7th, 2007.
•
•
•
•
adsense advertising amazon android api apple blogging browser business cell phone cellphone chrome cloud computing copyright cuil development doubleclick email engine environment europe facebook gmail google government ibm icahn internet internet explorer iphone linux marketing merger microsoft mobile news privacy saas salesforce.com search security seo t-mobile video web wikipedia windows yahoo youtube
All Recent Tags Comments (Newest First)
tgreer | Made Her Cry | Apr 9th, 2007
•
•
•
•
I'm all for Google making a profit. I'm against any business that makes a profit by stealing my content or by reselling portions of copyrighted material, or by spying on my shopping and browsing habits.
RTC | Light Poster | Apr 9th, 2007
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
If government agencies collected the amount of data on people that Google does, the ACLU and civil liberties and human rights organisations would be all over them...
Well right now Google doesn't have the power to storm your house with guns, seize your assets, and lock you up... However, I suppose Google could always be soepena'ed by the Government for their records so I guess its really just the same thing but a step removed.
Really though, are any search engines non-profits? Its google.com, not .org. being facetious here but I don't know any 501C3's, churches, community groups, or social service organizations that offer powerful competitive search engine alternatives.
jwenting | duckman | Apr 9th, 2007
•
•
•
•
sure, and none of them were altruistic... None of them had the marketing power Goooooogle has, nor the recognised interest in building up profiles of everyone for unknown purposes (possibly just marketing, but for just marketing they're collecting way too much data on people).
If government agencies collected the amount of data on people that Google does, the ACLU and civil liberties and human rights organisations would be all over them...
If Microsoft did a fraction of what Google is doing they'd be up over their heads in lawsuits about it.
But Google is run by a couple of far left kids so it's OK.
If government agencies collected the amount of data on people that Google does, the ACLU and civil liberties and human rights organisations would be all over them...
If Microsoft did a fraction of what Google is doing they'd be up over their heads in lawsuits about it.
But Google is run by a couple of far left kids so it's OK.
cscgal | The Queen of DaniWeb | Apr 7th, 2007
tgreer | Made Her Cry | Apr 7th, 2007
•
•
•
•
Of interest are the collaboration features, the ability to "share" your notebook with friends and family and "publish it" as a public web page. It seems Google is not content with caching entire sites and scanning copyrighted printed publications; they see a new opportunity in the social networking environment of the web. They want to get people to voluntarily generate content which becomes a "new public page", which they can then in turn regurgitate, index, and monetize.
To those who are tempted to voluntarily store, share, and publish their browsing history, ask yourself how this feature is possible. The answer is: Google is already doing exactly that, on a massive scale. Next, ask yourself why Google would offer this for "free". There is no free lunch, and I join the increasing number of people who view Google with a great degree of skepticism and an increasing amount of distrust.
To those who are tempted to voluntarily store, share, and publish their browsing history, ask yourself how this feature is possible. The answer is: Google is already doing exactly that, on a massive scale. Next, ask yourself why Google would offer this for "free". There is no free lunch, and I join the increasing number of people who view Google with a great degree of skepticism and an increasing amount of distrust.
jwenting | duckman | Apr 7th, 2007
•
•
•
•
one more way for Goooooooogle to track what you're doing and build up a complete commercial and political/social profile of almost everyone on this dirtball.
Post Comment
•
•
•
•
Only community members can start a blog or comment on blog entries. You must register or log in to contribute.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
DaniWeb Site Management Marketplace
Related Blog Entries
- McCain Runs Ads Saying He Won Debate -- Before It Happens (16 Days Ago)
- Webhosting Support (Aug 21st, 2008)
- Google gives users an insight into search (Aug 6th, 2008)
- Major ISPs Drop alt.* Usenet Hierarchy (Jul 28th, 2008)
- Google and Cuil search giants go head to head in DaniWeb testing (Jul 28th, 2008)
- Microsoft Live Search for Facebook (Jul 27th, 2008)
- Botnets boost click-fraud rate (Jul 23rd, 2008)
- Keep your server safe check your GNU software (Jul 8th, 2008)
- Need an online dictionary? Just ask Ask. (Jul 4th, 2008)
- Googlebot gets to grip with Flash (Jul 1st, 2008)
Related Forum Threads
- Google PR (Search Engine Optimization)
- Not sure whats wrong,please take a look!! (Viruses, Spyware and other Nasties)
- Hijacker problem (Viruses, Spyware and other Nasties)
- Site placing in google (Search Engine Optimization)
- Parents in court over evolution (Geeks' Lounge)
- Buying & Selling Google PageRank (Website Reviews)
- Problems IE 6 Win98 redirected from google to other site (Web Browsers)
Featured Entry