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Google No Longer A Quiet Giant


Silence not as golden as originally thought

Seemingly gone is the company that did one thing and did it well, and tried in earnest not to talk about that one thing done well. Google is dipping into many wells these days, but the biggest change is perhaps how forthcoming Google has been recently.

There was a time when one had to lurk about the search forums and bloggers-familiar-with-the-matter to pick up tidbits about algorithmic changes, policy changes, and future (seemingly grandiose) movements. The Google obsessed are still hard at it – many of them landing new, higher profile gigs or advertising deals – digging through domain registrations, robot droppings, and (sometimes faked) photo evidence. It was this trademark standoffishness that, ironically, seemed to propel the company to juggernaut status.

Alas, much of the mystery just isn't there anymore. Google has numerous blogs devoted to everything from public policy to research. Google's PR people actually answer questions (usually only the PR people, though), the founders are more outspoken about future plans, and the very public battle with AT&T and Verizon shows a more mature, confident, and transparent multinational corporation.

It wasn't long ago that Google wouldn't comment on rumor and speculation (they still won't) surrounding the rumored Google phone. It wasn't too tough to guess at their plans after they acquired Android. Still, they were pretty tight-lipped. These days, they're proud to say Android-powered phones will be shipping in time for Christmas – or after the holiday season says a source Google actually bothered to disagree with.

The company did one thing and did it so well it destroyed any semblance of competition. That point could serve as a reasonable springboard into why Google now looks to the mobile industry: a sort of digital manifest destiny. When one territory is conquered, choose another.

But cofounder Larry Page appeared in person and told some Washington types recently the company's interest in spectrum, broadband expansion, and mobile computing has more to do continuing to do its one thing well. To paraphrase: More people with more opportunities to access the web means more people searching for content and more people to click on search ads.

There you have it, laid out there on the table from the horse's mouth. No need to speculate, postulate, or prognosticate. No need to make the company more altruistic than necessary, either.

A couple of years ago, Google was known for holding secret meetings with hundreds of people and expecting them to not talk about it. Wonder of all wonders, they actually kept the secrets—perhaps in exchange for other discretions. But there's no sense in speculating anymore.

The watchdogs are still around, noting with the surgical precision of obsession and compulsion minute changes to how Google defines a doorway page (hint: it's less techie, more felt). Meanwhile, Google's Maile Ohye has posted a video detailing how Google defines IP delivery, geolocation, and cloaking (main point: don't try to trick the bot).

While a Google executive does his own prognosticating about the eventual commoditization of web content—an idea that means you'll be paying to read news again one day—the company demonstrates its own skill at getting around pesky subscription obstacles by allowing a few employee bloggers to announce the availability of real-time stock quotes on Google Finance.

Is this the end, then, of the search giant's shyness? We should be careful what we wish for; there may come a day when we wish they'd shut up already.    

 

  
 
 

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News Tags: Search, Google
About the author:
Jason Lee Miller is a WebProNews editor and writer covering business and technology.

Comments

vert interesting nothing new

vert interesting nothing new here though

No longer a quite Giant

Jason,

A few weeks ago, I would have read your article and yawned.  No interest.  However, this week I cheer you for Google seems to be taking over in many areas.  If you're not familiar with the copyright laws that are turning protections for the creative community upside down, see www.owoh.org .  I would love to read another article by you.  See if you can connect the dots!

 

Blessings,

Kathy

Google submitted a fantastic

Google submitted a fantastic argument to the ACCC regarding Ebays monopoly with paypal. A Google style Auction site would be very welcomed

Keep Talking, Google

About the forums - though Google keeps talking, a lot of the buzz in today's forums are trying to dig up what Google isn't saying, i.e. about how Johnny Webmaster can get his site to #1. So the more Google keeps talking, the more there is to 'read between the lines'. That seems to be the fodder for a lot of discussion. 

Interesing article, I liked

Interesing article, I liked it very much,

I would like google to talk

I would like google to talk about the role the play assisting with censorship in China. How about it?

Article was good

It is quite an informative article on Google. In fact, this unchallenged monolith in the field of internet searches has its own ways of defining the internet applications today.

But how to get an authoritative information on how to have the *best clickthorough rate* and also how less number of clicks too generate handsome return.

Thnx

 

i like your aticle

i like it, may i know how to get good PR couz my blog  is poor for PR

THANKS

Big G is going little g

Big G knows that it has already reached its highest peak...

That's why they are considering other avenues in order to
survive and save their declining stock price.

Deregulation of Electricity in all 50 States

Jason,

I would love to have you as a Regional Consultant on our team at Ambit Energy. This company is backed by Shell Oil and is presenting huge opportunities to make 20kor more monthly ONLINE. Just three states to date have deregulated, Texas, NY and Illinois......let me help you and you can help me....!! Deal!! :-)

Respectfully,

Mick Depp                           mickdepp@gmail.com        208-720-3373 (cell)

 

Google is dying and it should be

This is the topic that we all must aware about it. Google is the most delibrate only fraud promsing company on the net. However the search engine results which we are recieving not targetable rather it is on the paid client results. Most paid get first advertised. Infact many of us run website and with great Javascripts coding and implement Goolgle Adsense ads on the pages now guess about shit done by Adsense, as possible as we were close to $90 it ceased the account by saying that they were invalid.

I don't know but there are billions and more havebeen fooled around and will be fooled by such tricky fraud of Google - the most worst program ever on the net.

Big Brother is Google Waahahaha#2

 

Well, I don't like them either and they most CERTAINLY are NOT dieing....but my question is -

how long do you thik it will be b4 they take OVER the internet - Big Brother

They WIll you know - like it or not.  If not directly-they will play a large part in it - it is already haeppening.

 

M/

 

 

Seems like Google used to be

Seems like Google used to be a search engine that served ads. Now it seems that it is an ad engine that serves search. It's still the best at what it does, but what it's doing has changed. Alas, the whole web used to be about information, but increasingly it is about advertising. The two things are related, but not the same.

Auctions

Google has a great plaform with Google Products - I'd like them to consider expanding this to an auction site.   Would they even consider the pros and cons and let the many disgruntled ebay sellers know if there's even a chance.

Another thing I'd like to see is some Google discussion on their custom search engine.  It seems to get snagged up if you add too many sites.   We've been working on alternative auction searches and a search to include online stores and websites and the results are often fickle.

Auctions!

Yes, please consider a google online auction site! Ebay has done it's sellers wrong big time with all the horrid changes that are now in effect and we desperatly need another giant site to let ebay know they cannot push the sellers around so poorly.. after all, sellers pay the salaries of the ebay employees and we are treated terribly! Please google, we know you can help us with a great auction site! PLEASE!!!!  

Google

I'd like to hear Google talk more about blacklisting people for adwords violations that were untrue.  There are a lot of people out here that have no love for Google anymore because they were treated unfairly for something they didn't do and Google offers nothing but silence to them.

nice article! You may have a

nice article! You may have a couple of other deeper dive articles in the "commodization content" and the "doorway page" links as they seem confusing to me. 

Seems like the commoditization article was a pandering to the news sites and the doorway page one is interesting when viewed in context with the landing page concept for adwords. 

 

 

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