Archive for the 'google' Category...
Filed under google
*SECADM writes “Learning from Microsoft’s error, Google is building a lobbying power house in Washington.” From the Washington Post article: Two years ago, Google was on the verge of making that Microsoft-like error. Davidson, then a 37-year-old former deputy director of the Center for Democracy & Technology, was the search-engine company’s sole staff lobbyist in Washington. As recently as last year, Google co-founder Sergey Brin had trouble getting meetings with members of Congress. To change that, Google went on a hiring spree and now has 12 lobbyists and lobbying-related professionals on staff here — more than double the size of the standard corporate lobbying office — and is continuing to add people.
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Original post by samzenpus and software by Elliott Back
Filed under google
Bizzeh writes “YouTube has announced that they plan to go international. The video site, owned by Google, has launched nine country-specific versions across Brazil, France, Ireland, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain and the UK. The BBC reports: ‘YouTube is now stressing its credentials as a platform not just for user-generated content but also for professional broadcaster and advertisers. The company says it has more than 1,000 global partners, with more than 150 deals signed in Europe since March. [Chad Hurley, YouTube co-founder] said: “We respect copyright and we want to create new revenue streams to create opportunities. “We have been working with rights holders to help them leverage new audiences.”‘”
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Original post by Zonk and software by Elliott Back
Filed under google
slugo writes “Internet search giant Google (GOOG) hopes to speed the development of plug-in hybrid cars by giving away millions of dollars to people and companies that have what appear to be practical ways to get plug-in hybrid automobiles to market faster. ‘While many people don’t associate Google with energy, analysts say the fit isn’t all that unnatural. Renewable energy, unlike coal or nuclear, will likely come from thousands or tens of thousands of different locations. Analysts have long said that one of the big challenges will be managing that flow into and out of the nation’s electric grid, and that companies that manage the flow of information are well placed to handle that task.’”
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Original post by Zonk and software by Elliott Back
Filed under google, mahalo, search, seo, yahoo
The great thing about mixing it up with the SEO crowd is that they prove your point over and over and over again… first they tried to kidnap my search result on Google, now they are buying adwords to attack Mahalo (do a search for Mahalo.com on Google and you’ll see ads like the one below).
The more SEOs fight you the more you know you’re doing the right thing for the average web user. SEO is going to be looked at as a footnote in the history of the internet and search–a time we’ll want to forget.
For more childish SEO behavoir check here.
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Original post by Jason Calacanis and software by Elliott Back
Filed under google
odoketa writes “According to the BBC, it seems Google scheduled a party to promote their payment system (Google Checkout) on the same day as a big eBay meeting, and this made eBay mad enough to pull their ads with Google. According to the story, eBay says it’s merely an ‘ongoing experiment’ on their marketing. ‘Google hoped to alert PayPal users who would have been in Boston attending the eBay Live annual seller event to its own service, according to market experts. It could also have been seen as part of an effort to get eBay to accept Google Checkout, currently banned on the online auctioneer’s site. But in a contrite manner, Google cancelled its rival function a day before it was due to happen.’”
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Original post by Zonk and software by Elliott Back
Filed under google
arallsopp writes “European data protection laws restrict the commercial use of photographs where individuals are identifiable. The law sets extra requirements for so-called sensitive personal data: it demands explicit consent, not just notification: ‘If Google’s multi-lens camera cars come to Europe and inadvertently find themselves taking pictures of persons leaving a church or sexual health clinic, they may just need to pull over and start picking up signatures.’”
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Original post by kdawson and software by Elliott Back
Filed under google
Several notes about Google and privacy. First, Lucas123 informs us that Google’s global privacy counsel blogged about an improvement in Google’s data-retention policies: the company plans to anonymize data it stores about users after 18 months — a slight improvement on the “18 to 24 months” of the previous policy. This move may have come as a response to pressure from European regulators. Next, Spamicles sends in word that an EFF attorney has been photographed by Google’s Street View. The funny thing is, this isn’t the first time it’s happened. Finally, word from reader tamar that if you choose to share a video from Google Video to another social network like MySpace, your username and password get sent over http in plaintext, rather than the more secure https.
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Original post by kdawson and software by Elliott Back
Filed under google, mahalo, search, technorati
We have an interesting discussion starting over at Facebook:
What would you do next if you were CEO of Mahalo?
Feel free to post here, but would rather see the debate over there.
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Original post by Jason Calacanis and software by Elliott Back
Filed under google
nbauman writes “New York Times interview with Amit Singhal, who is in charge of Google’s ranking algorithm. They use 200 “signals” and “classifiers,” of which PageRank is only one. “Freshness” defines how many recently changed pages appear in a result. They assumed old pages were better, but when they first introduced Google Finance, the algorithm couldn’t find it because it was too new. Some topics are “hot”. “When there is a blackout in New York, the first articles appear in 15 minutes; we get queries in two seconds,” said Singhal. Classifiers infer information about the type of search, whether it is a product to buy, a place, company or person. One classifier identifies people who aren’t famous. Another identifies brand names. A final check encourages “diversity” in the results, for example, a manufacturer’s page, a blog review, and a comparison shopping site.”
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Original post by CmdrTaco and software by Elliott Back
Filed under google
40by40 writes “A Web application security specialist has figured out a way to launch man-in-the-middle attacks against a computer with a fully patched Google Desktop installed. With knowledge of the Google Desktop security model (a combination of one-time tokens, iFrames and JavaScript), hacker Robert Hansen figured out a way to sit between a target launching a Google search query and manipulate the search results to take control of other programs on the desktop. From the article: ‘This should drive home the point that deep integration between the desktop and the web is not a good idea, without tremendous thought put into the security model. As Google’s site is unencrypted, and they place their content that can run executables on their site, it can be subverted by an attacker,” Hansen warns. Hansen’s advisory come just days after a Chris Soghoian’s exposé of a similar man-in-the-middle attack scenario against a remote vulnerability [...]
Original post by Zonk and software by Elliott Back