-
Website
http://www.scobleizer.com/ -
Original page
http://scobleizer.com/2006/01/25/search-champs-grilling-msn-execs/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
danja
44 comments · 4 points
-
polizeros
52 comments · 1 points
-
AndyBeard
69 comments · 4 points
-
Zachary Adam Cohen
35 comments · 8 points
-
dbarefoot
40 comments · 3 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
World-brand-building mistakes France’s entrepreneurs make
2 weeks ago · 181 comments
-
The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
3 days ago · 24 comments
-
2010: the year SEO isn’t important anymore
1 week ago · 67 comments
-
iPhone developers abandoning app model for HTML5?
1 week ago · 52 comments
-
A new addition here: the Meebo bar
2 days ago · 8 comments
-
World-brand-building mistakes France’s entrepreneurs make
jaseone - a "Search Champ" is made up of a group of randomly selected people who go to Redmond to discuss search technoligies and other search related things. You can apply to be a Search Champ when they announce the next one.
The goal : trust, trust, trust.
Interesting spin there. Seems to me Google stood up for its values -- that is more than PR.
It's not unlike when you stood up for lesbian and gay rights at Microsoft. That wasn't a PR stunt and I don't think this stand by Google is either.
I appreciate that you're posting about this. However, with Google getting more evil and MS becoming more open (in large part thanks to your example), I was becoming far more open to MS. But I'm glad that Google is using this as PR: It makes it clear that caring about your users' privacy is a competitive advantage. And one that Google clearly beat MS and Y on: Enough so that there's no way I'd ever consider using MSN again unless you made a clear public statement that Mr. Gates would sooner go to jail that comply with a subponea from the government.
MS needs to make a strong public signal that you care about privacy; particularly if you want InfoCards to take off. Maybe MSR witholding any funding from Berkeley as long as Mr. Stark works there?
Dan
But Google isn't consistent. They are obviously playing with some governments, but not with others. Check this out: http://tech.memeorandum.com/060125/p44#a060125p44
Companies are also not static things. Today they might not be evil, but tomorrow?
That's why I'm pushing for transparency (and they are hearing that bigtime).
During lunchtime the Search Champs went even further. They want a button to click that shows everything that's being collected from their experience.
That is even more tranparency than what I'm pushing for. But, now that I've heard that idea, I'm pushing even harder!
Now if they started censoring Google.com then that would be a different story, the story here is about the Chinese government only allowing it's citizens to access a censored version of Google, it isn't about Google being evil, I think that evilness belongs with another entity involved in the story.
The Google.cn issue and the one about complying with the US government's subpoena are two completely different issues so please don't try to muddy the waters by comparing the two.
In USA - they can lose money - so they are willing to play games with government.
Even more - once Google will be in trouble with income - shareholders will not care about "Do not evil" and will force Google to do everything to make money. And SEC will help them.
Perhaps MSFT handed over information that allowed the government to see that "jihad" was queried for at 11:30AM and then "bomb" was queried for at 11:45 by the same person.
But then what's the government going to do with that?
And what if the government asked GYM for the IPs / cookie information for people querying for those search terms. Will GYM give it to them?
I don't want you to have it. Stop storing it.
At least in the US, all I have to do is file the right request, and pretty much for the asking, I can get every bit of info the government has on you, including how much your mortgage is, etc. It's a side effect of "Government in the Sunshine".
Considering that every packet you send has your IP and MAC address in it, if someone wants to track you bad enough, they will. You want anonymity, get off the public internet.
oy
Google is not being inconsistent. It is complying with Chinese law that is quite straightforward (no matter how much we might disagree with it).
In the US, it is questioning a law that is ambiguous at best. But it is a nice attempt to spin Google taking a stand into a negative. Keep up the good work.
What happened to the update on MS dropping Windows Media Player support for the Mac?
It'd be interesting to hear MS's thinking on that.
http://journals.aol.com/cybermagellan/savedcase
They're academics.
http://blogs.msdn.com/msnsearch/archive/2005/11...
It's just that MSN/AOL/Yahoo so willing gave it up, without so much as a fight, when such will just be used to create another burdensome regluation. It's not even good business-sense. But games like this are hard to win in the PR sense, stare down Feds on good principle, get accused of supporting child porn, but give them what they want willingly, become another tattle-tale East German Stasi; MSN choose the easy way out, 'inoffizielle mitarbeiter', indeed.
They also asked for more information in the beginning and MSN said no (Gary Flake said that) and renegotiated
Umm don't try and spin this, unbelieveable. So now MSN is the hero, only giving the Feds half of what they want. And plus now, after the fact, MSN realizes it's a mistake; pat on head, nice nice doggie, have a treat. Wheee. But let me guess, next time around, they will have to "realize" their mistake all over again. Come on, don't be such a dupe. Microsoft has some of the most obvious spin-doctoring out there. The attempts to explain away the Xbox 360 supply-chain management problems, are near works of art. Microsoft makes great excuses, indeed some of the best in the industry.
everyday people realized that search engines track a lot of things and that those things could be given over to governmental bodies.
Yup. Search engines just playing the search game for free when they are but advertising and data-collection spyware and marketing engines. No surprise to me, so such thing as a free lunch, but good that it's getting to Mom and Pop and Joe Public. If anything it all backfires, those you most have to worry about, will take measures of great sleath, and the great masses with be eternally spied upon.
Oh brother. Someone that has had a zillion papers published and really given back to the biz community, in terms of serious research, yet gets passed over as not a blogger? Well Search Champs isn't anything but PR then, sorta a Mobius for MSN. Myopia is blindness.
I now realize why you can't answer my question regarding Microsoft dropping Windows Media Player.
Because it's tied to Microsoft's decision to enter the mobile music player market. That's right folks -- MS is going to take on the iPod with games as its differentiator. Namely, Live Arcade games that can be transferred to the device.
My only questions is did you fly Elton John in or not?
My name is Captain B. A Capt in Iraq and was inquiring about producing my blog into a book. Man do I know you probably get a ton of these type of inquiries but I figured what the heck, I have RPGS shot at me, I haven’t seen my family for than 60 day in 2 years why not email these guys. Regardless if you’re about hit “delete”, please support our troops. Semper Fi, Capt B
http://shepherdaway.blogspot.com/
1. The "caving to Chinese censorship is EVIL!" line is a bit naive. Is it distasteful? Absolutely. But, look at how China got to the point where it's at - further integration with the global market economy saw a further political liberalization within the country. This good and evil split is counter-productive. Global politics are just never that easy.
2. The collection of records isn't evil or illegal. Phone records? Credit records? Driving record? There's tons of information available about you and everyone else out there. Unless you live in an information bubble, you're already out there in the ether. Stop acting so surprised. It's not the collection that's the problem, it's the legal means by which the government is trying to attain it - no matter what kind of records these were (let's say anonymous phone numbers instead of web sites), it would be noxious for the government to try to drift-net that stuff without proper legal footing.