Gmail outage deprives millions of e-mail

September 2, 2009

http://edition.cnn.com/2009/TECH/09/01/gmail.outage/index.html

(CNN) — Gmail, Google’s popular free e-mail service, was inaccessible to many of its 36 million users Tuesday afternoon, causing widespread chatter on Twitter and other social networks.

The cause of the outage, which Google said lasted an hour and 45 minutes, was not apparent by early Tuesday evening.

“We know many of you are having trouble accessing Gmail right now — we are too, and we definitely feel your pain,” Google Engineering Director David Besbris wrote in a 4:15 p.m. ET post on the Gmail blog.

“Because this is impacting so many of you, we wanted to let you know we’re currently looking into the issue and hope to have more info to share here shortly,” Besbris wrote. “We’re terribly sorry for the inconvenience and will get Gmail back up and running as soon as possible.”

Gmail’s problems were a top trending topic on Twitter, with users trading updates and posting links to blogs such as Mashable, which published a post called, “5 Things to Do While Gmail is Down.” (No. 1: “Immediately flood Twitter with tweets alternately proclaiming “Gmail is down!” and inquiring “Is Gmail down?”)

“When something like this used to happen, you would wonder if it was just you,” Rachel Sklar, editor-at-large of Mediaite.com, told CNN. “Here, it was immediate that you knew what was going on because of Twitter, and you knew that everyone had the same problems.”

At 5:37 p.m. ET, Google updated its Gmail blog to say, “We’ve fixed the issue, and Gmail should be back up and running as usual. We’re still investigating the root cause of this outage, and we’ll share more information soon.”

“The heavens opened, and then there was light. Gmail is back up,” wrote one user shortly afterward on Twitter.

Gmail had almost 37 million users in June, according to ComScore, a company that measures Internet use. Gmail remains the third-most popular Web-based e-mail service, after Yahoo! Mail and Microsoft’s Hotmail.


German court rules against Google’s terms

September 1, 2009

CNBC Asia Online

A German court has ruled that Google Inc. must change terms of service that could be interpreted to compromise a user’s rights, a decision the consumer advocacy group that brought the suit welcomed Monday as a victory for online transparency. The suit filed by the Federation of German Consumer Organizations charged that the terms of service for opening an account through Google Mail, Google Documents and other programs could be interpreted as giving the Internet search giant the right to review and even delete a user’s information.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/32628711


More questions than answers on Google Books

September 1, 2009

ZDNet Asia

Google’s Dan Clancy had patiently answered question after question regarding Google’s’ Book Search settlement with publishers and authors until late in the afternoon last Friday, when he was finally left speechless. Louis Trager, a reporter from Washington Internet Daily, asked Clancy what kind of message was sent when Google decided to “copy first and answer questions later”.

http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,62057334,00.htm


Antitrust watchdog probing Google Italy after Italian newspaper publishers complain

August 28, 2009

Associated Press

August 27, 2009

Italy’s antitrust watchdog is investigating allegations by Italian newspapers that Google Italy is discriminating against newspapers that don’t want their content linked on Google’s news site by dropping them from its search engine.

Google said the newspapers were free to remove themselves from Google News while still remaining on its search engine.

Italy’s financial police conducted an inspection Thursday of Google Italy’s offices, part of its probe looking into whether Google might have an unfair advantage in reaping online advertising.

The Italian Federation of Newspaper Publishers has charged that having some of their newspapers’ content appear on Google News Italia hurt their own efforts to attract users and advertising on their own home pages, the antitrust statement said.

Google says its Google News generates enormous traffic to newspaper sites, sending over 1 billion clicks per month to news publishers.

The publishers have complained that Google is “allegedly hindering publishers in freely choosing ways of allowing use of news published on their own Internet sites,” the antitrust authority said.

The publishers contend that the “editorial sites that don’t want to appear on Google News (Italia), would be automatically excluded from Google’s search engine,” the antitrust authority said.

A Google Italy spokeswoman, Simona Panseri, declined to comment on the specifics of the allegations while the antitrust investigation is being conducted. But, speaking in general, Panseri contended that a “request to be excluded from Google News doesn’t imply being excluded” from Google’s search engine.

Google News’ Josh Cohen, senior business product manager, said Thursday that publishers were in complete control as to whether their content appears in Google services. They can be removed altogether, or can opt to appear in a Google Web search but not in Google News.

“In that case, all they need to do is contact us to be removed,” he said in a blog post Thursday. “In fact, we met with several Italian publishers and representatives of FIEG just this summer to explain these options.”

Readers who click on headlines posted on Google News Italia site are linked directly to the newspapers’ site, where they can read the full story.

The Italian newspaper publishers’ complaint reflects a common claim elsewhere that Google News is diverting readers away from newspaper home pages, while Google says it ends up increasing the traffic to newspaper Web sites.

As its power has grown, Google has come under increasing scrutiny of antitrust regulators around the world, in particular in the United States.


Google patches severe Chrome vulnerabilities

August 27, 2009

ZDNet Asia

Google has fixed two high-severity vulnerabilities in the stable version of its Chrome browser that could have let an attacker remotely take over a person’s computer. With one attack on Google’s V8 JavaScript engine, malicious JavaScript on a Web site could let an attacker gain access to sensitive data or run arbitrary code on the computer within a Chrome protected area called the sandbox, Google said in a blog post Tuesday. With the other, a page with XML-encoded information could cause a browser tab crash that could let an attacker run arbitrary code within the sandbox. Chrome 2.0.172.43 fixes the issues and another medium-severity issue. Once Chrome is installed, it retrieves updates automatically and applies them when people restart the browser. Google won’t release details of the vulnerabilities until “a majority of users are up to date with the fix”, Engineering Program Manager Jonathan Conradt said in the blog post.


Is Google Sitting on the Clock of eBay?

August 27, 2009

Wall Street Journal

By Martin Peers

August 25, 2009

Is Google the next eBay?

Maybe. There are some worrisome parallels between Google today and eBay in 2005-06, as the online-auction company’s growth was faltering.

Consider this history: In August 2004, then-Chief Executive Meg Whitman said she didn’t believe eBay was approaching anything like saturation. Just six months later the company issued a weaker-than-expected forecast that in hindsight was the end of its red-hot growth phase. EBay’s stock is now trading at less than half its December 2004 level.

Through 2005-06 some hoped that eBay’s PayPal unit, acquired in 2002, and Skype, in 2005, would prove to be new growth engines, along with international markets. As it turned out, of course, after writing off much of the Skype purchase price, eBay now is looking to jettison it. And growth at PayPal and internationally hasn’t been enough to stop eBay’s top-line growth rate from decelerating.

When it comes to Google, there also are hopes for international growth. YouTube has some similarities with Skype, high user traffic but relatively low revenue. Whether YouTube can live up to its promise as a big ad platform is uncertain.

Another of Google’s potential growth engines is Android. But its ability to help Google expand in the mobile-ad market remains unproved.

Certainly, Google can claim lots of phones soon may be using the Android operating system. Unfortunately, they don’t include the two phone brands that account for much of the growth in the smart-phone market, Apple and Research In Motion’s BlackBerry. Google also is banking on expanding into display advertising.

While investors wait for these new initiatives to prove themselves, growth is slowing in the core paid-search ad business. Google’s revenue growth rate has fallen from 93% in 2005 to 31% in 2008.

The recession has demonstrated the Internet company isn’t immune from pressures other ad-dependent businesses face. Revenue growth dropped to 3% year on year in the second quarter.

Moreover, as U.S. revenue growth was only 1.6%, it is possible that Google’s core search business actually shrank in the U.S. when contributions from newer businesses like mobile advertising are excluded.

Google’s revenue growth will certainly accelerate coming out of the recession. The issue is by how much and for how long.

In the short term, growth will be sparked by “price reinflation of key words,” said Majestic Research Managing Director John Aiken. Prices fell during the worst of the slump. Assuming demand returns, price per clicks should rise again.

But that won’t sustain growth long term. That rests on several other variables, including where consumers go to search the Internet and how many searches they do.

Competition from Microsoft’s revamped search engine, Bing, is showing signs of life. Search marketing firm Efficient Frontier reported this month that Bing had lifted its paid-click market share 44% since the beginning of June. It still is only 4.9%, but Microsoft’s share will rise assuming the deal with Yahoo is completed.

It would be foolish to predict that Google won’t have another business success, of course. Microsoft managed to leverage its strength in PC operating systems into a stranglehold over the word-processing and spreadsheet applications.

But investors should be careful buying on such hopes. With Google’s medium-term revenue growth likely to fall toward 10%, it is hard to justify paying 25 times 2009 consensus earnings, including the cost of employee stock options. Google may itself discover the next Google-like business.

But until it proves that case, investors may want to wait for the stock to retreat.


Apple, AT&T Respond in Google Phone Spat

August 26, 2009

Wall Street Journal

By Amy Schatz

August 24, 2009

AT&T Inc. told federal regulators Friday that it played “no role” in Apple Inc.’s decision to keep Google Inc.’s Google Voice Internet phone application off the iPhone while Apple said that it hasn’t rejected the software.

Instead, Apple told the Federal Communications Commission that it is still studying the Google Voice application, but said it has concerns about how Google’s application puts the Google brand on Apple’s device.

“The application has not been approved because, as submitted for review, it appears to alter the iPhone’s distinctive user experience by replacing the iPhone’s core mobile telephone functionality and Apple user interface with its own user interface for telephone calls, text messaging and voicemail,” Apple said.

The FCC is looking into why Google’s phone app wasn’t approved for Apple’s App Store and whether AT&T, which has exclusive rights to offer the iPhone to customers in the U.S., had anything to do with it. In late July, the FCC asked all three companies for information on what led to the software’s apparent rejection from Apple’s online store.

In its letter to the FCC Friday, AT&T said it wasn’t responsible for keeping Google Voice off of the iPhone and that it doesn’t block consumers from using lawful applications on the Internet.

“AT&T was not asked about the matter by Apple at any time, nor did it offer any view one way or the other,” said Jim Cicconi, AT&T’s senior executive vice president for external and legislative affairs. “More broadly, AT&T does not own, operate or control the Apple App Store and is not typically consulted regarding the approval or rejection of applications for the App Store or informed when an application is approved or rejected.”

AT&T said that it wasn’t asked by Apple about the Google Voice app “nor did [AT&T] offer any view one way or the other,” according to the letter.

Additionally, AT&T said that it plans to take “a fresh look at possibly authorizing [Internet phone] capabilities on the iPhone for use on AT&T’s 3G network.” AT&T currently restricts use of some Internet phone applications, notable Skype’s phone service, on the iPhone to Wi-Fi networks.

Google also filed a response to the FCC about the matter, but redacted any information about its talks with Apple on its Google Voice app.

Thus far, the FCC’s interest hasn’t reached the stage of a formal investigation. FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski has previously told reporters that the agency is interested in finding out more about what happened in the matter.

An FCC spokeswoman said the agency was reviewing the letters.

Apple declined to approve the Google Voice application and related software developed by third parties in mid-July and some have speculated that AT&T had something to do with the decision.

AT&T has maintained for several weeks that it doesn’t have control over Apple’s App Store and that any decision to reject an application lies with the computer giant.

Google Voice doesn’t replace traditional or wireless phone services since it requires users to have at least one other phone. Google Voice is more of a call directing service. Google Voice users choose a phone number that, if called, will ring all of the user’s other phones. It also offers other services, like call recording and voice mail transcription.

However, Google Voice’s cheap international calling rates and free SMS message service could be more problematic for wireless carriers, which make healthy profits on text-message fees.

It’s not entirely clear what action the FCC could take against Apple to require the company to offer the Google Voice application to its customers.

The agency’s inquiry, however, comes as its focusing more attention on competition issues in the wireless industry, including the issue of whether to ban exclusive handset deals like the one between AT&T and Apple for the iPhone. Next week, the agency plans to open broad inquiries into the state of competition in the wireless industry and whether to change truth-in-billing rules designed to prevent phone companies from tacking on extraneous charges onto subscribers’ bills.


The Search For a Rival

August 26, 2009

Time

By Farhad Manjoo

August 31, 2009

Microsoft is spending massively on its new search business. Is Bing a better engine? Maybe. Can Google play defense? We may soon find out

Every year, the market-research firm Millward Brown conducts a survey to determine the economic worth of the world’s brands–in other words, to put a dollar value on the many corporate logos that dominate our lives. Lately the firm’s results have been stuck on repeat: Google has claimed the top spot for the past three years. The most recent report values Google’s brand–those six happy letters that herald so many of our jaunts down the Web’s rabbit hole–at more than $100 billion.

What’s astonishing about this stat is how effortlessly Google seems to have earned the public’s affection. Other companies–Microsoft, Coke, IBM, McDonald’s–spend enormous sums to stay in the consciousness. Google, which makes most of its money from ads, rarely advertises itself. Telling the world how well it does what it does just isn’t Google’s way.

But Google’s humility is being tested as never before. The firm’s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., seem besieged by competitors gaining new momentum. Even nominal allies are questioning the company’s motives and long-term plans. In July, Google’s largest competitors, Microsoft and Yahoo!, agreed to work together in an attempt to dethrone it as the world’s dominant search engine. The deal, which awaits government approval, would create a first: a tenacious, well-financed search rival.

Conflicts are beginning to take place in other areas where Google has ventured. That includes e-mail and office programs (Gmail, Google Docs), a cell-phone operating system (Android) and a Web browser (Chrome). Google scans and sells books, runs a phone system and is even working on a desktop operating system to rival Windows. CEO Eric Schmidt recently stepped down from Apple’s board of directors because the two companies now compete in so many areas. The U.S. Justice Department is investigating a legal settlement between Google and the publishing industry over the company’s book-scanning service, and Christine Varney, Justice’s antitrust chief, said she sees Google as a “problem.”

At the moment, Google’s most pressing problem is Microsoft. The software giant is spending $100 million to market its new search engine, Bing–and in the process, to get us all bummed about Google. Bing’s slick ads are unavoidable and blistering. They suggest that Google is broken, that it rarely leads us to what we’re looking for and turns us all into blathering zombies who spew out search keywords in casual conversation.

Microsoft claims Bing isn’t even a search engine–it’s a “decision engine.” What that means isn’t exactly clear. Bing seems to work the same way Google does: type in some keywords, it gives you some Web results. But the marketing shows signs of gaining traction. According to the media-metrics firm comScore, Bing captured 8.9% of the search-engine queries in July, a tiny increase from 8.4% in June. “All of us in the search industry were surprised by Bing,” says Anna Patterson, a former Google engineer who has since gone on to found Cuil (pronounced Cool), one of the many smaller search start-ups in Google’s shadow. “It’s the first time you have someone with deep pockets that’s willing to lose money in order to compete with Google, and they’re willing to stick with it over the long term.”

Google says it isn’t worried, and publicly at least, the company is pretending not to notice Bing. The search engine is Google’s cash cow, and the firm constantly pours resources into improving it–hiring the industry’s brightest and most experienced engineers, paying them handsomely and letting them work on what is effectively the world’s largest data-mining project. Just this month, Google unveiled a project it calls Caffeine, a massive overhaul of its back-end infrastructure that promises to create a faster, more accurate and more comprehensive search engine. “We aren’t resting,” says Gabriel Stricker, a Google spokesman. “We’re continuing to innovate–i’m feeling lucky is getting luckier all the time.”

This sort of constant improvement pays off: two-thirds of all searches in the U.S. are now conducted through Google–about 7 billion a month. Yahoo! has less than 20% of the market, and Microsoft less than 10%. Despite Microsoft’s claims, most people think Google works pretty well as it is.

Microsoft argues that the Yahoo! deal will help change that perception. If the partnership is approved, Microsoft will take over Yahoo!’s search engine–type in “Britney Spears” at Yahoo! and you’ll get results provided by Bing. Microsoft points out that search engines get smarter as more people use them; if a search engine notices lots of clicks on Spears’ music videos after searching for the pop star, it can begin to highlight those videos in future searches. That’s how the Yahoo! deal will help Bing beat Google, Microsoft says. By massively expanding its market share to a potential 26%, Microsoft will get access to a much broader pool of user data, which will in turn make it better at predicting what you want when you search.

Google pooh-poohs this claim. Hal Varian, the company’s chief economist, has pointed out that most search engines look at only a small sample of their data in order to improve their results. In other words, Microsoft already has enough data to learn from its users. “It’s not the quantity or quality of the ingredients that make a difference. It’s the recipes,” Varian told CNET. The recipes are Google’s proprietary algorithms, which it has slaved over for more than a decade. They’re Google’s ultimate competitive advantage, and Google believes they’ll help it weather the coming assault.

Privately, Googlers will tell you that the Bing ads rankle. They describe them as misleading and unfair, painting a picture of Google that doesn’t match reality. Maybe, but Microsoft–a company not previously known for its marketing savvy–is taking a page out of a 1960s Procter & Gamble playbook: create a problem consumers don’t know they have, then solve it. Bing!

Can Google play defense if Bing starts to move the needle? Google’s first instinct has always been to innovate its way out of trouble. But there are a number of features in Google’s search engine that most of the public is unaware of. Like how it can give you the local weather and movie times and perform currency conversions with a single search query. It’s not in Google’s DNA to run confrontational ads, but it’s easy to imagine a campaign that shows off all the amazing things your friendly search giant can do.

 At the moment, Google derives about 97% of its revenue from advertising. Barry Schwartz, CEO of the Web consulting firm RustyBrick and an editor at Search Engine Land, says that some at Google have to be getting a little jittery that the company’s entire revenue stream rests on a single product. “They keep downplaying that they’re competing with other companies–whenever they pitch something like Android or their new Chrome OS, they say it’s just an attempt to get people to use the Web more,” Schwartz says. But here’s the irony: Google faces a problem very similar to the one plaguing Microsoft, which itself makes the bulk of its money from just two products–Windows and Office. Each company sees the other’s business as its own path forward. The rest of us, we’re just bystanders.


Can Bhuvan Able to Pose Any Threat to Google Earth?

August 19, 2009

Ub News

Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) has surprised the whole world with his recent launching of Bhuvan, earlier identified as a tough competitor of Google Earth. The significance of this tool is to give an easy way to experience, explore and visualize IRS images over Indian region.


Facebook to compete with Google?

August 19, 2009

Beijing Review

Facebook is making strategic moves to evolve itself into something greater. The most used social network by worldwide monthly active users Facebook.com may become the next super computer operating system for communications, according to news reports on Monday. Facebook is making strategic moves to evolve itself into something greater. Last week, it has purchased FriendFeed, another popular social media platform.


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