Google: Threat or Menace?
A couple of fascinating items discussing the growing power (and concomitant lack of accountability) of Google:
- A Wired article from earlier this year: "Google vs. Evil," by Josh McHugh.
- Google Watch, a site dedicated to pointing out Google's potential for abuse of power.
Now, Wired is all about overstating the potential future of technology in one direction or another, and Google Watch is almost certainly much more alarmist than it needs to be. I'm willing to keep trusting Google for the time being; I still see them as being among the good guys. But I think the above article and site are good reminders that there's tremendous potential for abuse there.
Also relevant are a couple of articles from The Register by Andrew Orlowski with the premise that blogs are ruining Google results: one article about an anti-war slogan being repurposed by bloggers, and another suggesting (though this never panned out) that Google was likely to remove blogs from its main listings. Orlowski appears to have an axe to grind about this stuff; I have a hard time getting incensed about blogs temporarily obscuring other sources, given that Google rankings change rapidly and frequently. In particular, the thing Orlowski complained about in that first article (that the only uses of the phrase "the second superpower" turned up by Google were references to the altered meaning of the term as used in blogs) is simply no longer true, now that the bloggers have gone on to talk about other things (and about Orlowski's article). (Also, heh, it turns out the original article Orlowski was talking about never actually used the phrase "the second superpower." See above about axe-grinding.)
And I think there's a pretty big math error (or at least misleading statement) in that second Orlowski article. Orlowski says:
Google searches 3,083,324,652 pages as of 4PM PT today. Assuming there are one million bloggers, and generously assuming they have a hundred pages each, that amounts to 0.032 per cent of web content indexed by Google.
I can see how it could be a concern if bloggers accounted for 1 in 3000 pages on the web but had search results wildly out of proportion to that. But it seems to me that 100 million out of 3000 million is 1 in 30, or about 3%—about 3 out of 100, which is very different from 3 out of 10,000. ...Or does ".03 per cent" mean "3 out of 100" in British usage? I'm honestly not sure. Regardless, to an American this phrasing is definitely misleading. I wrote to Orlowski to ask him about it, but didn't receive a response.
Anyway. Regardless of precise numbers, it's interesting to see some people being critical of Google, especially in light of the ubergeeks' adoration of it; I haven't seen this kind of criticism of it 'til now.