Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 22nd May 2010 21:18 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 426115
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Google is indeed quite dangerous. But the worst is that when you look at what's in front of them, you're still tempted to choose them.
It's a next-generation dictatorship. Instead of basically acting in the old "we only care about our benefits, our customers are just something that we happen to need for that" way, like Microsoft and Apple, Google use a more subtle approach...
Google is the closest thing we've had to Big Brother in recorded history
Not true. Big Brother never asks you if you're willing to participate. With Google, the users all opted in, and continue to do so, either never caring about their privacy-related settings, or never bothering to get information about how the different services work and how they are interconnected. I hate car analogies, but here you go, when you're buying a car, you're not just taking it home without getting all the information about terms, conditions, payment plan, insurance, and so on. The perception of what Google is becoming is just as much the users' fault - who are stupid - as theirs - who know they are stupid and exploit that to an extent.
Not true. ... With Google, the users all opted in, and continue to do so
Not true. People whose data was stolen ("scanned") by the Street View cars never opted in.
People who had registered to Youtube before Google acquired it never opted in.
And while I partially agree with your about the users' responsibility, it is still *wrong* to just enter someone's house even if the door is open, and even if it is not against the law, taking something you find there definitely is. Same applies here.





Member since:
2006-01-01
I find it rather interesting that Google compared Apple to Big Brother at Google I/O while, really, Google is the closest thing we've had to Big Brother in recorded history.
Google search history is already used in cases to convict people. It's only a matter of time before governments start trolling Google's data for 'undesirables'.
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