Cape Argus

Common myths about world’s most ubiquitous search engine

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GOOGLE is the biggest and best-known internet company in the world, a colossus whose revenue this year is expected to top $65 billion (R780bn). It makes headlines seemingly every week. But despite being so familiar, Google is often misunderst­ood. Here are four common myths.

Google is a search company

Search is Google’s primary product. Its search engine is so widely used that “Google” has become a dictionary­approved verb, and the company makes virtually all its money by selling ads connected to search.

But Google’s ventures into self-driving cars and balloons that deliver internet connectivi­ty from the stratosphe­re show that it’s not just a search company. Its long-term plan is to become an artificial intelligen­ce company.

Google has built a research group around AI and machine learning, and even hired renowned AI guru Ray Kurzweil, who believes that by 2045 humans will merge with computers in what’s known as “The Singularit­y”.

Google’s recent acquisitio­ns speak to its intentions: British company DeepMind, one of the most advanced AI developmen­t shops in the world, plus eight of the world’s best robotics companies. Nobody knows what Google will do with all these robots and AI software, but its ambitions certainly go well beyond self-driving cars.

This work takes place inside Google X, the company’s top-secret research lab. A few hundred people work there, a tiny but potent slice of Google’s workforce of 53 600.

Google isn’t alone in the quest to develop AI (Facebook also has an AI research team), but it’s one of the few organisati­ons with the brainpower and financial resources to make true artificial intelligen­ce a reality. Plus, AI is in its blood: Google co-founder and chief executive Larry Page is the son of renowned AI pioneer Carl Page.

Glass was a failure

Headlines proclaimed that Google Glass “flopped” after the company announced it would stop selling its goofy $1 500 eyewear. As a consumer product, Glass was declared clunky, too expensive and not useful.

But Google never intended for Glass to be widely worn. That’s clear from the awkward design. In 2013, I was among a group of “influencer­s” invited to the Google campus to see some future products. Many of the influencer­s showed up proudly sporting their Google Glass eyewear – and looking like idiots. Not one of the Google executives wore Glass.

Google viewed Glass as an experiment, a way to explore wearable computing and learn lessons it can apply to other, presumably less-hideous-looking products.

Google is ‘Big Brother’

If you’re using Google’s online services, Google knows a lot about you: your location, browsing history, the videos you watch, your age, gender and interests. That has earned the company plenty of Big Brother comparison­s.

There is a Big Brother online, but it’s not Google: It’s America’s NSA. The National Security Agency is the one peering into every major tech company’s systems and hoovering up personal informatio­n.

Google has responded aggressive­ly to news about the NSA’s activities revealed in the Edward Snowden leaks, vowing to keep developing techniques to prevent the agency from spying on people who use its services. – The Washington Post

 ??  ?? EYE-OPENER: The NSA, not Google, is ‘watching you’ the most, says the writer.
EYE-OPENER: The NSA, not Google, is ‘watching you’ the most, says the writer.

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