There is no better illustration of Google's corporate immorality and
avarice for personal, private information than Chief Executive Officer
Eric Schmidt's latest announcement about where he wants to take the
company.
He told journalists in London the company's goal is to maximize the
personal information it holds on you.
"The goal is to enable Google users to be able to ask the question such
as 'What shall I do tomorrow?' and 'What job shall I take?'"
I don't know about you, but I don't want any private or public entity
to have that kind of private, personal information about me.
"We cannot even answer the most basic questions because we don't know
enough about you," Schmidt frets. "That is the most important aspect of
Google's expansion."
Google's lust for private, personal data on individual users is
unsatisfied even though it currently maintains records of your Internet
searches for at least two years.
Why would Google need to know every search you conducted for the last
two years? What do you suppose the company might do with that
information? Did you know your searches were being tracked and
maintained in an electronic dossier for future use? Do you trust Google
to keep those searches confidential? Do you trust Google never to
exploit them for commercial gain?
Recently, Google purchased an advertising company called DoubleClick
for $3.1 billion. DoubleClick is known as the most intrusive Internet
advertising agency in the world – one that sets cookies in its banners
that attach themselves like viruses to your personal computer with the
express purpose of tracking your movements and finding out more about
your habits.
Do you approve of that kind of activity? Did you know about Google's
spying activities?
When confronted about this, Schmidt said his company was working on
technology to reduce the concerns of consumers. Notice he didn't say
the technology would reduce privacy intrusions – only consumer
concerns.
I've warned you that this corporate monstrosity is evil. Maybe you
thought I was joking – or resorting to rhetorical overkill to make a
point. I assure you this is no joke. This kind of surreptitious
espionage is dangerous. Google is rapidly becoming the Big Brother of
George Orwell's "1984."
And look at its hideously immoral track record on other matters.
Google sold its corporate soul, if it ever had one, to the totalitarian
Chinese regime by agreeing to restrict Internet searches in that
country to sanitized, government-approved pabulum – no truth about
Tiananmen Square, no truth about freedom movements, no truth about
Taiwan independence bids. This was the price to be paid for expansion
into the Chinese market.
What if some other dictator wanted something else – like information?
Could we count on the spoiled, immature billionaire young punks at
Google to stand on principle or conviction?
What if some rogue government agency got a subpoena for Google's data
on you? Do you think Google would ever stand up for its customers in
the face of pressure – especially in light of its utter moral
capitulation to Beijing?
Let me put it simply: Google is out of control. Google is an amoral
corporate giant only too happy to do the bidding of evil governments.
Google needs to understand there's a cost to raping and pillaging your
privacy rights.
It's time to grab these rich kids by the scruff of the neck and give
them a wake-up call.
What do I want to do tomorrow?
Rein in the ogling, voyeuristic peeping toms of the Silicon Valley.
Yes, that means you, Eric Schmidt
Original
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