International development

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Sunday, May 4th, 2008 @ 2:31 am

Posted by Sonal Shah, Head of Global
Development Initiatives, Google.org and Bob Boorstin, Washington
Director of Policy Communications

Last month, Google and Google.org hosted more than 80 technology
decisionmakers from international development non-profits for an
interactive discussion at our Washington D.C. office. Over lunch,
case study presentations and hands-on sessions, participants
discussed the ways technology is changing the landscape of
international development — and how to take advantage of new tools
for fundraising, communication, data visualization, and online
collaboration.

Speakers highlighted the benefits of href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_computing" id="h9x4" >cloud
computing and demonstrated how to display data on maps and
interactive graphs with products like href="http://www.google.com/earth/outreach/" id="um5h" >Google
Earth and href="http://www.gapminder.org/world/" id="zj2i" >Trendalyzer. A
representative from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum discussed
how the Museum created a href="http://www.ushmm.org/maps/projects/darfur/" id="k5to"
>Darfur layer on Google Earth that gives
"publicly accessible evidence of destruction to help visually
refute claims of minimal collateral damage from war." The
YouTube breakout session explored how cheap video cameras paired
with an on-the-ground presence can help document and spread
awareness of ongoing crises abroad. Participants even made their
own videos to talk about how the Internet is changing the
development world:

value="http://www.youtube.com/v/5v02QS69F1w" /> type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent"
height="355" width="425" />

Special thanks to our friends at the href="http://www.theirc.org/" id="ycg4"
>International Rescue
Committee, >MercyCorps, and the href="http://www.ushmm.org/" id="homs"
>U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum for sharing stories of their experiences in taking
advantage of new technologies. For those who are interested,
we're posting the href="http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=0C7A75D936163C8C"
id="pafl" >presentations on YouTube.

We hope that this event will be the first of many discussions,
workshops, and other public events we hold with non-profits in our
new D.C. space.

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A common sense approach to Internet safety

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Sunday, May 4th, 2008 @ 2:27 am

Posted by Elliot Schrage, Vice
President of Global Communications and Public Affairs

Over the years, we've built tools and offered resources to help
kids and families stay safe online. Our href="http://www.google.com/support/bin/static.py?page=searchguides.html&ctx=preferences&hl=en"
>SafeSearch
feature, for
example, helps filter explicit content from search results.

We've also been involved in a variety of local initiatives to
educate families about how to stay safe while surfing the web. Here
are a few highlights:

Searching for solutions

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Tuesday, April 15th, 2008 @ 3:50 am

Posted by Sheryl Sandberg, VP, Global
Online Sales & Operations

Just over two years ago, I href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2005/10/about-googleorg.html"
id="fijs" >wrote here that we were taking a broad approach to
philanthropy under the umbrella of Google.org. Today Google.org

href="http://www.google.com/intl/en/press/pressrel/20080117_googleorg.html"
id="qagv" >shared
its game plan, announcing five core
initiatives to help combat climate change, global poverty and
emerging threats such as pandemic disease. These initiatives draw
upon Google's strengths in access to information and scalable
technology. We'll use a range of approaches including grants,
investments in for-profits and advocacy, and will continue to tap
the experience of Google engineers and other team members.

We're working alongside experienced partners to carry out these
initiatives. For example, one of the initiatives is aimed at
improving the quality of delivery of basic services, such as
education or clean water. In rich countries we take it for granted
that clean water comes out when we turn the tap, and our children
learn to read when they go to school. But in many countries in the
developing world, essential public services are not working,
especially for the poor. Governments are investing huge sums — to
the tune of $700 billion — to provide basic services, but the lack
of two-way information flow inhibits the effectiveness of delivery
and the ability of communities to hold providers accountable. The
href="http://www.google.org/inform.html" id="phbx" >Inform and
Empower initiative explores ways to bridge that gap. One of our
partners is id="qwa5" >Pratham, a non-governmental organization (NGO) in
India that creates the href="http://www.pratham.org/aserrep.php" id="zfs9" >ASER
Report, a yearly nationwide survey on education outcomes. Their
2005 report provided data for the first time on basic reading and
math skills for children in rural India. The report seeded a
national conversation between governments, NGOs and private
providers about the state of education and served as a catalyst for
change. Our support will help expand their work to other sectors
and potentially to other countries.

Please visit id="t42q" >Google.org for more information on Inform and Empower
and the other initiatives announced today

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Free expression and controversial content on the web

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Wednesday, December 12th, 2007 @ 9:57 pm

Posted by Rachel Whetstone, Director of
Global Communications and Public Affairs, EMEA

Our world would be a very boring place if we all agreed all the
time. So while people may strongly disagree with what someone says,
or think that a particular newspaper article is total nonsense, we
recognize that each of us have the right to an opinion.

We also know that letting people express their views freely has
real practical benefits. Allowing individuals to voice unpopular,
inconvenient or controversial opinions is important. Not only might
they be right (think Galileo) but debating difficult issues in the
open often helps people come to better decisions.

While most people agree in principle with the right to free
expression, the challenge comes in putting theory into practice.
And that's certainly the case on the web, where blogs, social
networks and video sharing sites allow people to express themselves
- to speak and be heard - as never before.

At Google we have a bias in favor of people's right to free
expression in everything we do. We are driven by a belief that more
information generally means more choice, more freedom and
ultimately more power for the individual. But we also recognize
that freedom of expression can't be — and shouldn't be –
without some limits. The difficulty is in deciding where those
boundaries are drawn. For a company like Google with services in
more than 100 countries - all with different national laws and
cultural norms - it's a challenge we face many times every
day.

In a few cases it's straightforward. For example, we have a
global all-product ban against child pornography, which is illegal
in virtually every country. But when it comes to political
extremism it's not as simple. Different countries have come to
different conclusions about how to deal with this issue. In Germany
there's a ban on the promotion of Nazism — so we remove Nazi
content on products on href="http://www.google.de/" >Google.de (our domain for German
users) products. Other countries' histories make commentary or
criticism on certain topics especially sensitive. And still other
countries believe that the best way to discredit extremists is to
allow their arguments to be publicly exposed.

All this raises important questions for Internet companies like
Google. Our products are, after all, specifically designed to help
people create and communicate, to find and share information and
opinions across the world. So how do we approach these
challenges?

It should come as no surprise to learn people have different views
about what should appear on our sites. How and where to draw the
boundaries is the subject of lively debate even within Google. We
think that's healthy. And partly because of this, we realize
that creating a flawless set of policies on which everyone can
agree is an impossible task.

Google is not, and should not become, the arbiter of what does and
does not appear on the web. That's for the courts and those
elected to government to decide. Faced with day-to-day choices,
however, we look at our products in three broad categories: search,
advertising and services that host other people's
content.

Search is the least restricted category. We remove results from our
index only when required by law (for example, when linked to
content infringing copyright) and in a small number of other
instances, such as spam results or results including unauthorized
credit card and social security numbers. Where feasible, we tell
our users when we remove results.

At the other, most restrictive, end of the spectrum, we have what
might be called commerce products –- the text of the advertisements
we carry, which are subject to clear href="http://adwords.google.com/support/bin/static.py?page=guidelines.cs&topic=9271&subtopic=9279" >
ad content policies.

The most challenging areas are where we host other people’s content
– offerings like Blogger, Groups, orkut and video. On the one
hand, we're not generating the content and we aim to offer a
platform for free expression. On the other hand, we host the
content on our servers and want to be socially responsible. So we
have terms that we ask our users to follow. (See href="http://www.blogger.com/content.g" >Blogger and href="http://help.orkut.com/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=57444" >orkut
for examples.)

So the question becomes: how do we enforce those terms? In general,
Google does not want to be a gatekeeper. We don't, and
can't, check content before it goes live, any more than your
phone company would screen the content of your phone calls or your
ISP would edit your emails. Technology can sometimes help here, but
it's rarely a full answer. We also have millions of active
users who are vocal when it comes to alerting us to content they
find unacceptable or believe may breach our policies. When they do,
we review it and remove it where appropriate. These are always
subjective judgments and some people will inevitably disagree. But
that’s because what’s acceptable to one person may be offensive to
another.

We also face the added complication that laws governing content
apply differently in the different parts of the world in which we
operate. As we all know, some governments are more liberal about
freedom of expression than others. These legal differences create
real technical challenges, for example, about how you restrict one
type of content in one country but not another. And, in extreme
cases, we face questions about whether a country's laws and
lack of democratic processes are so antithetical to our principles
that we simply can't comply or can't operate there in a way
that benefits users.

But it's not only legal considerations that drive our policies.
One type of content, while legal everywhere, may be almost
universally unacceptable in one region yet viewed as perfectly fine
in another. We are passionate about our users so we try to take
into account local cultures and needs — which vary dramatically
around the world — when developing and implementing our global
product policies.

Dealing with controversial content is one of the biggest challenges
we face as a company. We don’t pretend to have all the right
answers or necessarily to get every judgment right. But we do try
hard to think things through from first principles, to be as
transparent as possible about how we make decisions, and to keep
reviewing and debating our policies. After all, the right to
disagree is a sign of a healthy society. height="1" width="1" />

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How long should Google remember searches?

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Tuesday, December 11th, 2007 @ 9:52 pm

Posted by Peter Fleischer, Global
Privacy Counsel

Over the years we’ve taken many steps to protect our users'
data and privacy. For example, we have resisted href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/02/response-to-doj-motion.html" >
overly-broad government subpoenas; we've designed our
services to give users a choice between href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2007/02/personally-speaking.html" >
personalized services and general services; and we've
engineered our services to allow users href="https://www.google.com/accounts/ServiceLogin?hl=en&continue=http://www.google.com/history/?zx=8TejGP12Uv4&nui=1&ltmpl= reauth&service=hist&srr=1" >
to see and control how much data they wish to share with us.
Recently, we took another important step to improve our privacy
practices by announcing href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2007/03/taking-steps-to-further-improve-our.html" >
a new policy to anonymize our server logs after 18 to 24
months, becoming the first leading search company to publish a data
retention policy. We also posted here to

href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2007/05/why-does-google-remember-information.html" >
explain the factors
that guided our decision to retain server
log data for 18 to 24 months.

The Article 29 Working Party, an advisory panel composed of
representatives from all of the E.U.'s national data protection
authorities, has sent us a href="http://ec.europa.eu/justice_home/fsj/privacy/news/docs/pr_google_16_05_07_en.pdf" >
letter in response to our commitment to anonymize server logs.
In it, they're asking us to provide further information about
our new policy, and to explain why we feel that the time period of
18 to 24 months is “proportionate” under European data protection
principles. For some time, we've discussed many things with the
Working Party, ranging from issues raised by Google products like
Gmail and Google Desktop to industry-wide concerns, such as the
challenges of protecting privacy in the Web 2.0 era. We’re pleased
that this most recent letter from the Working Party acknowledges
our ongoing engagement with the data protection community and, in
particular, our "readiness to consult with it [the Working
Party] in contrast with a relative lack of engagement by some of
the other leading players in the search engine community”.

In the spirit of transparency, we're publishing href="http://64.233.179.110/blog_resources/Google_response_Working_Party_06_2007.pdf" >
our response to the Working Party's letter. The Internet is
a global medium, and the principles at stake — privacy, security,
innovation and legal obligations to retain data — have an impact
beyond Europe, and outside of the realm of privacy. These
principles sometimes conflict: while shorter retention periods are
good for privacy, longer retention periods are needed for security,
innovation and compliance reasons. We believe we’ve struck a
reasonable balance between these various factors. Our policies are
consistent with EU data protection laws, which acknowledge the need
to set data retention periods that are proportionate and that
enable companies like Google to comply with legal
requirements.

We have a legitimate interest in retaining search server logs for a
number of reasons:

to improve our search algorithms for the benefit of users

to defend our systems from malicious access and exploitation
attempts

to maintain the integrity of our systems by fighting click
fraud and web spam

to protect our users from threats like spam and phishing

to respond to valid legal orders from law enforcement as they
investigate and prosecute serious crimes like child exploitation;
and

to comply with data retention legal obligations.

After considering the Working Party's concerns, we are
announcing a new policy: to anonymize our search server logs after
18 months, rather than the previously-established period of 18 to
24 months. We believe that we can still address our legitimate
interests in security, innovation and anti-fraud efforts with this
shorter period. However, we must point out that future data
retention laws may obligate us to raise the retention period to 24
months. We also firmly reject any suggestions that we could meet
our legitimate interests in security, innovation and anti-fraud
efforts with any retention period shorter than 18 months. We are
considering the Working Party's concerns regarding cookie
expiration periods, and we are exploring ways to redesign cookies
and to reduce their expiration without artificially forcing users
to re-enter basic preferences such as language preference. We plan
to make an announcement about privacy improvements for our cookies
in the coming months.

As we build new products and services, we look forward to
continuing our discussion with the Article 29 Working Party and
with privacy stakeholders around the world. Our common goal is to
improve privacy protections for our users.

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This blog’s M.O.

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Tuesday, December 11th, 2007 @ 6:18 am

Posted by Elliot Schrage and Karen
Wickre, Global Communications & Public Affairs

Just about 3 years ago, we href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2004/05/is-this-thing-on.html" >
launched this blog as a fast and direct way to reach Google
users, friends and anyone else interested in our goings-on. Even
though it's a blog from Google, it's by Googlers, not from
a single executive (or founder). We've encouraged hundreds of
people to write about news and ideas from all their respective
corners of the company. A lot of the posts you read are news and
updates about products, because that's what the bulk of
Googlers work on. But with an eye towards transparency, we also
share our positions on issues — for example, our href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/01/google-in-china.html" >role
in China, our href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2005/10/point-of-google-print.html" >
perspective on digitizing books, our href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/03/update-lanes-gifts-v-google.html" >
comment on a lawsuit. And occasionally we're keen to share
snippets of our href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2007/04/snakes-in-plain-old-office-building.html" >
culture or highlight href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/11/health-care-information-matters.html" >
industry developments we find noteworthy.

Our communications team manages the blog, but consistent with our
grassroots way of doing things, it's Googlers who propose
content and write the posts (and likewise, develop new blogs). When
it comes to editing copy, we aim for a very light touch — focusing
mainly on clarity of information, not sanitizing style.

Since this blog first appeared, another 52 Google blogs have also
launched. At present, 18 of them are not in English, and we expect
that number to grow as we expand around the world. All of these
other Google blogs (the href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com" >full list is on the
righthand side of the main blog) have smaller readership because
they are more tightly focused on the details of a specific product
(like AdWords or href="http://adsense.blogspot.com/" >AdSense or they represent
Google in a country (including href="http://googlepolska.blogspot.com/" >Poland and href="http://adwords-br.blogspot.com/" >Brazil), or they speak
to a niche audience, like href="http://librariancentral.blogspot.com/" >librarians or href="http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/" >webmasters.
Typically they don't feature the same topical expanse we think
will be of interest to most Google users.

In short, we're relying as always on the power of the Internet
– in this case, the incredibly easy-to-use publishing platform
known as the blog — to help interested folks understand how we
work, and what we do. As new resources and media tools come into
being, we want to make use of those too. One of these is the href="http://youtube.com/google" >Google Channel on YouTube,
where it's a priority to post videos and presentations by
Googlers, including our executives, as quickly as we can following
public events.

Through all of these means and others — podcasting, video blogs,
forums — we plan to continue being as direct as possible with you
concerning our news and views. So thanks for reading, and stay
tuned.

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Cookies: expiring sooner to improve privacy

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Monday, December 10th, 2007 @ 12:55 am

Posted by Peter Fleischer, Global
Privacy Counsel

We are committed to an ongoing process to improve our privacy
practices, and have recently taken a closer look at the question of
cookie privacy. How long should a web site "remember"
cookie information in its logs after a user's visit? And when
should a cookie expire on your computer? Cookie privacy is both a
server and a client issue.

On the server side, we href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2007/03/taking-steps-to-further-improve-our.html" >
recently announced that we will anonymize our search server
logs — including IP addresses and cookie ID numbers — after 18
months.

Now, we're asking the question about cookie lifetime: when
should a cookie expire on your computer? For background: a href="http://www.google.com/privacy_faq.html#cookie" >cookie is
a very small file which gets stored on your computer All search
engines and most websites use cookies. Why? Cookies remind us of
your preferences from the last time you visited our site. For
example, Google uses our so-called "PREF cookie" to
remember our users’ basic preferences, such as the fact that a user
wants search results in English, no more than 10 results on a given
page, or a SafeSearch setting to filter out explicit sexual
content. When we originally designed the PREF cookie, we set the
expiration far into the future — in 2038, to be exact — because the
primary purpose of the cookie was to preserve preferences, not to
let them be forgotten. We were mindful of the fact that users can
always go to their browsers to change their cookie management
settings, e.g. to delete all cookies, delete specific cookies, or
accept certain types of cookies (like first-party cookies) but
reject others (like third-party cookies).

After listening to feedback from our users and from privacy
advocates, we've concluded that it would be a good thing for
privacy to significantly shorten the lifetime of our cookies — as
long as we could find a way to do so without artificially forcing
users to re-enter their basic preferences at arbitrary points in
time. And this is why we’re announcing a new cookie policy.

In the coming months, Google will start issuing our users cookies
that will be set to auto-expire after 2 years, while auto-renewing
the cookies of active users during this time period. In other
words, users who do not return to Google will have their cookies
auto-expire after 2 years. Regular Google users will have their
cookies auto-renew, so that their preferences are not lost. And, as
always, all users will still be able to control their cookies at
any time via their browsers.

Together, these steps — logs anonymization and cookie lifetime
reduction — are part of our ongoing plan to continue innovating in
the area of privacy to protect our users. height="1" width="1" />

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Google search privacy: Plain and simple

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Saturday, December 8th, 2007 @ 6:01 am

Posted by Peter Fleischer, Global
Privacy Counsel

Cookies, IP addresses, logs — all of these
are important things to understand in the context of online
privacy. We try to explain them in clear and simple language in our
href="http://www.google.com/privacy.html" >privacy policy and href="http://www.google.com/privacy_faq.html" >FAQ.
But they're not always easy for non-techies to understand.
Google is committed to being transparent about our privacy
practices. We've been thinking about different ways to help
people understand the technical aspects of online privacy, to
improve transparency, and to empower you to make informed decisions
about how you want to use our services. Today, we're launching
our first experiment to href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLgJYBRzUXY" >explain basic
privacy concepts via video on YouTube. Here it is:

value="http://www.youtube.com/v/kLgJYBRzUXY" /> type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent"
width="425" height="350" />

This video runs about 5 minutes, so we
couldn’t cover everything. Over time, we hope to create additional
videos where we talk about other privacy issues: what data do we
collect when you register for a Google Account? or - when you
search on Google while you’re logged in? or - why does Google keeps
server logs? But before we head down the road of sequels, we’d like
to get your feedback on whether you find this video format helpful.
So please watch it and href="http://www.google.com/support/bin/request.py?form_type=user&stage=fm&user_type=user&contact_type=privacy&hl=en" >
tell us what you think. We look forward to hearing from
you.

height="1" width="1" />

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About Google.org

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Wednesday, December 5th, 2007 @ 8:20 pm

Posted by Sheryl Sandberg, VP, Global
Online Sales & Operations

When we told prospective shareholders about Google and href="http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1288776/000119312504142742/ds1a.htm" >
how we wanted to do business, we said that we hoped our
philanthropic efforts could some day have a greater impact than
Google itself. We committed one percent of our profits and equity
toward that vision. We’ve looked closely at how those resources can
have the greatest impact and found that there are many creative and
effective ways to make a difference. So we’ve taken time to
investigate, learn and imagine. And while we are still actively
engaged in the learning process, we’ve made enough progress that we
thought it was a good time to give an update on our plans.

As our founders said in our href="http://investor.google.com/pdf/2004_AnnualReport.pdf" >2004
annual report
, we’re taking a broad approach. We’re calling
the umbrella under which we’re putting all of these efforts href="http://www.google.org/" >Google.org. It will include the
work of the Google Foundation, some of Google’s own projects, as
well as partnerships and contributions to for-profit and non-profit
entities. Here are some things we're already working on:

We established the Google Foundation, funded it with $90 million
and have made a few initial commitments. We've contributed $5
million to support Acumen
Fund
, a non-profit venture fund that invests in market-based
solutions to global poverty. Acumen Fund supports entrepreneurial
approaches to delivering affordable goods and services for the 4
billion people in the world who live on less than $4 a day.

We’re also working with href="http://www.technoserve.org/" >TechnoServe to build small
businesses that create jobs and promote economic growth in the
developing world. With TechnoServe, we are funding an
entrepreneurship development program in Ghana that includes a
business plan competition and seed capital for the winners to build
their businesses.

In addition, we are working with Alix Zwane and Edward Miguel of UC
Berkeley and Michael Kremer of Harvard University to support
research in western Kenya to identify ways to prevent child deaths
caused by poor water quality.

Google.org also includes projects we manage on our own, using
Google talent, technology and other resources. An example is the href="http://www.google.com/grants/"
>Google Grants program,
which gives free advertising to selected nonprofits. To date,
Google Grants has donated $33 million in advertising to more than
850 nonprofit organizations in 10 countries.

Current Google Grants participants include:
Make-a-Wish Foundation -
grants the wishes of children with life-threatening medical
conditions. More than 25 percent of their online donations are made
as a result of their Google ads.

Doctors Without
Borders
- delivers emergency medical aid to people affected by
armed conflict, epidemics, disasters, and exclusion from health
care in nearly 70 countries. Google Grants has assisted them with
recruiting experienced doctors and nurses for their field programs,
which has helped them increase applications by 30 percent this
year.

Grameen Foundation USA -
uses microfinance and innovative technology to help the world's
poorest people escape poverty. Google Grants has helped them
attract donors and broaden their newsletter subscriber base.

With Google.org, we’ll also support entities with strong social
missions which use market-based solutions for sustainable economic
development. One example is our recent donation of $2 million to
the One Laptop Per Child
program.

While the results we get are more important than the amount of
money we give, we want to be clear about how we’re going to keep
our “one percent” commitments. There are two parts: equity and
profit. For the one percent of equity, we have committed one
percent of the outstanding shares that resulted from our initial
public offering – 3 million shares. We’re going to donate and
invest this amount over a period of as much as 20 years. Because it
is based on stock, the dollar value of this commitment will rise
and fall with our stock price

We’ll follow through on the other commitment – one percent of
profit – by taking one percent of each year’s profits and donating
and investing that too. Our first step in meeting these commitments
includes a $90 million cash donation to the Google Foundation and a
commitment of up to $175 million over three years across our other
Google.org efforts. We don’t expect to make further donations to
the Foundation for the foreseeable future.

As Larry and Sergey said in their Founders’ Letter, “We hope
someday this institution may eclipse Google itself in terms of
overall world impact by ambitiously applying innovation and
significant resources to the world's problems."

We feel fortunate to have the opportunity to contribute our
resources, talent, energy, and passion helping to solve some of the
world’s most pressing problems. We will provide you with updates as
our work progresses.

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Putting users in charge

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Monday, December 3rd, 2007 @ 10:13 pm

Posted by Peter Fleischer, Global
Privacy Counsel

I just wrote href="http://www.ft.com/cms/s/560c6a06-0a63-11dc-93ae-000b5df10621.html" >
an opinion piece for the Financial Times on the future of
search in relation to personalization. It's about what we
believe to be the value of personalized search, especially when you
yourself can control the level of personalization. Hope you enjoy
reading it.

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