Here’s to Tom Lehrer, elemental geek

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Monday, May 19th, 2008 @ 9:17 pm

Posted by Jonathan J. Rosenberg, Senior
VP, Product Management

We live in a world focused on celebrity, but there are also
luminaries — those guiding lights who actually inspire celebrities
along with the rest of us. Today there's a luminary we'd
like to call out: href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Lehrer" id="p_iz" >Tom
Lehrer. It hasn't escaped our attention that Mr. Lehrer
turned 80 last week. (We have it on good authority that his view of
numbers is such that 80 is not so different than 79, so he probably
won't mind this belated note.) We think he's great.
We're fans.

Mr. Lehrer is the Harvard mathematician turned parodist
songwriter-performer whose sense of humor, intelligence and rhythm
created a cult following that, weirdly enough, anticipated a lot of
what Google's culture tries to be about. His work is clever,
playful and fun and connects things in ways that surprises,
delights and inspires. (Consider href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNfx0FO4hzs"
id="zs_0" >"The Element Song", his ode to the periodic
table, or his lesson on href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a81YvrV7Vv8"
id="zp:h" >"New Math".) How could we not be inspired
by someone who can craft a good laugh, a great tune, and an elegant
equation?

From href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TytGOeiW0aE"
id="h9_z" >"The Masochism Tango" to

href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FgMTAj4f_o"
id="djxr" >"Who's Next"
to

href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zz-DHBiYnrc"
id="cjub" >"Poisoning Pigeons in the Park
" (trust us,
you have to hear it), Mr. Lehrer's unique music carved out a
distinctive place in popular music in the 1950s and '60s. He
made his fans feel smart. An entrepreneur — and we like
entrepreneurs — he self-produced and sold his songs via mail
order. And for all the edginess in his humor, he ended up writing
some ten clever songs for the '70s public television
children's program The Electric Company, including
a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6gjvAYDZ6M" id="wdnx" >tune
about the letter 'e.'

Although Wikipedia notes that he performed only 109 shows and wrote
just 37 songs over 20 years, we think his impact and influence goes
well beyond those numbers. He was the best kind of "geek"
before the word made its way into pop culture. He's the kind of
character as comfortable teaching a university course on the
history of the musical — which he did — as running a seminar on
the nature of mathematics — which he did.

We hope that in retirement Mr. Lehrer is enjoying himself even a
fraction as much as we've enjoyed his work. We're grateful
that he's such a great example of how science, humor, music and
mathematics can be combined to create such wonderful things.

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

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Here’s to Tom Lehrer, elemental geek

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Friday, May 16th, 2008 @ 11:56 pm

Posted by Jonathan J. Rosenberg, Senior
VP, Product Management

We live in a world focused on celebrity, but there are also
luminaries — those guiding lights who actually inspire celebrities
along with the rest of us. Today there's a luminary we'd
like to call out: href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Lehrer" id="p_iz" >Tom
Lehrer. It hasn't escaped our attention that Mr. Lehrer
turned 80 last week. (We have it on good authority that his view of
numbers is such that 80 is not so different than 79, so he probably
won't mind this belated note.) We think he's great.
We're fans.

Mr. Lehrer is the Harvard mathematician turned parodist
songwriter-performer whose sense of humor, intelligence and rhythm
created a cult following that, weirdly enough, anticipated a lot of
what Google's culture tries to be about. His work is clever,
playful and fun and connects things in ways that surprises,
delights and inspires. (Consider href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNfx0FO4hzs"
id="zs_0" >"The Element Song", his ode to the periodic
table, or his lesson on href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a81YvrV7Vv8"
id="zp:h" >"New Math".) How could we not be inspired
by someone who can craft a good laugh, a great tune, and an elegant
equation?

From href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TytGOeiW0aE"
id="h9_z" >"The Masochism Tango" to

href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FgMTAj4f_o"
id="djxr" >"Who's Next"
to

href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zz-DHBiYnrc"
id="cjub" >"Poisoning Pigeons in the Park
" (trust us,
you have to hear it), Mr. Lehrer's unique music carved out a
distinctive place in popular music in the 1950s and '60s. He
made his fans feel smart. An entrepreneur — and we like
entrepreneurs — he self-produced and sold his songs via mail
order. And for all the edginess in his humor, he ended up writing
some ten clever songs for the '70s public television
children's program The Electric Company, including
a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6gjvAYDZ6M" id="wdnx" >tune
about the letter 'e.'

Although Wikipedia notes that he performed only 109 shows and wrote
just 37 songs over 20 years, we think his impact and influence goes
well beyond those numbers. He was the best kind of "geek"
before the word made its way into pop culture. He's the kind of
character as comfortable teaching a university course on the
history of the musical — which he did — as running a seminar on
the nature of mathematics — which he did.

We hope that in retirement Mr. Lehrer is enjoying himself even a
fraction as much as we've enjoyed his work. We're grateful
that he's such a great example of how science, humor, music and
mathematics can be combined to create such wonderful things.

href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/blogspot/MKuf?a=RfqcD3G" > border="0" />

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

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Tell the Tale: Holocaust Remembrance Day

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Tuesday, May 13th, 2008 @ 10:04 pm

Posted by Jonathan Rosenberg, Senior
VP, Product Management

This week Israel observed href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yom_Hashoah" id="u3.v" >Yom
HaShoah, the Holocaust Remembrance Day, a holiday inaugurated
in 1959 to commemorate the victims of the Holocaust. This is an
especially important day to id="omu9" >Yad Vashem, the Jerusalem-based
center for remembering the Holocaust's victims and survivors. I
was fortunate to tour Yad Vashem's href="http://www1.yadvashem.org/new_museum/overview.html" id="gc22"
>New Museum with my family last summer, and
was moved and inspired by the experience. Our guide told us an
anecdote about a visitor, a survivor of the camps, who recognized
an item in one exhibit and was able to explain its context to
museum curators and fellow visitors. This is why Yad Vashem is so
important: it's a place that preserves the horrible history of
the Holocaust and puts it in context for all of us.

But a lot of people, including many survivors, aren't able to
visit Yad Vashem. How can they discover and share stories? How can
they see an artifact or a photo and say, I recognize that item or
person because I was there? The answer, of course, is the
Internet.

We're proud to report that Yad Vashem has just launched two new
YouTube channels, href="http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://www.youtube.com/user/YadVashem"
id="gh7u23" >one in English, the href="http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://www.youtube.com/user/yadvashemarabic"
id="gh7u24" >other in Arabic. They feature
testimonies from Holocaust survivors, historians' lectures on
key issues related to the Holocaust, and footage of events big and
small ( id="o1kw" >Pope John Paul
II's visit
in 2000, a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ucu94QAi4dA" id="f3-o"
>touching family reunion). More
importantly, they are a way for Yad Vashem to surpass its physical
boundaries and reach out to an audience worldwide. This is the
promise the Internet holds: to inform and connect the globe, to
remember stories, to teach us. As href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elie_Wiesel" id="gh7u17"
>Elie Wiesel said in href="http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=D_kuKXRLEnY"
id="gh7u18" >his speech at the opening of the
museum: "If we decided to tell the tale, it is because we
wanted the world to be a better world, just a better world, and
learn and remember."

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

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Moving to Unicode 5.1

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Tuesday, May 13th, 2008 @ 10:04 pm

Posted by Mark Davis, Senior
International Software Architect

Google has just begun supporting href="http://www.unicode.org/press/pr-5.1.html" id="yh5d" >Unicode
5.1, less than one month after it was released. It's now
available in search, so people speaking languages such as Malayalam
can now search for words containing the new characters in Unicode
5.1.

Web pages can use a variety of different character encodings, like
ASCII, Latin-1, or Windows 1252, or href="http://www.unicode.org/book/aboutbook.html#Foreword"
id="c42w" >Unicode. Most encodings can only represent a few
languages, but Unicode will handle anything from Chinese to French
to Arabic. We have long used Unicode as the internal format for all
the text we search: any other encoding is first converted to
Unicode for processing. So we regularly update to each new version
of Unicode (and relevant related standards like href="http://unicode.org/cldr/" id="az_w" >CLDR and href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/bcp/bcp47.txt"
id="da92" >BCP 47) to make sure we are current. Thus Unicode
plays a key role in our href="http://www.google.com/corporate/" >mission.

Uptick in native Unicode webpages

Just last December there was an interesting
milestone on the web. For the first time, we found that Unicode was
the most frequent encoding found on web pages, overtaking both
ASCII and Western European encodings—and by coincidence, within 10
days of one another. What's more impressive than simply
overtaking them is the speed with which this happened; take a look
at the blue line in this graph.

onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}"
href="http://bp1.blogger.com/_Ap14FtNN91w/SBzrtHJfLnI/AAAAAAAAA5U/TV7_g2_sWq0/s1600-h/Unicode2.gif" >
alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5196287230324190834"
border="0" />

You can see a long-term decline in pages encoded in
ASCII (unaccented letters A through Z). More recently, there's
been a significant drop in the use of encodings covering only
Western European letters (ASCII and a few accented letters like Ä,
Ç, and Ø). We're seeing similar declines in other
language-specific encodings. Unicode, on the other hand, is showing
a sharp increase in usage.

This is based on our indexing of web pages, and thus may vary
somewhat from what other search engines find. However, the trends
are pretty clear, and the continued rise in use of Unicode makes it
even easier to do the processing for the many languages that we
cover.

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

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Bringing it all together

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Sunday, May 4th, 2008 @ 2:32 am

Posted by Scott Johnston, Senior
Product Manager (former VP of Products at JotSpot)

Many of you have been waiting for JotSpot to re-emerge, integrated
into Google — and now it's happening. Here's the
story:

In the last 10 years, the way all of us work has changed. We've
grown accustomed to always being connected through email and
instant messaging. Consequently, people are working together in
teams more often, with larger groups, and with others who may be in
different parts of the country or the world. We are shifting our
focus from personal to team productivity. It's less about
"you" and more about "us."

But with this explosion in collaboration, how do you bring together
everything your team needs to work? How do you take information,
whether it is on your desktop or online, and share it with specific
groups of people — your team, the company, the public?

Meet Google Sites, the newest addition to the Google Apps product
suite. It was designed to allow you to easily create a network of
sites and share them with whomever you choose. Google Sites lets
you pull together information from across Google Apps by embedding
documents, spreadsheets, presentations, videos, and calendars in
your sites. Of course, we also harness the power of Google search
technology so your search results are always fast and
relevant.

What does it take to start using Google Sites? Just a click of a
button — that's it. Here's an overview with more
detail:

value="http://www.youtube.com/v/X_KnC2EIS5w" /> type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent"
height="355" width="425" />

We're just finishing up the code to migrate existing JotSpot
customer wikis to Google sites, so if you're already a JotSpot
customer, you'll be hearing from us soon on how to make the
switch.

If you aren't a Google Apps customer yet and want to use Google
Sites, sign up at href="http://sites.google.com/" >http://sites.google.com.

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Google I/O: Advancing the web as a platform

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Sunday, May 4th, 2008 @ 2:30 am

Posted by Tom Stocky, Senior Product
Manager, Developer Products

We spend a lot of time, especially within our Developer Products
team, talking about how to build applications for the web. After
all, Google was born on the web, and over time we've gained
tons of experience with AJAX and other technologies to build apps
like Gmail, Google Maps, Google Calendar and Google Docs.

Along the way, we've seen the power of collaborative web apps
and become very familiar with the pain points of building them. To
share that knowledge, we href="http://google-code-updates.blogspot.com/2008/03/announcing-google-io.html" >
just announced Google I/O — a two-day developer gathering to
be held May 28-29 in San Francisco. We want to move the web forward
as a platform, and continue to invest in projects like Google
Gears, OpenSocial, and the Google Web Toolkit to further that
effort.

If you're a developer, we hope you're interested in
learning more about Google APIs and joining this conversation about
moving the web forward. For details and registration, please visit
the Google I/O
site.

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Our solutions for ad serving

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Sunday, May 4th, 2008 @ 2:30 am

Posted by Rohit Dhawan, Senior Product
Manager

Earlier this week, we href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2008/03/weve-officially-acquired-doubleclick.html" >
completed our acquisition of DoubleClick. Together, we're
now focused on building a full suite of products and tools that
help publishers of all sizes improve productivity, manage their
inventory, generate additional revenue opportunities and save time
so they can focus on what they do best — creating great content
and delivering an exceptional experience to their users.

First, let us address the options that publishers have when it
comes to selling and managing ad space on their websites. Some
publishers use ad networks like href="https://www.google.com/adsense/login/en_US/?gsessionid=KDKfga-9mk0"
>Google AdSense to fill
their ad space. Still others employ a direct sales force to manage
and sell their ad inventory with solutions like the

href="http://www.doubleclick.com/solutions/publishers/index.aspx"
>DoubleClick Revenue Center
, and partner with
third-party ad networks to fill in any unsold space. Regardless, it
is a challenge for publishers to effectively manage their available
inventory and ensure all of their clients' campaigns serve on
time without a sophisticated ad management and ad serving
solution.

Today, we're announcing a new tool for publishers with the beta
launch of Google Ad
Manager
. Directed at addressing the ad management and serving
needs of publishers with smaller sales teams, Google Ad Manager is
a free, hosted ad and inventory management tool that can help
publishers sell, schedule, deliver and measure their directly-sold
and network-based ad inventory. It offers an intuitive and simple
user experience with Google speed and a tagging process so
publishers can spend more time working with their advertisers and
less time on their ad management solution. And by providing
detailed inventory forecasts and tracking at a very granular level,
Ad Manager helps publishers maximize their inventory sell-through
rates.

Google Ad Manager effectively complements the DoubleClick Revenue
Center, which is focused on publishers with larger sales teams.
We're excited to add DART for Publishers to our suite of
products, and we're committed to the continued development and
enhancement of DoubleClick's offerings. Today's
announcement demonstrates this promise, and at the same time
furthers our goal of creating new opportunities for publishers of
all sizes. Dozens of publishers have been using Google Ad Manager
successfully in early trials. To hear what those publishers have to
say check out some href="https://www.google.com/admanager/login/en_US/index.html#successstories"
>Ad Manager
success stories or take a product tour to learn more.

As we are still in beta, Google Ad Manager is available to
publishers by invitation only. If you're interested in learning
more about it or would like to be considered for the program, visit
the Google Ad Manager
site. Existing DoubleClick customers are not affected by this
announcement. As we expand the Google Ad Manager beta program, we
will be in touch again to include additional publishers and offer
updates on our progress.

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Privacy made easier

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

Posted by Jane Horvath, Senior Privacy
Counsel, and Peter Fleischer, Global Privacy Counsel

Because we're strongly committed to protecting your privacy, we
want to present our privacy practices in the clearest way possible.
Over the past year, we've been experimenting with video to
clarify and illustrate the privacy practices set forth in our
Google Privacy Policy. We've used videos to communicate with
you about things like cookies, IP addresses, and logs. (Check out
the Google
Privacy Channel
on YouTube.) And you've told us that the
screen shots, whiteboard drawings, and pointers from the engineers
and product managers we've captured on video are helping you
better understand the fine points of our Privacy Policy.

With that in mind, today we're announcing a revamp of our href="http://www.google.com/privacy" id="hhl2" >Privacy Center.
The new Center is a one-stop shop for privacy resources, with
various multi-media formats aimed to help you further understand
how we store and use data, how to control who you share your data
with, and how we protect your privacy. We hope this new Center will
help you make more informed privacy choices whenever you use Google
products and services.

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New privacy tips video series

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Saturday, May 3rd, 2008 @ 10:17 pm

Posted by Jane Horvath, Senior Privacy
Counsel

In order to give you the best possible information about the
privacy settings for our products, we asked the engineers and
product managers who actually designed them to explain how they
work in href="http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=FCEE46AA997A23D9" >a
series of new videos we released today on our href="http://www.youtube.com/googleprivacy" id="n-48"
>YouTube Privacy Channel.
These videos feature Googlers sharing privacy tips, like how to use
Google Chat’s “Off the Record” feature, how to limit the number of
people who can view your Picasa photos, how to unlist your phone
number from Google search results, and how to make the details of
your Google Calendar entries private.

Just as we’re dedicated to innovation when it comes to making
better, more useful products, we’re also committed to finding new
ways to educate you about how to control what information you share
when using our products, and with whom. This series, along with the
other videos on our YouTube Privacy Channel, are part of this
awareness-raising effort. So watch the videos (including our very
own blooper reel) and href="http://www.google.com/support/bin/request.py?form_type=user&stage=fm&user_type=user&contact_type=privacy&hl=en"
id="dc3s" >tell us what you think. And
we'll be adding new videos to the Privacy Channel now and
again, so be sure to check back.

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Analysis: The FTC clears our acquisition of DoubleClick

Filed under: Official Google Blog — Wrote by Lees on Saturday, May 3rd, 2008 @ 10:16 pm

Posted by David Drummond, Senior Vice
President, Corporate Development and Chief Legal
Officer

Earlier today, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) href="http://www.google.com/press/pressrel/20071220_doubleclick.html"
id="g78_" >cleared
our acquisition of DoubleClick. This is obviously excellent
news for both companies, and I would like to comment on its
significance and what it means for us going forward.

Perhaps most importantly, the FTC’s decision publicly affirms what
we and numerous independent analysts href="http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2007/09/our-senate-testimony-on-online.html"
id="sl3h" >have been saying for
months: our acquisition does not threaten competition in what is a
robust, innovative, and quickly evolving online advertising space.
In fact, we firmly believe the transaction will increase
competition and bring substantial benefits to consumers, web
publishers, and online advertisers.

Looking at the FTC's href="http://ftc.gov/opa/2007/12/googledc.shtm" id="y_2g"
>clearance statement, a few key points
jump out as noteworthy:

Transaction was cleared with no conditions. The FTC
cleared the acquisition unconditionally, without demanding any
changes in or commitments concerning the companies’ business
practices. This will allow us to remain flexible as we continue to
innovate and provide the best services to our customers and
users.

Google and DoubleClick are not competitors. The FTC
stated that its "thorough analysis of the evidence showed that
the companies are not direct competitors in any relevant antitrust
market." Furthermore, the FTC concluded that the merger would
not eliminate beneficial potential competition, writing that
"it is unlikely that the elimination of Google as a potential
competitor in the third party ad serving markets would have a
significant impact on competition." We agree with both of
these findings. Google and DoubleClick provide complementary
services, and competition between the companies was not necessary
to create benefits for consumers. To the contrary, consumers will
benefit from the two companies working together and combining our
resources.

Third party ad serving markets are highly competitive.
The FTC noted that "the evidence shows that the third party ad
serving markets are competitive," and said that "the
evidence also shows that firms can and do switch ad serving firms
when it is in their self-interest to do so." This is an
important finding, because it means that ad serving customers will
continue to benefit from innovation and product development by the
many players in this space, and that they can always select the ad
serving provider that offers them the best services.

Privacy not a part of the merger review. Though we
strongly believe in protecting our users' privacy, the FTC
clearance decision reaffirmed the law by
noting that privacy concerns played no role
in its merger review. This is an important principle, as
privacy issues need to be addressed on an industry-wide basis, and
not on a company-by-company basis. The FTC wrote, "although
such issues may present important policy questions for the Nation,
the sole purpose of federal antitrust review of mergers and
acquisitions is to identify and remedy transactions that harm
competition. Not only does the Commission lack legal authority to
require conditions to this merger that do not relate to antitrust,
regulating the privacy requirements of just one company could
itself pose a serious detriment to competition in this vast and
rapidly evolving industry." The FTC also noted, however,
"that the evidence does not support a conclusion" that
this particular transaction will harm consumer privacy.

Data combination wouldn't pose problems. The FTC
rejected the suggestion from competitors that Google would combine
user information with DoubleClick's customers' data to
obtain an advantage in the market, writing that the data is owned
by DoubleClick’s customers and that "at bottom, the concerns
raised by Google’s competitors regarding the integration of these
two data sets — should privacy concerns not prevent such
integration — really amount to a fear that the transaction will
lead to Google offering a superior product to its customers."
Moreover, "a number of Google’s competitors have at their
disposal valuable stores of data not available to Google. For
instance, Google’s most significant competitors in the ad
intermediation market, Microsoft, Yahoo!, and Time Warner have
access to their own unique data stores."

Advertisers and publishers aren't concerned. The FTC
noted that "the clear majority of third parties expressing
[competitive] concerns [about the deal] were Google’s current or
potential competitors." Additionally, Commissioner Jon
Liebowitz noted in his href="http://ftc.gov/os/caselist/0710170/071220leib.pdf" id="wp4."
>concurring opinion that "my
staff and I independently spoke with publishers and advertisers
potentially affected by this deal and, somewhat surprisingly, they
raised few anticompetitive concerns. In fact, many seem unruffled
by the alternatives in the post-merger market." It is telling
that while our competitors tried hard to come up with theories of
how our customers and partners could be harmed by the deal, those
customers and partners themselves did not agree with those
theories. In fact, we know that many of these advertisers and
publishers are excited about the transaction and look forward to
benefiting from it.

But as I said at the outset, perhaps the most important aspect of
the clearance decision is its recognition of the fact that both
Google and DoubleClick do business in a competitive and rapidly
evolving arena. Indeed, as the FTC noted, all of the recent
acquisitions that have occurred in the online advertising space
have confirmed this. "The entry and expansion
of…well-financed competitors has transformed the ad
intermediation marketplace over the last six months," the FTC
wrote. "All of these firms are vertically integrated, and all
appear to be well-positioned to compete vigorously against Google
in this new marketplace."

I should also note that, separate from its clearance decision, the
FTC this morning released some suggested href="http://ftc.gov/opa/2007/12/principles.shtm" id="b0_:"
>principles to guide online companies
engaging in online advertising. We support the FTC's effort to
develop industry-wide standards in this area, and we are studying
these proposals carefully.

Receiving clearance from the FTC is of course an important step
forward, but it does not mean that we can now close the
acquisition. For that, we must also receive clearance from European
Commission (EC), which is still conducting its review. We are
cooperating fully with the EC and are hopeful that they will soon
reach the same conclusion as their U.S. counterparts.

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