Category Archives: Search

New “Alphabet” Name Shows How Presumptive (And Good) Google Might Be

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Attribution and All Photo Illustration Credits: The Guardian

“Alphabet” Presumes A Lot
It’s hard to imagine naming your company “Planet Earth”, or “Universe” or “Everything Under The Sun”, but Google comes pretty close.  In recent corporate re-structuring hailed (temporarily) by Wall Street, Google restructured and re-named itself “Alphabet” to bring all its disparate companies under one roof.  From its core search and advertising business that underwrites it all, to energy, to curing cancer, to driver-less cars, to web-enabled eyeglasses, Alphabet now enlists “moonshot” projects along with what everybody knows Google best for: search.

Laudable Missions
Google’s missions are laudable and reflect worthy passions among its founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brinn. After all, besides moonshot pioneer Elan Musk, few executives of publicly held web companies do not often stray too far from stockholders’ collective wishes: core business.

“Banal Search”
According to The Guardian’s Evgeny Morozov, in his August 16, 2015 piece, “Google may have changed its name but the game remains the same”, the company is simply temporarily righting its troubles with investors. Morozov writes that Page and Brinn aspire well beyond “banal search” and the advertising that supports it.

“Alphabet – a nice example of corporate plastic surgery at work – makes explicit what everybody has known for a while,” Morozov writes. “Google’s founders are tired of and deeply embarrassed by the company’s core business. Selling ads, after all, is not a business that requires a PhD from Stanford or MIT – in fact, it’s so mind-numbingly banal and inelegant that all those brainy scientists on Google’s payroll must have an identity crisis every time they realise how their moonshot projects are actually financed.”

Google/Alphabet Does Good Work, No Matter What
Page and Brynn revolutionized search and have established Google — that is, Alphabet — as the undisputed data Goliath of our digital times. The very verb “to Google,” now means “to search” for mostly all of us. And the business pair are serial (and I would argue “benevolent”) entrepreneurs at the highest levels with their work outside search. So even if Morozov and others consider the re-naming of Google a deft attempt to boost Wall Street stock, so be it.

Greg Goaley, President of WinCommunications in Des Moines, Iowa, is a former copywriter and creative editor, and a 25-year digital content strategist and provider. Kathryn Towner is President of WinM@il USA, a former 15-year sales rep for Random House/McGraw-Hill, and a 20-year permission-based email publications consultant and provider.

Long Google-Oracle Legal Fray = Programming Innovation Slog

Image Source: “Google Demands Retrial Copyright Case” by TheNewsTribe.com, May 9, 2015. No author name provided.

Oh, The Trolls
“Web trolls” are groups that go into business precisely to sue other companies and groups by trolling content and software, usually offered for free or fairly used and even expressly attributed. Web trolls write and register patents specifically to prey after well-healed interests, often on obscure legal grounds and even on grounds of clear fair use of content and software. All their money is usually settled between the accused and the accusers, most often when the accused has decent resources – simply to make the problem go away. Wonder why the trolls generally “scare and settle” with mostly rich companies?

Hmm, The Bigger Trolls?
But when the largest of established companies like Oracle go after web search software behemoths like Google for, just like everybody else, using application interfaces based on Java — among the most commonly used software on the web that is freely distributed and owned by Oracle — whom, then, does one call the “web troll?”

Carving Out Creative Legal Niches
We hopefully will see. The U.S. Supreme Court on June 30, 2015, refused to hear Google’s plea to overturn a 2014 decision favoring Oracle by the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals concerning Google’s use of APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) for Android phones that might, or in many legal cases, might not, use Java.

Bigger Reasons To Upbraid Google
Google deserves great criticism and legal challenges over favoritism for surfacing strong search results for Google clients over smaller and likely more innovative interests, among so many other questionable actions, but the Electronic Freedom Foundation (“Bad News: Supreme Court Refuses to Review Oracle v. Google API Copyright Decision”, 77 computer science business leaders, innovators and professors, and I wonder about Oracle’s legal creativity. The courts need to up their technology knowledge even to consider cases like these, but Google will have its shot at appealing the ruling again through the District Court.

Fair Use Legal Arguments Shaky In Copyright Cases
Oracle argues that Java’s APIs are copyrighted, and that using them for Android app development was infringement by Google. Google argues that Java is a fair-use application, used by hundreds of millions on the web, and pilfered widely by Oracle across all platforms for free. Not now, apparently, for Android. For some reason. Wonder why?

Programmers Not Only Might Not Know Or Even Care
Most software and app developers might not even be aware that what they write and use surrounding Java is now more subject to lawsuits, argues Jared Newman of Fast Company in his piece, “Here’s The Scariest Thing About The Oracle-Google Software Copyright Battle”. Click Here. Maybe developers have figured they should simply march on, write the damn code, and worry about the courts later, if need be. Maybe Oracle should account for all things they consider copyright infringement so developers know. But Oracle and others keep moving the goalposts for pots of potential gold.

If It Pleases The Court, And Even If It Doesn’t: Up Thy Tech Knowledge
All considered, Google-Oracle is just one case among thousands that represent loopholes and lack of knowledge in American and world jurisprudence that appear increasingly inept at keeping pace with technology. That Oracle chooses — and for years, chases — Google, of all companies and interests developing “Java-involved” software, more so demonstrates the smaller giant biting the heels of the biggest giant of all, resulting in arguably less innovation due to a chilling effect on programmers.

Hope not.

Greg Goaley, President of WinCommunications in Des Moines, Iowa, is a former copywriter and creative editor, and a 25-year digital content strategist and provider. Kathryn Towner is President of WinM@il USA, a former 15-year sales rep for Random House/McGraw-Hill, and a 20-year permission-based email publications consultant and provider.

“Mobilegeddon” Fallout: Google’s April 21, 2015 Mobile Search Algorithm Changes

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Image Source & Credit: SearchEngineLand.com. They and others are already calling winners and losers, but it’s far too early to say for many reasons.

How Mobile-Friendly For Search Is Your Web Site? Click Google’s Test Site To Know Whether Your Site Mobile-Friendly

Mobile Phone Advantages Are Clear, As Search Is Always Changing
Although the verdict is still out on Google’s major mobile search changes on April 21, 2015 — which could lessen or boost your web site’s chances of showing up for your customers — changes for better or worse (depending on any changes for your site’s “searchability”) are happening. Preliminary data show that important brands have suffered significant declines, at least for now.

For example, according to SearchMetrics, megasites like Reddit.com (27% loss in percent of actual visibility), NBCSports.com (28% loss) and WalmartStores.com (31% loss) have seen losses in the number of mobile users who had previously searched keywords and phrases that Google had generated for these sites.

Declines for these sites, amid likely upticks for others, has happened in just six days, according to the full Search Metrics report.

Changes Will Be Dynamic Over Time
But that’s the catch: It’s really quite early, as the planet is not even a full week into this. Whether Google is chasing its tail to catch up and reveal to researchers what changes are occurring (Google’s blogs are saying that mobile site search has gained a 5 percent uptick), or whether currently “deposed” sites need to improve their mobile SEO — OR whether a likely untold number of other factors apply — these worldwide changes to Google’s search markers will continue dynamically to show up over time.

So, much more later.

Greg Goaley, President of WinCommunications in Des Moines, Iowa, is a former copywriter and creative editor, and a 25-year digital content strategist and provider. Kathryn Towner is President of WinM@il USA, a former 15-year sales rep for Random House/McGraw-Hill, and a 20-year permission-based email publications consultant and provider.

April 21 Deadline: Google To Boost Mobile Sites For Phones, Less So For Tablets & Desktops

Google Clarion Call for Mobile

“Google Will ‘Kick Your Butt’ If Your Site Is Not Mobile Friendly” – Marketing Digest

Same Old, Same Old: Mobile Marches On
If there were ever a time to update your digital content to ensure mobile devices can best show your web site to customers, now is the time.

Google Sets Mobile Gauntlet Date at April 21
Google: “Starting April 21, we will be expanding our use of mobile-friendliness as a ranking signal. This change will affect mobile searches in all languages worldwide and will have a significant impact in our search results. Consequently, users will find it easier to get relevant, high quality search results that are optimized for their devices.” Click For Entire Letter from Google


Greg Goaley, President of WinCommunications in Des Moines, Iowa, is a former copywriter and creative editor, and a 25-year digital content strategist and provider. Kathryn Towner is President of WinM@il USA, a former 15-year sales rep for Random House/McGraw-Hill, and a 20-year permission-based email publications consultant and provider.

Google to Show Twitter Search Results, Again

“Google-ized” Tweets Will Show Up Again First Half of this Year – So How Will Google Present Search Results “Logically & Consumably” – How Do Users Avoid Getting Wet with All of Twitter’s New “Firehose” Traffic – 21 Million Tweets Are Sent Daily

Bloomberg: Twitter Reaches Deal to Show Tweets in Google Search ResultsBloombergGoogleTwitter

Greg Goaley, President of WinCommunications in Des Moines, Iowa, is a former copywriter and creative editor, and a 25-year digital content strategist and provider. Kathryn Towner is President of WinM@il USA, a former 15-year sales rep for Random House/McGraw-Hill, and a 20-year permission-based email publications consultant and provider.