i don’t want to offend anyone, but some open source/privacy enthusiasts dislike google, but why?? google has made chromium, android, etc and most of the things they do are open source, and not only that, they also support creative commons media or public domain. i know the privacy concernes they may have, but they would never do anything bad to you. i love google personally because of their commitment to open source software.

  • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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    i know the privacy concernes they may have, but they would never do anything bad to you.

    Seriously?

    So;

    Google would never….

    And that’s just the stuff I know about and could find quickly,

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    Their search used to be amazing, now it’s shit.

    If you disagree, I’m sorry you can’t remember when there was a time that it was infinitely better. It was so good, in fact, that their name actually became a verb. Crazy, right?

    They’re slowly killing Waze by removing features. Believe it or not, that app used to be even cooler too.

    That. That’s why.

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      Their search used to be amazing, now it’s shit.

      Yeah, have to agree on that. Especially if I’m looking for something niche. It used to be the opposite, you went to google if you were looking for something hard to find.

      Bing seems to be a lot better for my search needs right now. Duckduckgo is just… a mess if you ask me. No relevance to results whatsoever, I usually find what I was looking for in the 10th link or so… or not at all. After 10, 15 results, duckduckgo just returns irrelevant results.

      The image search in Google has gotten better though, so I still use that.

  • yoevli@lemmy.world
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    Chromium is open-source. Chrome is not and also happens to constitute a majority of the browser market, and Google has tried multiple times to cash in on this market share to benefit their primary business of advertising to the detriment of users (FLoC, Manifest v3, Web Environment Integrity).

    Likewise, AOSP is open-source, but Google has been progressively dismantling it and making various components closed-source (most recently the dialer app).

    All this to say, Google is absolutely not friendly to FOSS. As a corporation, they’re beholden to their shareholders above all else and they should be treated as an amoral entity, the same as every other publicly-traded company.

    • Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world
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      Chrome itself isn’t the real problem, how they managed to get Chromium everywhere is. You have one real alternative and that’s Firefox (and derivatives) and it’s barely surviving, which sucks.

      Sure, they might not get as much money directly from non-Chrome browsers, but they get to push standards through Chromium.

    • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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      google isn’t amoral , i’m sorry but, what about the google employees who use debian?? or who use krita?? those people are changing the environment!! and the only case in which they can be seen as amoral, is when they are asked for data to the government.

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        Public companies are by definition amoral. They’re beholden to their shareholders and virtually every decision they make is informed by this obligation. Morality generally only factors into their decision-making insofar as it affects PR and thus the bottom line.

        I don’t mean to say that Google or any other company is immoral. I use amoral to simply mean that they operate independent of morality. No public company, no matter how much you may like them, is your friend at the end of the day.

      • atlasraven31@lemm.ee
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        I’m sure they have some Firefox users too. It’s going to take a lot more than a few employees using Linux to convince me they wouldn’t steal both of my kidneys and leave me in an icy hotel bathtub.

        • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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          I mean, Microsoft peeps are trying to be buddy buddy with Linux now.

          Doesn’t mean they are not an awful company

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          Bathtub? Google would just pop you afterwards, there’s more organs in there.

    • vzq@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      That would be bad for business. Why sell data to the highest bidder once when you can insert yourself in their value chain and seek rent forever?

        • atlasraven31@lemm.ee
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          I looked it up on Google and it said google is one of the good guys!

          /sarcasm (circular reasoning)

          • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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            circular reason is also this?? (i looked it up on brave search and it said google is evil!!) both are bad arguments, i’m so sorry.

        • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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          well, with all blog articles, not everything has to be taken literally, maybe sometimes it’s just criticism or a misunderstanding. for example breaching user security, yes they did it, but for the safety of other people, so i’m sorry.

          • subignition@fedia.io
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            Multi-billion-dollar corporations do not deserve the benefit of the doubt. Companies do not act morally unless they are legally compelled to.

        • al4s@feddit.de
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          They sell ad spots based on their data about you - IMHO that’s very different from outright selling your data.

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          lawsuit claims

          It’s right in the title. So you claim it is true. I can also claim that you sell my personal data. Doesn’t make it true.

          Let that lawsuit play out, and wait for the verdict.

          • RedditWanderer@lemmy.world
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            In 2019, Google agreed to pay $170 million to settle claims by the FTC and New York Attorney General that YouTube illegally collected personal information from children without their parents’ consent, the suit noted. Last year, a French high court upheld a 50 million Euro fine against Google over alleged failure to obtain users’ consent for using their data for ad targeting, the suit said.

            Many settled claims too.

  • atlasraven31@lemm.ee
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    “but they would never do anything bad to you”

    Oof, can I get this in writing? I, a massive company beholden to no one, promise to never evar backstab my loyal customers, pinky swear.

    • amio@kbin.social
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      I swear some people take it as a challenge.

      Edit: nah, there is literally no way this guy’s not trolling, and badly at that.

      • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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        (this is unrelated but I’m not trolling, I’m very sorry if my opinion about Google is bad, but I am ok with hearing the opinions of other people and maybe change a little bit, I don’t only love Google, I also love open source, Ubuntu, etc)

          • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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            it’s not your fault, it’s mine. I had an opinion beforehand and I like Google but I am ok with hearing what everyone has to say, thank you!!

    • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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      please don’t say that. i just really love google and want to know the opinion of other people. and don’t worry, i am also a fan of open source!!

        • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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          maybe they won’t love me back personally, but they will love the community back. for example the cute android easter eggs, the offline dinosaur game, it’s like a hug to the community.

          • Travalaaaaaaanche!@lemmy.world
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            You really need to read more and gain yourself some perspective on the way corporations are now structured to drain any and all value from users/customers and funnel it to (mainly the majority) shareholders, using any tactics that they Believe they can legally get away with. This includes lobbying (re: bribery) for legislation and/or legal decisions that work in their favor.

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            They add those so you will feel warm and cuddly and spend more money. They would sell out an entire community for a nickel.

            • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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              They already have sold out entire communities. It was more than a nickle, though.

  • Spiralvortexisalie@lemmy.world
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    Personally Google gives me a negative impression due to its intrusiveness and current aim of hoovering up all data possible. While you seem certain Google would never hurt you, there are many people who would never take such a risk. Even if Google was purely good of heart (which I doubt), they have proven themselves subjects to Government whims. A recent example is here: https://www.theregister.com/2023/10/18/google_keyword_search_warrants/ where a court in the United States ordered Google to return personally identifying information on any and all users who searched for the address of a crime in the month prior. And their commitment to open source is debatable as shown by their graveyard of projects (https://killedbygoogle.com/) often killed with strong usage and with dubious explanations really has strong Embrace, Extend, Extinguish vibes.

    • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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      i know those criticisms. but while they do end the life of some services, they mostly do it to merge other services or make them better. and by the way, their main open source projects haven’t been ended, so that means something.

      • Spiralvortexisalie@lemmy.world
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        There are some, myself included, who believe many of the “mainstream” projects are only open to avoid antitrust lawsuits in America. The reason why there is chromium vs chrome and AOSP Android vs Google Android, is to take advantage of the confusion to make it sound as if the actual Google product is open source, where as the Google product is based upon the open source project. This makes it sound like anybody could copy Google’s product and give them a run for their money, which is obviously not the case.

  • cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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    Because their main purpose is to collect as much personal information as they can from their users and sell it to anyone willing to pay for it.

    • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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      yes but they do it legally and only what you type in the internet while you are connected to a google account, and maybe your contacts but that is up to you!! you have the freedom to limit how much data google uses!! and i personally like it because the algorithm recommends me good linux products.

      • squiblet@kbin.social
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        They collect much more than that, such as location data, and huge amounts of info gleaned from email and photos.

        • massive_bereavement@kbin.social
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          One of the main priorities of the google maps cars is to also map wireless networks, so when your phone locates a wireless network, Google also knows your location (and the location of those connected to said network).

          Note: This is also done passively by Android phones.

      • RealM@kbin.social
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        “Legal” doesn’t immediately mean “moral”. Everything is legal as long as there isn’t a law specifically banning it, and those laws often only get created as a result of someone abusing their legal right to something.

        Google collects also way more data than you pointed out, in every avenue possible. Ever solved a captcha? You likely helped Google train their image recognition AI. Got an android smartphone (a brand that previously had committed itself to being open-source and linux based)? Have fun with pre-installed unremovable Google Spyware. You’re forced to create a GMail account to interact with the whole App ecosystem of the market.
        Google can remotely (without your consent) download and delete apps on your smartphone, read your personal data (including stuff you have saved on your SD card) and accesses your camera, pictures and GPS-Data regularly.

        I just read an article to prepare for writing this comment and feel actually sick now, I wanna jump ship and get an independent OS, screw the AppStore…

  • F4stL4ne@programming.dev
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    Because they are an advertising company.

    With all that been said here, they also killed xmpp with hangout, so they’re not friendly to Foss at all.

    • BarbecueCowboy@kbin.social
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      They did also kill hangouts… and pretty much every other messaging platform they’ve ever created, sometimes just for kicks. It might be incompetence as opposed to anything malicious there.

  • 0485@lemmy.world
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    People tend to dislike google because they collect a ton of data on you and you can’t ever be sure they aren’t selling it to other companies.

    • tinkeringidiot@lemmy.world
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      You can be absolutely sure they’re selling it to every company and national government that will pay for it.

      If you’re part of a marginalized group that some government would like to commit a human rights violation against in the last decade, chances are Google was a gleeful enabler on the government side.

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        I worked for a certain “big data” company that bought browsing histories from Google (and many other companies). They absolutely sell your data; and without even anonymising the personal identification information before selling it.

        (I lasted 6 weeks before the lack of ethics forced me to quit. Needed the job to pay rent and buy groceries, but I couldn’t buy enough soap to cleanse my soul).

  • zeppo@lemmy.world
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    Because they are above all else an advertising company. Businesses like having somewhere to advertise, of course… but overall consumers don’t like ads. Chrome, Android and gmail are simply ways to steer people to google search so they can sell ads. Then, like Facebook, their bread and butter is essentially privacy invasion - gathering huge dossiers of personal information on everyone they can. Google also has a reputation for being somewhat arrogant, as far as their work culture (only hiring people from elite universities, and having ridiculous ‘clever’ interview questions) as well as launching products, getting people to depend on them, then cancelling them with little notice or replacement. In addition, while their main product was innovative for the first several years, it’s declined significantly in quality, but their near-monopoly status makes it difficult for anyone else to effectively compete. Another issue is that like Facebook, Google has basically no customer service for anyone not spending 5 million a month with them. If they decide to close down your account based on who-knows-what algorithm thing, unless you get lucky on social media or have good connections, you’re screwed and all your stuff is permanently deleted.

  • rufus@discuss.tchncs.de
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    One more thing concerning the ‘open source’. Most things Google does aren’t open.

    You mentioned Chromium. I don’t think it would have become the most used browser platform if it hadn’t been open. So I’m not sure if it’s a gift or marketing decision. They kinda use it to spy on people/track behaviour. And push the web-standards they like. It’s part of their strategy to retain control over every part along the way and dominate the internet. From servers, to network infrastructure to the end users device and even their software that displays the webpages.

    With Android they take extra care to move more and more things into their propretary Google Services. I think the Calendar is kinda unmaintained, the ASOP keyboard is very bare. Half the Apps don’t work without Play Services, Push Notifications are an important part of todays world but proprietary. The camera doesn’t even have half it’s capabilities and the Play Store is set to assert control over the ecosystem. Contactless Payment doesn’t work with open source, …

    With Google, their open source always comes with strings attached. They’re not doing it for your benefit.

    If you compare it for example with Meta, they just give away PyTorch, React and their Llama2 models because they can and it’ beneficial to them. I don’t see too many strings attached there.

    But Google has a few of those, too. TensorFlow, Kubernetes, Gerrit, Angular and the two or three programming languages.

    If you like being dominated and the future of the web being shaped for you by a single company, or your wants and needs align well with their motives, I don’t have any objections, though.

    • 01adrianrdgz@lemmy.worldOP
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      at least they have done something for open source, something you and I can modify and maybe even turn it into a privacy-oriented browser. even android has custom roms, what matters is what can be done with the source code! And by the way, I am not dominated, because I use duckduckgo and open source software.

      • rufus@discuss.tchncs.de
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        The bad thing is, I don’t think you even need to use it to be dominated. Google uses their 70% market share to push things like the Web Integrity API or new fingerprinting methods whether you use it or not. Diversity get’s thrown under the bus anyways. I’ve had a bit of a look at WebRTC during the videoconferencing times. It mainly matters what codecs Safari and Chrome implement these days.

        Whatever messenging app your friends have preinstalled dictates if you can videocall them.

        And their gmail account if the mails from your open source mailserver get accepted or just dumped into the spam folder.

        I also use Android and have a Chromium based browser ready. I’m somewhat okay with it. But I don’t think that changes anything in the broader, global picture.

        It affects me. I have to use Meta’s messenger instead of having an open and interoperable solution if I want to stay in contact with my friends. I can’t participate in contactless payments with my phone or rent those stupid e-scooters. My online banking app works, but I’m not sure if I could for example charge an electric car without a smartphone that has Google Services installed.

        And I think a big tech company can’t buy their way out of something by also giving away a few open source things. The projects might be nice and usable and lead by smaller and distinct teams. But it doesn’t really make me like the company as a whole if 95% of their business is something else.

  • brothershamus@kbin.social
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    I love open source too, but this:

    i know the privacy concernes they may have, but they would never do anything bad to you.

    Is just super problematic. I appreciate the enthusiasm for open source, but google is a monopoly actively involved in making the internet worse in order to profit from it. They do this by leveraging your personal information, and that’s bad.