Google used to be our friend, didn’t it? Google
gave us the world’s best search engine, for which we were grateful. And a free
blogging service, for which we were also grateful. Still are.
But something is happening to Google, something
dark and insidious. It seems to be growing ever more obsessed with its power
and success. There’s evidence of Mad Scientist Disease beginning to affect the
Google management machine. Mad Scientist Disease is a nasty condition in which
the infected person starts off working for the good of humanity, but is gradually
consumed by the euphoria of success until he descends into a helpless state of
mad megalomania in which all notions of higher principle get suffocated to
death.
If you install a Google product now, Google
assumes the right to access your computer and take an unhealthy and unwarranted
interest in everything you do. I noticed recently that the ads on my computer
were becoming relevant to the searches I was making of Amazon and suchlike. I
didn’t mind that too much, since watching my window shopping didn’t seem so
terrible. But it’s moved on a stage. Now I’m finding that ads are becoming
relevant to words I’m using in e-mails. It seems that Google is reading my e-mails. E-mails are private;
reading them is no different from having the Post Office open and read my
correspondence. That isn’t right. And I’ve heard that people are now receiving
spam based on their correspondence and surfing habits, which suggests that
Google is not only accessing information to which it has no right, but is
sharing that information with third parties.
The message is simple; it’s the same as you see
on some tobacco products – the ones that say ‘Don’t start!’ If you have no
Google products on your system, don’t start. Don’t download Chrome, don’t open
a gmail account, and if you want a blog, go to Word Press.
We live in an increasingly Big Brother society in
which government agencies assume the right to read our e-mails and text
messages and listen to our phone calls. There are CCTV cameras nearly
everywhere, watching nearly everything we do. There can be little doubt that
Orwell is being proved to have been a true prophet. Whether Google is simply cashing
in on this mentality for the sake of commercial exigency, or whether it’s becoming
an arm of Big Brother Establishment, we shall probably never know.
2 comments:
If you use Firefox as your web browser they have web extensions which can not totally get rid of Google's ego but can block ad's and other unplesantries. Check it out.
I am looking into it, Wendy, thank you. Problem is, some of the ads I see are unintentionally funny and provide blogging material, so I have mixed feelings about getting rid of them altogether. And it wouldn't stop Google presuming to infest my computer, which is what I really object to.
Post a Comment