| Google Privacy Uproar Continues but What’s Really Going On? |
|
|
| Tuesday, 21 February 2012 23:14 |
|
The Google flap over privacy continues and the machine moves with fine efficiency. Take a look at these headlines. Google Bypassing User Privacy Settings – MSDN Microsoft: Google Bypasses Privacy Settings in Internet Explorer, Too – All Things D Google Privacy Fiasco Lesson: There Is No Privacy – Computerworld Not Just Google: Facebook Also Bypass [...]
Google Bypassing User Privacy Settings – MSDN Microsoft: Google Bypasses Privacy Settings in Internet Explorer, Too – All Things D Google Privacy Fiasco Lesson: There Is No Privacy – Computerworld Not Just Google: Facebook Also Bypass Privacy Settings In IE – ZDNet’s Friending Facebook More Sneaky Business About Google: It Bypasses Internet Explorer Privacy Settings Too – Business Insider It seems that everyone wants to put Google on a skewer and roast them over an open fire. Makes for great headlines but let’s take a look at two quotes from two of the above articles. First, Friending Facebook
Now from Business Insider which occurs toward the very end of after making a big deal about what Google is doing
Ok, everybody so what is it? If everyone does this why the Google witch hunt and if it’s no big deal then what are doing here? Oh yeah, that’s right. Traffic and pageviews. I forgot this all comes from an originl story from the Wall Street Journal who really wants to be relevant in the tech news space and it has been jumped on by the Internet industry news machine which has never seen a molehill it didn’t think should be turned into Mt. Everest. You decide but if you just do headline gazing to get your news in this area you would think Google was on the wrong side of a new cold war. If you really take the time to look, however, you would realize that maybe we are just rubbernecking yet again and there really is nothing to see here. Any thoughts? Posted: 2012-02-21 06:47:35 |
is an Internet advertising model used on websites, in which advertisers pay their host only when their ad is clicked. With search engines, advertisers typically bid on keyword phrases relevant to their target market.
refers to the statistical property that a larger share of population rests within the tail of a probability distribution than observed under a 'normal' or Gaussian distribution.
also referred to as i-marketing, web-marketing, online-marketing or e-Marketing, is the marketing of products or services over the Internet.
is a form of contextual advertising where specific keywords within the text of a web-page are matched with advertising and/or related information units.
Ad rotation
AdSense
Affiliate marketing
Article marketing
Article Video marketing
Blitz Campaign
Chinwag
Chitika
Content farm
Contextual advertising
Cost per time
Coupon Dispatch
Data pimping
Direct digital marketing
Display advertising
E-mail marketing
Emetrics Summit
Epostmailer
Future Ads
HubSpot
Image search optimization
Impression (online media)
In-text advertising
Infolinks
Interactive advertising
Internet presence management
Internet marketing
Keyword Services Platform
Kontera
Landing page
Landing page optimization
LeadPoint
Lightningcast
Link bidding
Long Tail
Lyris HQ
Micro content
Multivariate landing page optimization
Net Applications
New Media Strategies
Paid inclusion
Pay per click
Pay for placement
Pay per play
Pay Per Post
Phorm
Post-click marketing
Prime Visibility
Private label rights
Quality Score
Quinstreet
Radical trust
Red Ventures
Referral marketing
Resource Interactive
Revcube
Revenue sharing
Sales letter
Search Engine Marketing Professional
Search engine optimization
Semantic advertising
Semantic targeting
Sensis Agency
Social media optimization
Sonmate
Permission marketing
Inbound marketing
Double loop marketing
Traffic reporting
Transactional Link
Unboxing
Web analytics
Web banner
Web button