Tag Archives: Google

I don’t care what Google says – I’m innocent

The technology that’s meant to serve us sometimes comes back to bite us.

Imagine a perspective employer enters your name in a Google search and the autocomplete feature offers suggestions such as “sex offender” or “pedophile.”  Maybe someone with the same name fits those descriptions — or maybe the Google feature just made a poor choice.  Either way, you’re not likely to get that job.

Something similar recently happened to a Japanese man.  Google’s Instant Search linked his name to crimes and his employer fired him.  The man claims he didn’t commit any crimes and now he can’t find another job.  He took Google to court claiming an invasion of privacy.  A Tokyo court recently agreed with him and ordered Google to stop the use of its Instant Search feature.

Google of course disagrees and says that as a U.S. company it won’t change its business practices due to Japanese laws.  The problem the man suffered, says Google, wasn’t intentional or the result of a malicious company employee.  The Instant Search uses impersonal algorithms to suggest the most popular searches.

Instant Search is a cool tool that I’ve used many times.  But this story led me to check out my name.   Just to play it safe, you might want to check out yours.  Fortunately, mine came back clean.  I hope yours does, too.

–JD

Follow me on Twitter @jdaum

Google Playing with Fire

Google is playing around with our searches and the public is not happy.

This week, the global leader for all online questions-and-answers has made a few significant changes that will alter the way you search.


In an effort to improve its Google Plus market influence in the world of social media, Google has integrated the platform into all searching on the site. This means that you will now see links to friends’ results, tagged posts and even other users’ photos in your searches.

Unfortunately, this seems like a move that places Google’s needs in front of the consumers’. Sure, we can’t blame them for boosting Google Plus but at what expense? Isn’t Google supposed to be the go-to stop for the most effective searching?

Google used to provide real-time results from Twitter (read Twitter’s angry reply to this move). Google used to be the best place to find exactly what you wanted quickly, regardless of how obscure. Now, it is beginning to look like a watered-down version of what once was.

Certainly this new format weakens the platform and even pushes certain consumers away.

Luckily, for those of us savvy enough to do a little digging, you can opt out of the new setup and partially restore your Google searching to normalcy.

Or just simply teach Google a lesson and switch to Bing.

-Justin