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8 votes
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Google leadership set 2023 as deadline to beat Amazon and Microsoft in the cloud business
6 votes -
Apps that access Google G Suite services using a username and password (as opposed to OAuth) will be restricted in June 2020, and blocked in February 2021
13 votes -
The terror queue - Google and YouTube moderators speak out on the work that's giving them PTSD
13 votes -
How to fight back against Google AMP as a web user and a web developer
28 votes -
Google Founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin stepping down at Alphabet. Google's CEO Sundar Pichai will become CEO of Alphabet
18 votes -
How Google is building a browser monopoly
17 votes -
Tim Berners-Lee proposes "Contract for the Web": A set of principles to guide a better development of the Internet
12 votes -
Google is going to deploy Loon balloons in rural Peru
9 votes -
Google updates their political advertising policies, limits targeting capabilities, and expands which ads are covered by their transparency report
14 votes -
The Supreme Court will hear Google’s appeal in the long-running copyright/API dispute with Oracle
24 votes -
I'm the Google whistleblower. The medical data of millions of Americans is at risk
33 votes -
What did Google Reader offer back in the day?
From time to time I see people on the internet who remember Google Reader fondly, and miss it. At the time, I didn't have much use for something like it, so I never used it. But a common theme in...
From time to time I see people on the internet who remember Google Reader fondly, and miss it. At the time, I didn't have much use for something like it, so I never used it.
But a common theme in these conversations about Google Reader is that no other feed reader ever offered everything Google Reader could, but I can't seem to find details.So what was it? Does anyone here remember Google Reader, or even still wishes it was available? Why did nothing come from the Open Source community that could replace it?
16 votes -
New YouTube terms will allow Google to terminate accounts that it determines are not "commercially viable"
Relevant part of YouTube TOS that'll come into effect on 2019-12-10: YouTube may terminate your access, or your Google account’s access to all or part of the Service if YouTube believes, in its...
Relevant part of YouTube TOS that'll come into effect on 2019-12-10:
YouTube may terminate your access, or your Google account’s access to all or part of the Service if YouTube believes, in its sole discretion, that provision of the Service to you is no longer commercially viable.
However, it's not clear whether "Service" is YouTube or whole Google account. As we've seen in Markiplier affair, violating YouTube TOS meant that people lost access to their whole Google account - including gmail and gdrive.
37 votes -
Hackers can use lasers to ‘speak’ to your Amazon Echo or Google Home
10 votes -
Tutorial on how to enable RCS on any carrier/device with Android Messages
7 votes -
Google owner Alphabet has made an offer to acquire wearable device maker Fitbit
9 votes -
When Amazon Web Services, Azure, or GCP becomes the competition
7 votes -
Applying BERT models to Google Search
6 votes -
The Pixel 4’s 90Hz display only works at high brightness levels
16 votes -
Google Pixel 4 and 4XL review: More than the sum of its sensors
5 votes -
Announcements from Google's 2019 "Made by Google" event
14 votes -
Google’s auto-delete tools are practically worthless for privacy
9 votes -
Google’s new voice recorder app transcribes in real time, even when offline
7 votes -
An analysis of the implications of using Google's G Suite products in a newsroom
10 votes -
Can a machine learn to write for the New Yorker?
6 votes -
Google CEO Sundar Pichai said the company would invest an additional 600 million euros into its Hamina data center next year
3 votes -
TCL Communication announces the Alcatel GO FLIP 3 and Alcatel SMARTFLIP, the first flip phones with Google Assistant
5 votes -
Google's Wing will test deliveries using drones from FedEx Express, Walgreens, and Sugar Magnolia in Christianburg, Virginia
6 votes -
Huawei’s flagship Mate 30 Pro has impressive specs but no Google
4 votes -
Coalition of fifty US attorneys general launch antitrust investigation into Google
17 votes -
The stakes are too high for Apple to spin the iPhone exploits
6 votes -
Google and YouTube will pay record $170 million for alleged violations of US children’s privacy law
6 votes -
Android 10 has been released
13 votes -
Android Q is officially named Android 10
14 votes -
Google to pay up to $200M to settle FTC investigation into YouTube over violations of children's privacy laws
7 votes -
Google and Dell team up to take on Microsoft with Chromebook Enterprise laptops
8 votes -
Deconstructing Google’s excuses on tracking protection
17 votes -
Google delays classic Hangouts transition for G Suite until 2020
5 votes -
[Chrome 82, 2020Q2] Deprecate FTP support
7 votes -
'Where's the line of free speech – are you removing voices that should be heard?': As YouTube struggles with extreme content, Susan Wojcicki talks about her role as the internet’s gatekeeper
11 votes -
Three years of misery inside Google, the happiest company in tech
22 votes -
The surprising history of copyright and what it means for Google
4 votes -
How would one go about removing Google from one's life?
I have an android phone and my main email is a gmail. I'd like to somehow de-googlefy myself if at all possible. I don't have facebook so that isn't really a concern.
35 votes -
The Hamburg Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information has banned Google from listening to Google Home recordings in the EU for three months
9 votes -
Datacentre at Hamina and technology training hub in Helsinki illustrate Google's growing interest in Finland
3 votes -
YouTube said it was getting serious about hate speech. Over six weeks later, why is it still full of extremists?
23 votes -
Justice Department to open broad, new antitrust review of Big Tech companies such as Google, Facebook, Amazon, and Apple
10 votes -
Intel prepares to graft Google's bfloat16 onto processors
6 votes -
Google is trying to convince Congress that there's competition in the search industry, but recent statistics show it owns 92% of the market
20 votes