This link has been bookmarked by 90 people . It was first bookmarked on 22 Jun 2009, by someone privately.
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the Web has been defined by Google's algorithms
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We all had that audacity, 'Anything Google does, we can do better.' No one talked about MySpace or the other social networks. We just talked about Google."
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It is remarkable that the most powerful company on the Web would feel threatened by one that has yet to turn a profit. (Last year, one insider estimates, Facebook burned through $75 million plus the $275 million in revenue it brought in; Google made $4.2 billion on an astounding $15.8 billion in net revenue.)
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Once, Google hoped an alliance with Facebook would help attract those huge ad budgets. Now, instead of working together to reach the promised land of online brand advertising, Facebook and Google are racing to see who can get there first.
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26 Sep 10
Gary RitzenthalerArticle on the different strategies of Google v. Facebook and the different strategies of mining biographical and other user data as practiced by the two companies. From Wired.
2009 magazine article wired Facebook socialmedia socialnetworks search privacy mmc3260
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Petri TonteriFacebookin suunnitelmat ottaa haltuunsa Internetin hakukonemarkkinoita. Fbin muuttuminen googlemaiseksi hakukoneeksi.
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Michael StonerFacebook's plans to usurp Google and dominate search.
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19 Oct 09
Josh Calder"the Google-Facebook rivalry isn't just going strong, it has evolved into a full-blown battle over the future of the Internet—its structure, design, and utility"
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"We never liked those guys," says one former Facebook engineer. "We all had that audacity, 'Anything Google does, we can do better.' No one talked about MySpace or the other social networks. We just talked about Google."
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Today, the Google-Facebook rivalry isn't just going strong, it has evolved into a full-blown battle over the future of the Internet—its structure, design, and utility. For the last decade or so, the Web has been defined by Google's algorithms—rigorous and efficient equations that parse practically every byte of online activity to build a dispassionate atlas of the online world. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg envisions a more personalized, humanized Web, where our network of friends, colleagues, peers, and family is our primary source of information, just as it is offline.
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Like typical trash-talking youngsters, Facebook sources argue that their competition is old and out of touch. "Google is not representative of the future of technology in any way," one Facebook veteran says. "Facebook is an advanced communications network enabling myriad communication forms. It almost doesn't make sense to compare them."
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Jesse StremchaFacebook vs. Google for control of the dominant web paradigm.
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Shrutarshi BasuInstead of working together to reach the promised land of online brand advertising, Facebook and Google are racing to see who can get there first.
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hubert guillaudAvec 200 millions d'utilisateurs et un trafic qui approche celui de Google, Facebook est en train de devenir un géant de l'internet. Dans cette course à la domination, deux visions s'opposent : la vision algorithmique à la Google contre la vision sociale
internetactu2net internetactu facebook google chiffres tendances statistics
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Antoine DupinLarry Page should have been in a good mood
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Monique PriestleyGet Wired's take on technology business news and the Silicon Valley scene including IT, media, mobility, broadband, video, design, security, software, networking and internet startups on Wired.com
facebook google socialmedia internet socialnetworking future wired statistics
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users will query this "social graph"
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More than 200 million people—about one-fifth of all Internet users—have Facebook accounts.
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arcojediLarry Page should have been in a good mood. It was the fall of 2007, and Google's cofounder was in the middle of a five-day tour of his company's European operations in Zurich, London, Oxford, and Dublin. The trip had been fun, a chance to get a ground-floor look at Google's ever-expanding empire. But this week had been particularly exciting, for reasons that had nothing to do with Europe; Google was planning a major investment in Facebook, the hottest new company in Silicon Valley.
Originally Google had considered acquiring Facebook—a prospect that held no interest for Facebook's executives—but an investment was another enticing option, aligning the Internet's two most important companies. Facebook was more than a fast-growing social network. It was, potentially, an enormous source of personal data. Internet users behaved differently on Facebook than anywhere else online: They used their real names, connected with their real friends, linked to their real email addresses, and shared tgoogle internet business 2009 Wired.com facebook news technology community imported
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Mark RabnettWant to see what some anonymous schmuck thought about the Battlestar Galactica finale? Check out Google. Want to see what your friends had to say? Try Facebook Search. And it will not only be for searching within Facebook. Because Facebook friends post li
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