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View Article  Technology predictions 2006

Delloite Research has released its latest TMT Trends: Technology Predictions 2006. It refers to it as “The technology sector's top trends.”

 

Immediately I am skeptical since the intent is to predict the future which 98 times out of 100 is pure unabashed marketing. So I decided to see what DR considers the top 10 trends…

  1. Search engines will challenge email as the leading digital application.
  2. Research and development will become more collaborative as business, government and academic institutions increasingly work together on new innovations.
  3. Offshoring as a way of minimizing costs and optimizing efficiencies will continue to grow in popularity.
  4. Classrooms of the developed world will incorporate more digital aids in their instruction.
  5. Open source will pose an ever-greater challenge to the established software model, impacting both providers and end users.
  6. Governments will increasingly regulate the Internet.
  7. Technological advances such as speech recognition and voice synthesis, along with improvements in artificial intelligence, will change the way humans interact with computers and computers interact with each other.
  8. Products will become less static with the launch of many more devices, from cameras to cars, that can be upgraded remotely.
  9. The gap between those with digital technology and those without will widen and put undeveloped countries at an even greater disadvantage.
  10. Those technologies that permanently change human behavior will continue to be the most profitable.

Did anyone catch the first trend statement, “search engines will challenge email as the leading digital application”?

 

Does anyone really believe that? Who aside from those that hold the title or role as a researcher spend more time doing search engine queries than email? I can’t name a single one; not one. And I’m a power Google user undertaking 20-30 searches every day. Knowledge workers I know, those that have a computer at their desk, most average more than 75 e-mails a day. Some clients and colleagues process 500 or 600 emails a day. That’s extreme but I know of no client or colleague that processes less than 50 emails a day. I know of no client or colleague that comes close to undertaking that many search queries.

 

My point: we are being inundated by marketing messages every day and those messages are rapidly growing in frequency and rate. Some organizations are getting more clever in packaging their marketing. This report is a perfect example. DR is full of very smart people and very clever marketers. This report is superb marketing (I’ll admit that my company Prescient Digital Media does a little bit of this too. However, despite the name you'll not find me spending too much time on predicting the future, except for specific client endeavors).

 

Caveat emptor (buyer beware) – not everything you read is the truth.

 

NOTE: It is my goal to be as honest as possible in my writings and severely limit if not completely eliminate any commercial messages within articles if it has no relevance to the readers (you’ll also note that I have forsworn any Google ads on either of my blogs or websites). Sometimes however I may separately promote an event or a job opportunity that might be relevant to the user but has no direct compensation relation to the author. Though if you suspect me of trying to use any of my articles as a direct sales tool then feel free to call me on it.

 

© 2006 Toby Ward - Prescient Digital Media

 

 

View Article  Warning: Google will search your taxes & love letters

Do not use Google Desktop, warns the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF). At the user’s option the new Google Desktop software will “search across computers” and a new feature will store copies of the user’s Word documents and other personal files on Google’s servers. And, these files can be searched from any other computer of the user.

 

“EFF urges consumers not to use this feature, because it will make their personal data more vulnerable to subpoenas from the government and possibly private litigants, while providing a convenient one-stop-shop for hackers who've obtained a user's Google password,” urges a statement by the EFF today (Google Copies Your Hard Drive - Government Smiles in Anticipation).

"Coming on the heels of serious consumer concern about government snooping into Google's search logs, it's shocking that Google expects its users to now trust it with the contents of their personal computers," said EFF Staff Attorney Kevin Bankston. "If you use the Search Across Computers feature and don't configure Google Desktop very carefully—and most people won't—Google will have copies of your tax returns, love letters, business records, financial and medical files, and whatever other text-based documents the Desktop software can index. The government could then demand these personal files with only a subpoena rather than the search warrant it would need to seize the same things from your home or business, and in many cases you wouldn't even be notified in time to challenge it. Other litigants—your spouse, your business partners or rivals, whoever—could also try to cut out the middleman (you) and subpoena Google for your files."

Let’s put this into perspective: anyone can download a free copy of Google Desktop and if they don’t know what they’re doing, Google will start indexing their personal files which among other things can be open to subpoena.

If you think this is science fiction then you haven’t been reading the news. Last week the U.S. Department of Justice's demanded an amazing amount of search data from Google. Originally the DOJ requested all web addresses (URLs) contained in the Google database as well as a record of "all queries that have been entered into your company' s search engine between June 1, 2005 and July 31, 2005."  In other words, it wanted a list of every website in the Google database plus every search request ever made during a two-month period. Faced with resistance, DOJ settled on a random sample of one million web addresses as well as a list of every search string during a one-week period.

 

It is now confirmed by Google: Google admits it keeps and collates EVERY search query. While we’re not exactly sure how Google uses all of these, we do now know the company can be forced to divulge the information under court order.

A key problem highlighted by EFF is that the Electronic Communication Privacy Act (1986) gives only “limited privacy protection to emails and other files that are stored with online service providers—much less privacy than the legal protections for the same information when it's on your computer at home.” EFF is quick to point out that that very limited level of protection “could disappear if Google uses your data for marketing purposes.”

Furthermore, according to the EFF “Google says it is not yet scanning the files it copies from your hard drive in order to serve targeted advertising, but it hasn't ruled out the possibility, and Google's current privacy policy appears to allow it.”

Google is the most fearsome and now as well the most powerful company in the world. While only making profit approaching $2 - 3 billion per year it I am sure won’t be long before it catches GE as the most profitable as well.

 

Ironically, I love Google as a utility. I use it 20-30 times per day on average. But Google has now become a pop culture icon that is influencing our social fabric and is now a part of the daily routine of tens of millions of people. "Just Google it..." is as common in our lexicon as "Where's the bathroom?"

 

And Google doesn't want to be just a search engine they want to be the center of the human genome universe, the world's biggest media broker, the king of mapping and geography, and the list goes, on and on.

 

I love using Google and I wish I owned stock -- but at the same time they scare the living dickens out of me.

 

More on Google watching you:

Big Brother Google

When Google is not your friend

Bill would force Web sites to delete personal info

 

© 2006 Toby Ward - Prescient Digital Media