Are You Too Dependent On Google

in philosophy •  7 years ago 

I've been thinking about this on and off for some time. Am I too dependent on Google? Worst still, is my business too dependent on Google?


Having been around the block a few times, I usually figure out an exit strategy Before I dip my toes into anything. Alas, I haven't done so for Google.

I probably use Google a bit more than is good for me. Let's count them all. Gmail, G+, Google Photos, Google Docs, Drive, Maps, Google Calendar, YouTube, Android, Waze, and maybe one or two I missed. I have business related things on almost everything above except Waze, and Maps.

Why I want to reconsider and re-think my relationship with Google

Google has been good to me so far, but there were things I'm uncomfortable with over the years. Most people think that is it about their personal data. It's that but it is also more than that.

Looking at the overall picture, I find it strange that while Google claim to have issues policing YouTube, while on the other hand, it is busy dipping its tentacles into my harddrive and phone, uploading photos and videos I make.

If the product is free, you are the product.

I've read about Google deleting email accounts, YouTube deleting channels, leaking your data from Android, Google de-listing entire websites, and some of the practices that big corporations tend to do, and I think it is about time to take back some of the power I, as a user gave to Google.

Why?

Google's mission was to organize the world's information. Along the way, like most corporations that grow too big, it began to look after its own, and shareholder interest. The internet was about diversity. Anyone can and should be able to share their ideas, and thoughts.

Over time, when more user start to use Google search results, Google began to dictate which search results you see. Today, most of the top ten search results are dominated by 16 large media companies.

That in itself is not bad. I'll get to the bad part shortly. In order to rank well, i.e. be in the top 10 or 20 of search results, your website and web pages have to meet certain criteria. The bad thing with Google is that, while small websites have to comply with certain good practices as given by Google, those same large media corporations don't play by the same rules.

In essence, Google favors the large media companies, even though your website may have better, more accurate, and up to date information! Google knows it and let it slide.

In some situations, if Google disagree with your website content or you are a competitor, it can delist your website so that if someone wants to search for you, you won't be found in Google search. While Google was fined 2.1 B Euro recently for doing that to new startup, Foundem.com, the company was practically wiped out from the market.

YouTube videos and channels deleted

One problem with YouTube they can't tell which videos are okay, and which ones are not. The algorithm that YouTube uses to flag a video often times don't work well, and request to review the video can take a long time. So perfectly innocent videos get demonetized, or deleted, just due to some words in the title, description, and or tags.

Even YouTube's own video got marked with a copyright claim. That says it all for the algorithm.

Another problem is YouTube deleting videos and channels without recourse. In the past, they've done so without even checking if copyright claims are legitimate.

Too bad if your video got flagged. However, when news channels that offers diverse views gets deleted, then you begin to wonder.

While I'm support the freedom of speech, I also think there should be some form of censorship like racism, hate speech, extreme and graphic violence etc. I feel that certain censorship is valid. Thus far, action taken by YouTube has been rather inconsistent. There are more to this too. I read somewhere someone got locked out of Gmail but I could not find the article now.

Gmail

mail is something of a love hate affair for me. On the one hand, very few spam gets into the Inbox. On the other hand, on numerous occasions Gmail mark legitimate emails as spam.

A few months back, there were complaints that emails that people subscribed to were marked as spam. So email deliveries dropped by as much as 50% for some business.

If you rely on email newsletters as part of your business strategy, and since a lot of your customers are probably using Gmail, your business is severely affected by what Gmail do or don't do.

Also, emails to you from your customers or would be customer can easily end up in your spam folder, causing potential loss of business.

Even without marking legitimate emails as spam, Gmail already segments your email into 3 tabs, primary, social and promotions. The things is, they decide where the emails go!

Whether you are a customer, or a business end of the equation, it does seem better to have alternatives.

Reducing Google's power

Anyway, here's are some ways you can reduce the power you give to Google. Yes, we as users of Google services gave power to Google in the first place, and collectively, we can reduce that power. There are 2 things you can do right now without revamping everything. The first is Google search and Chrome. Instead of using Google search, use Duck Duck Go.

Yes, it is a funny name, but I assure you it is a legitimate search engine, and I've been using for a few years now. Duck Duck Go results are pretty good, and fast too and they don't track you. I still use Google search occasionally when I could not find the information I wanted.

The second is the Chrome browser. Using Chrome browser, Google also gets your search queries, and partial search queries. Thus, stop sending data to Google. I suggest you use Firefox. Firefox has been updated and just as fast if not faster than Chrome. Make sure you use both of these on your computer, and also on your mobile phone.

Have alternatives ready

As a business, it is never good to rely on one service provider. It is always good to have alternatives ready. I suggest you examine if you are overly rely on Google. For example, based on what I wrote earlier, I think that's way too much.

If Google were shut me or you out one or two of the services, how would that impact your business?

You may think that it won't happen to you, but it can. I have a video titled "The Death Of Blab As We Know It", that got flagged and demonetized just because of the word death. Nothing graphic, and Blab is a service, so go figure. Anything can happen.

Going forward

For me, I will explore options and reduce relying on Google so much. It will be something I do all over time, I'll slowly migrate out of Google services, or at least have backups services elsewhere For example with email, I already use Zoho as an alternative email provider. I'm also testing Protonmail.

I really think that if you are doing online business of any sort, you ought to have your own personal email address. Over time, I'm going to reduce using my Gmail account too. Bookmark this page. I'll continue to update this as I go along. So far, this is what I've done to extricate myself.

  • Google Photos - at this point in time, I've shut off auto syncing my photos up to the cloud.
  • Google Analytics - taking a cue from SEO experts, Analytics is Not installed on my websites. I've not installed Analytics on my sites for many years. There are several free services besides Analytics. You can also host your own analytics using Piwik, so that no data goes to a third party.
  • Google Search - limited use
  • Chrome - hardly use. On laptop, I use Firefox. On mobile, I use Firefox and Opera.

What about you? Is your business relying on Google too much?

image source

James Woo
Online Educator, Entrepreneur, Tech Enthusiast
at JamesWoo.net

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An interesting experiment, as I think we all know we rely too much on Google (and give them too much info!). Gmail is hard to break with and I too sacrificed Firefox for chrome.....

I'll be following and look forward to your updates.

@stevelivingston its not an experiment. The straw that broke the camels back happened. I will slowly move away. I foresee the most difficult to find alternative will be YouTube

Good luck with it.

@dtube for YouTube.....?

Good luck with it.

@dtube for YouTube...?

It is not just about hosting the videos. YouTube is the 2nd largest search engine. Dtube, not so much, not yet anyway.

Fair point - depends how many you need plus dtube (for now) looks quite profitable despite its fairly limited current audience reach...