Tag: google

  • Gül says ‘I am pro-freedom,’ but gets Internet criticism

    Gül says ‘I am pro-freedom,’ but gets Internet criticism

    ANKARA – Hürriyet Daily News

    Gül’s meeting with Schmidt came amid a heated public debate on the government’s move requiring Internet users in Turkey to choose one of four content-filtering packages.

    arab spring a product of internet gul says 2011 06 21 l

    Gül’s meeting with Schmidt came amid a heated public debate on the government’s move requiring Internet users in Turkey to choose one of four content-filtering packages.

    Under fire from international organizations for plans to filter Internet access, Turkey’s president praised the role the Internet played in the eruption of the Arab Spring that has shaken reigns of regional dictators.

    “The Internet played an important role in the Arab Spring. It would not have been as easily developed in the absence of the Internet,” President Abdullah Gül told Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, according to information gathered from sources.

    Gül’s meeting with Schmidt came amid a heated public debate on the government’s move requiring Internet users in Turkey to choose one of four content-filtering packages, which was considered a kind of censorship. Speaking to journalists Monday, Schmidt said he would tell Gül there would be no use in Internet filtering during his meeting with the president.

    “I will talk about the importance of the Internet. I will say there would be no use in Internet filtering. I will explain to him that these kinds of restrictions are of no use. I will underline the fact that restrictions won’t work out, on the contrary it will solely harm Turkey’s image,” he told journalists who asked him what he may say to Gül. “There may be a good purpose behind these kinds of systems. Yet, if these systems do not remain transparent enough, they can be abused quite easily,” he said.

    Recalling that the United States was also conservative but there was no such system like filtering, he said, “Turkey may apply an Internet waning system like in the U.S. and users may report non-ethical and inappropriate contents,” he said.

    Recalling demand for censorship in China, Schmidt said censorship cannot be imposed effectively on the Internet and users find ways to break the bans eventually. “Although heavy penalties are imposed in China, people access Google. Censorship and restrictions are against the spirit of the Internet. No one can succeed in this sense.”

    In response to Schmidt’s criticisms, Gül said he was sharing the Google chief’s views but stated that protection of children and families was equally important, which required every responsible institution to take necessary steps. Underlining that he was always pro-freedoms when it comes to Internet regulations, Gül said: “However, necessary measures should be taken to preserve the family and children as well as personal rights. In this sense, your role is also important. If you do not take measures to stop such abuses, then the state intervenes to do so.”

    Recalling some videos violating his personal rights released by the Youtube in the past, Gül urged those who are controlling and guiding the Internet to take precautions to protect the rights of the people. The president also asked Schmidt to reinforce Google’s office in Turkey, a country where more than 25 million of its people has a page on Facebook.

    via Gül says ‘I am pro-freedom,’ but gets Internet criticism – Hurriyet Daily News.

  • Google Makes Special Logo To Celebrate 400th Birthday Of Turkish Traveler Evliya Celebi

    Google Makes Special Logo To Celebrate 400th Birthday Of Turkish Traveler Evliya Celebi

    ISTANBUL, March 26 (Bernama) — Internet search engine Google has shown a special logo on its homepage to celebrate the 400th birthday of 17th century Turkish traveler and writer Evliya Celebi, reported Turkey’s Anadolu News Agency.

    google evliya celebiThe logo on google.com.tr depicts Evliya Celebi riding a horse. Internet users are able to get special search results about Evliya Celebi by clicking on the icon.

    Last year, UNESCO included the 400th anniversary of Ottoman traveler’s birth to its timetable for celebration of anniversaries. Commemoration events for Evliya Celebi (1611-1682) will take place throughout the year in 2011.

    Evliya Celebi was born in Istanbul. He began his travels in Istanbul, taking notes on buildings, markets, customs and culture; in 1640, he started his first journey outside the city. His collection of notes from all of his travels formed a ten-volume work called the Seyahatname (Book of Travels).

    Although many of the descriptions in this book were written in an exaggerated manner or were plainly inventive fiction or 3rd-source misinterpretation, his notes are widely accepted as a useful guide to the cultural aspects and lifestyle of 17th-century Ottoman Empire.

    evliya celebi

    The first volume deals exclusively with Istanbul, the final volume with Egypt. Despite being characterized as unreliable, the work is valued as both a study of Turkish culture and the lands he reports on.

    Currently, there is no English translation of the entire work. There are translations of various parts of the Seyahatname, but not the whole. The longest single English translation was published in 1834 by Ritter Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall, an Austrian Orientalist; it may be found under the name “Evliya Efendi.” Von Hammer’s work covers the first two volumes: Istanbul and Anatolia.

    The translation is by now quite antiquated, but other sections have been translated, such as Erich Prokosch’s nearly complete German translations of the tenth volume.

    An introduction to the work entitled The World of Evliya Celebi: An Ottoman Mentality was published in 2004 written by University of Chicago professor Robert Dankoff.

    — BERNAMA

    via BERNAMA – Google Makes Special Logo To Celebrate 400th Birthday Of Turkish Traveler Evliya Celebi.

  • Forget Google’s Self-Driving Cars. The Pentagon Is Building A Self-Flying Humvee

    Forget Google’s Self-Driving Cars. The Pentagon Is Building A Self-Flying Humvee

    SECURITY

    Google may have earned plenty of buzz with its announcement last weekend that it has beensecretly testing self-driving cars on California roads. But the mad-scientist military agency that first inspired those auto-bots may still be a step ahead–or rather, above.

    Flying humvee

    On Tuesday, the Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (DARPA) officially announced the private sector participants in its Transformer X project to build a Humvee that can take off, fly hundreds of miles, and land with little human input. Military contractors Lockheed Martin and AAI will receive about $3 million each to function as the system integrators for the project, with another $1 million for both Carnegie Mellon University and Pratt and Whitney Rocketdyne and $750,000 each for Aurora Flight Services and Metis Design.

    The Transformer X (TX) will be designed for depositing and extracting soldiers and supplies in tough-to-reach places without easily accessible roads, taking off from a standstill and flying up to 250 miles with a 1000-pound load. Most science-fictional of all? It won’t necessarily have a human at the controls–or at least not one with any piloting experience.

    Flying humvee2

    “Key to the success of this technology is the ability for guidance, navigation and control of the TX to be conducted without a dedicated pilot—increasing flexibility,” reads an agency statement. “It is envisioned that guidance and flight control systems will allow for semi-autonomous flight, permitting a nonpilot to perform [vertical takeoffs and landings], transition into forward flight, and update the flight path in response to changing mission requirements or threats.”

    DARPA, after all, is the ultra-forward-thinking Pentagon agency that hosted the Grand Challenge in 2006 and 2007, an autonomous car race across the Mojave desert, as well as the Urban Challenge, a 2008 event that challenged self-driving cars to negotiate a cityscape complete with obstacles and traffic. Sebastian Thrun, Google’s lead researcher for its autonomous autos project, led the Stanford teams that won the 2007 event and placed second in 2008, and several other researchers from those X-Prize style events have joined Google to work for him.

    The car-to-plane conversion abilities of the Transition X may be its most achievable element: In fact, it’s practically ready for the consumer market. Aviation Week has reported that AAI’s subcontractors for the DARPA project include Terrafugia, the Woburn, Mass.-based startup that’s also building the Transition, a consumer-targeted flying car planned for sale in 2011. Any customers who shell out $200,000 for that transformable car-plane, unfortunately, will have to drive it themselves.

    Forbes

  • Why is Google running print ads in Turkey?

    Why is Google running print ads in Turkey?

    google battleship

    And, to expand that question: why is Google running such idiotic print ads in Turkey? Battlesheep? (world’s quietest “ha”) Maybe it’s a Turkish nuance that’s lost in translation? update: In the US, if you search ‘battlesheep,” you get 10,000+ hits and no alternative suggestions. Here’s two more ads in the campaign, by Grey Istanbul. Related: When Jason Binn used to Google himself, the first thing he read was: Jason Binn is a Prick: The Evidence.

    Excerpt from copyranter Blog

  • Google Acquires Israeli Company

    Google Acquires Israeli Company

    by Elad Benari

    Google announced on Tuesday that it has acquired Quiksee, an Israeli-based company which develops interactive video mapping technologies based on user-filmed videos.

    Founded in 2007 by CEO Gadi Royz, VP R&D Rony Amira, CTO Assaf Harel, and Pavel Yosifovich, Quiksee’s software allows Internet users to turn a simple video clip into an interactive video clip. Its users can photograph any location where they are with a digital camera or mobile device, and then upload the file to Google Maps. The clip thus becomes interactive, allowing people to wander through and get a seemingly real visit experience, without physically being there.

    A report in TheMarker financial newspaper on Monday estimated that the deal was worth $10 million. A spokeswoman for Google told Reuters on Tuesday that it was a “small deal” and did not provide exact figures.

    In an announcement on its website, Quiksee said: “We are delighted to announce that Quiksee has been acquired by Google! We’ve learned a lot from our previous work at Quiksee, and we look forward to bringing our experience, creativity and insight to Google. Both Google and Quiksee share the same innovative vision…we look forward to the opportunity to contribute and do great things together in the future.”

    According to TheMarker, Google sees Quiksee’s technology as “the missing link” in its Street View service which allows users to view photographs of streets around the world.

    Quiksee is Google’s second acquisition in Israel in six months. In April, it acquired web gadgets provider LabPixies for an estimated $25 million. LabPixies specializes in personalized websites and mobile gadgets such as calendars, checklists, games, and news and weather feeds.

    Google Israel’s development center managing director Yossi Matias, said in a statement that Google was committed to continue investing in Israel “both by expanding and deepening our activity as well as by continuing to strengthen our collaboration with companies and start-ups in Israel.”

    (IsraelNationalNews.com)

    Related Links:

    • ►Google Goes With Palestinian Authority
    • ►Google Defines Samaria as ‘Palestinian Territory’

    , 15.09.2010

  • Google accused of criminal intent

    Google accused of criminal intent

    Wednesday, 9 June 2010 18:36 UK

    Google is “almost certain” to face prosecution for collecting data from unsecured wi-fi networks, according to Privacy International (PI).

    Google Street View camera

    The search giant has been under scrutiny for collecting wi-fi data as part of its StreetView project.

    Google has released an independent audit of the rogue code, which it has claimed was included in the StreetView software by mistake.

    But PI is convinced the audit proves “criminal intent”.

    “The independent audit of the Google system shows that the system used for the wi-fi collection intentionally separated out unencrypted content (payload data) of communications and systematically wrote this data to hard drives. This is equivalent to placing a hard tap and a digital recorder onto a phone wire without consent or authorisation,” said PI in a statement.

    This would put Google at odds with the interception laws of the 30 countries that the system was used in, it added.

    Scotland Yard

    “The Germans are almost certain to prosecute. Because there was intent, they have no choice but to prosecute,” said Simon Davies, head of PI.

    In the UK the ICO has said it is reviewing the audit but that for the time being it had no plans to pursue the matter.

    PI however does intend to take the case to the police.

    “I don’t see any alternative but for us to go to Scotland Yard,” said Mr Davies.

    The revelation that Google had collected such data led the German Information Commissioner to demand it handed over a hard-disk so it could examine exactly what it had collected.

    It has not yet received the data and has extended the original deadline for it to be handed over.

    The Australian police have also been ordered to investigate Google for possible breach of privacy.

    ‘Systematic failure’

    According to Google, the code which allowed data to be collected was part of an experimental wi-fi project undertaken by an unnamed engineer to improve location-based services and was never intended to be incorporated in the software for StreetView.

    “As we have said before, this was a mistake. The report today confirms that Google did indeed collect and store payload data from unencrypted wi-fi networks, but not from networks that were encrypted. We are continuing to work with the relevant authorities to respond to their questions and concerns,” said a Google spokesman.

    “This was a failure of communication between and within teams,” he added.

    But PI disputes this explanation.

    “The idea that this was a work of a lone engineer doesn’t add up. This is complex code and it must have been given a budget and been overseen. Google has asserted that all its projects are rigorously checked,” said Mr Davies.

    “It goes to the heart of a systematic failure of management and of duty of care,” he added.

    BBC