![History of Google](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi8wLzBhL0dvb2dsZV9wYWdlX2JyaW4uanBnLzE2MDBweC1Hb29nbGVfcGFnZV9icmluLmpwZw==.jpg )
This article needs to be updated.(October 2023) |
Google was officially launched in 1998 by Larry Page and Sergey Brin to market Google Search, which has become the most used web-based search engine. Larry Page and Sergey Brin, students at Stanford University in California, developed a search algorithm first (1996) known as "BackRub", with the help of Scott Hassan and Alan Steremberg. The search engine soon proved successful, and the expanding company moved several times, finally settling at Mountain View in 2003. This marked a phase of rapid growth, with the company making its initial public offering in 2004 and quickly becoming one of the world's largest media companies. The company launched Google News in 2002, Gmail in 2004, Google Maps in 2005, Google Chrome in 2008, and the social network known as Google+ in 2011 (which was shut down in April 2019), in addition to many other products. In 2015, Google became the main subsidiary of the holding company Alphabet Inc.
The search engine went through many updates in attempts to eradicate search engine optimization.
Google has engaged in partnerships with NASA, AOL, Sun Microsystems, News Corporation, Sky UK, and others. The company set up a charitable offshoot, Google.org, in 2005.
The name Google is a misspelling of Googol, the number 1 followed by 100 zeros, which was picked to signify that the search engine was intended to provide large quantities of information.
In August 2024, it was held that Google had an illegal monopoly over Internet search engines. In September 2024, it was held Google had an illegal monopoly in Europe with its shopping search.
History
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Beginnings
Google has its origins in "BackRub", a research project that was begun in 1996 by Larry Page and Sergey Brin when they were both PhD students at Stanford University in Stanford, California. The project initially involved an unofficial "third founder", Scott Hassan, the lead programmer who wrote much of the code for the original Google Search engine, but he left before Google was officially founded as a company; Hassan went on to pursue a career in robotics and founded the company Willow Garage in 2006.Craig Nevill-Manning was also invited to join Google at its formation but declined and then joined a little later on.
In the search of a dissertation theme, Larry Page had been considering among other things exploring the mathematical properties of the World Wide Web, understanding its link structure as a huge graph. His supervisor, Terry Winograd, encouraged him to pick this idea (which Larry Page later recalled as "the best advice I ever got") and Larry Page focused on the problem of finding out which web pages link to a given page, based on the consideration that the number and nature of such backlinks was valuable information about that page (with the role of citations in academic publishing in mind). Page told his ideas to Hassan, who began writing the code to implement Page's ideas.
The research project was nicknamed "BackRub", and it was soon joined by Brin, who was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship. The two had first met in the summer of 1995, when Page was part of a group of potential new students that Brin had volunteered to give a tour around the campus and nearby San Francisco. Both Brin and Page were working on the Stanford Digital Library Project (SDLP). The SDLP's goal was "to develop the enabling technologies for a single, integrated and universal digital library" and it was funded through the National Science Foundation, among other federal agencies. Brin and Page were also part of a computer science research team at Stanford University that received funding from Massive Digital Data Systems (MDDS), a program managed for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the National Security Agency (NSA) by large intelligence and military contractors.
Page's web crawler began exploring the web in March 1996, with Page's own Stanford home page serving as the only starting point. To convert the backlink data that is gathered for a given web page into a measure of importance, Brin and Page developed the PageRank algorithm. While analyzing BackRub's output which, for a given URL, consisted of a list of backlinks ranked by importance, the pair realized that a search engine based on PageRank would produce better results than existing techniques (existing search engines at the time essentially ranked results according to how many times the search term appeared on a page).
Convinced that the pages with the most links to them from other highly relevant Web pages must be the most relevant pages associated with the search, Page and Brin tested their thesis as part of their studies and laid the foundation for their search engine. The first version of Google was released in August 1996 on the Stanford website. It used nearly half of Stanford's entire network bandwidth.
Some Rough Statistics (from August 29, 1996)
Total indexable HTML urls: 75.2306 Million
Total content downloaded: 207.022 gigabytes
...
BackRub is written in Java and Python and runs on several Sun Ultras and Intel Pentiums running Linux. The primary database is kept on a Sun Ultra II with 28GB of disk. Scott Hassan and Alan Steremberg have provided a great deal of very talented implementation help. Sergey Brin has also been very involved and deserves many thanks.
— Larry Page
Scott Hassan and Alan Steremberg were cited by Page and Brin as being critical to the development of Google.Rajeev Motwani and Terry Winograd later co-authored with Page and Brin the first paper about the project, describing PageRank and the initial prototype of the Google search engine, published in 1998. Héctor García-Molina and Jeff Ullman were also cited as contributors to the project. While setting up the Google engine, Page and Brin used the garage in their friend Susan Wojcicki's Menlo Park home for $1,700 a month.
PageRank was influenced by a similar page-ranking and site-scoring algorithm earlier used for RankDex, developed by Robin Li in 1996. Larry Page's patent for PageRank filed in 1998 includes a citation to Li's earlier patent. Li later went on to create the Chinese search engine Baidu in 2000.
Late 1990s
Originally the search engine used Stanford's website with the domains google.stanford.edu and z.stanford.edu. The domain google.com was registered on September 15, 1997. They formally incorporated their company, Google, on September 4, 1998, in their friend Susan Wojcicki's garage in Menlo Park, California. Wojcicki eventually became an executive at Google and CEO at YouTube.
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Both Brin and Page had been against using advertising pop-ups in a search engine, or an "advertising funded search engines" model, and they wrote a research paper in 1998 on the topic while still students. They changed their minds early on and allowed simple text ads.
By the end of 1998, Google had an index of about 60 million pages. The home page was still marked "BETA", but an article in Salon.com already argued that Google's search results were better than those of competitors like Hotbot or Excite.com, and praised it for being more technologically innovative than the overloaded portal sites (like Yahoo!, Excite.com, Lycos, Netscape's Netcenter, AOL.com, Go.com and MSN.com) which, during the growing dot-com bubble, were seen as "the future of the Web", especially by stock market investors.
Early in 1999, Brin and Page decided they wanted to sell Google to Excite. They went to Excite CEO George Bell and offered to sell it to him for $1 million. He rejected the offer. Vinod Khosla, one of Excite's venture capitalists, talked the duo down to $750,000, but Bell still rejected it.
In March 1999, the company moved into offices at 165 University Avenue in Palo Alto, home to several other noted Silicon Valley technology startups. After quickly outgrowing two other sites, the company leased a complex of buildings in Mountain View at 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway from Silicon Graphics (SGI) in 2003. The company has remained at this location ever since, and the complex has since become known as the Googleplex (a play on the word googolplex, a number that is equal to 1 followed by a googol of zeros). In 2006, Google bought the property from SGI for US$319 million.
2000s
The Google search engine attracted a loyal following among the growing number of Internet users, who liked its simple design. In 2000, Google began selling advertisements associated with search keywords. The ads were text-based to maintain an uncluttered page design and to maximize page loading speed. Keywords were sold based on a combination of price bid and click-throughs, with bidding starting at $.05 per click. This model of selling keyword advertising was first pioneered by Goto.com, an Idealab spin-off created by Bill Gross. When the company changed names to Overture Services, it sued Google over alleged infringements of the company's pay-per-click and bidding patents. Overture Services would later be bought by Yahoo! and renamed Yahoo! Search Marketing. The case was then settled out of court; Google agreed to issue shares of common stock to Yahoo! in exchange for a perpetual license. While many of its dot-com rivals failed in the new Internet marketplace, Google quietly rose in stature while generating revenue.
Google's declared code of conduct is "Don't be evil", a phrase which they went so far as to include in their prospectus (aka "S-1") for their 2004 IPO, noting that "We believe strongly that in the long term, we will be better served—as shareholders and in all other ways—by a company that does good things for the world even if we forgo some short term gains."
In February 2003, Google acquired Pyra Labs, owner of the Blogger website. The acquisition secured the company's competitive ability to use information gleaned from blog postings to improve the speed and relevance of articles contained in a companion product to the search engine Google News.
In February 2004, Yahoo! dropped its partnership with Google, providing an independent search engine of its own. This cost Google some market share, yet Yahoo!'s move highlighted Google's own distinctiveness. The verb "to google" has entered a number of languages (first as a slang verb and now as a standard word), meaning "to perform a web search" (a possible indication of "Google" becoming a genericized trademark).
After the IPO, Google's stock market capitalization rose greatly and the stock price more than quadrupled. On August 19, 2004, the number of shares outstanding was 172.85 million while the "free float" was 19.60 million (which makes 89% held by insiders). Google has a dual-class stock structure in which each Class B share gets ten votes compared to each Class A share getting one. Page said in the prospectus that Google has "a dual-class structure that is biased toward stability and independence and that requires investors to bet on the team, especially Sergey and me."
In June 2005, Google was valued at nearly $52 billion, making it one of the world's biggest media companies by stock market value.
On August 18, 2005 (one year after the initial IPO), Google announced that it would sell 14,159,265 (another mathematical reference as π ≈ 3.14159265) more shares of its stock to raise money. The move would double Google's cash stockpile to $7 billion. Google said it would use the money for "acquisitions of complementary businesses, technologies or other assets".
With Google's increased size came more competition from large mainstream technology companies. One such example is the rivalry between Microsoft and Google. Microsoft had been touting its Bing search engine to counter Google's competitive position. Furthermore, the two companies are increasingly offering overlapping services, such as webmail (Gmail vs. Hotmail), search (both online and local desktop searching), and other applications (for example, Microsoft's Windows Live Local competes with Google Earth). In addition to an Internet Explorer replacement, Google designed its own Linux-based operating system called ChromeOS to directly compete with Microsoft Windows. There were also rumors of a Google web browser, fueled much by the fact that Google was the owner of the domain name "gbrowser.com".[citation needed] These were later proven when Google released Google Chrome. This corporate feud boiled over into the courts when Kai-Fu Lee, a former vice-president of Microsoft, quit Microsoft to work for Google. Microsoft sued to stop his move by citing Lee's non-compete contract (he had access to much sensitive information regarding Microsoft's plans in China). Google and Microsoft reached a settlement out of court on December 22, 2005, the terms of which are confidential.
Click fraud also became a growing problem for Google's business strategy. Google's CFO George Reyes said in a December 2004 investor conference that "something has to be done about this really, really quickly, because I think, potentially, it threatens our business model."
While the company's primary market is in the web content arena, Google has experimented with other markets, such as radio and print publications. On January 17, 2006, Google announced that it had purchased the radio advertising company dMarc, which provides an automated system that allows companies to advertise on the radio. Google also began an experiment in selling advertisements from its advertisers in offline newspapers and magazines, with select advertisements in the Chicago Sun-Times.
During the third quarter of 2005 Google Conference Call, Eric Schmidt said, "We don't do the same thing as everyone else does. And so if you try to predict our product strategy by simply saying well so and so has this and Google will do the same thing, it's almost always the wrong answer. We look at markets as they exist and we assume they are pretty well served by their existing players. We try to see new problems and new markets using the technology that others use and we build."
After months of speculation, Google was added to the Standard & Poor's 500 index (S&P 500) on March 31, 2006. Google replaced Burlington Resources, a major oil producer based in Houston that had been acquired by ConocoPhillips. The day after the announcement Google's share price rose by 7%.
In 2008, Google launched Knol, their own equivalent of Wikipedia, which failed four years later.
Use of cookies
Although Google was already deriving the vast majority of its income from advertising at the time of its 2004 IPO, it did not use any HTTP cookie-based web tracking until 2007. By 2006, Google's Ad revenue was already facing signs of decline, as "a growing number of advertisers were refusing to buy display ads from Google." The Great Recession led Google to institute a hiring freeze.
In 2007, Google agreed to buy DoubleClick for $3.1 billion, marking the start of its use of cookie-based tracking. Even with the purchase, Google only ended up with a 3% revenue in the second quarter of 2009, in the depth of the recession.
Google initially separated the browsing habits collected from AD tracking from data collected by its other services by default. Google removed this last layer of protection in 2016, making its tracking personally-identifiable.
2010s
In 2011, the company launched Google+, its fourth foray into social networking, following Google Buzz (launched 2010, retired in 2011), Google Friend Connect (launched 2008, retired by March 1, 2012), and Orkut (launched in 2004, retired in September 2014)
As of November 2014, Google operated over 70 offices in more than 41 countries.
In 2015, Google reorganized its interests as a holding company, Alphabet Inc., with Google as its leading subsidiary. Google continued to serve as the umbrella for Alphabet's Internet interests. On September 1, 2017, Google Inc. announced its plans of restructuring as a limited liability company, Google LLC, as a wholly owned subsidiary of XXVI Holdings, Inc., which is formed as a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc. to hold the equity of its other subsidiaries, including Google LLC and other bets.
Between 2018 and 2019, tensions between the company's leadership and its workers escalated as staff protested company decisions on internal sexual harassment, Dragonfly, a censored Chinese search engine, and Project Maven, a military drone artificial intelligence, which had been seen as areas of revenue growth for the company. On 25 October 2018, The New York Times published an exposé, "How Google Protected Andy Rubin, the 'Father of Android'". The company subsequently announced that "48 employees have been fired over the last two years" for sexual misconduct. On 1 November 2018, Google employees staged a global walk-out to protest the company's handling of sexual harassment complaints, including the golden parachute exit of former executive Andy Rubin; more than 20,000 employees and contractors participated. CEO Sundar Pichai was reported to be in support of the protests.
On March 19, 2019, Google announced that it would enter the video game market, launching a cloud gaming platform called Google Stadia.
On June 3, 2019, the United States Department of Justice reported that it would investigate Google for antitrust violations. This led to the filing of an antitrust lawsuit in October 2020, on the grounds the company had abused a monopoly position in the search and search advertising markets.
In December 2019, former PayPal chief operating officer Bill Ready became Google's new commerce chief. Ready's role will not be directly involved with Google Pay.
2020s
This section needs to be updated.(April 2023) |
In April 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Google announced several cost-cutting measures. Such measures included slowing down hiring for the remainder of 2020, except for a small number of strategic areas, recalibrating the focus and pace of investments in areas like data centers and machines, and non-business essential marketing and travel.
Google and Apple collaborated on the development of smartphone-based contact tracing solutions to address the COVID-19 pandemic. Prominent examples of government initiatives in this field include Singapore's TraceTogether and Australia's COVIDSafe apps. TraceTogether was notably the first national Bluetooth contact tracing app to be launched globally, debuting in March 2020.
The 2020 Google services outages disrupted Google services: one in August that affected Google Drive among others, another in November affecting YouTube, and a third in December affecting the entire suite of Google applications. All three outages were resolved within hours.
In January 2021, the Australian Government proposed legislation that would require Google and Facebook to pay media companies for the right to use their content. In response, Google threatened to close off access to its search engine in Australia.
In March 2021, Google reportedly paid $20 million for Ubisoft ports on Google Stadia. Google spent "tens of millions of dollars" on getting major publishers such as Ubisoft and Take-Two to bring some of their biggest games to Stadia.[citation needed]
In April 2021, The Wall Street Journal reported that Google ran a years-long program called 'Project Bernanke' that used data from past advertising bids to gain an advantage over competing ad services. This was revealed in documents concerning the antitrust lawsuit filed by ten US states against Google in December.
In June 2023, Google stated it would remove Canadian news links from its services throughout the country due to legislation from the Canadian government (Bill C-11) that would require Google and other online platforms such as Facebook to pay for news articles being shown on their platforms.
In September 2024, Google and its parent company Alphabet Inc. were fined 2.42 billion euros by the European Commission for an antitrust case surrounding Google's shopping service. The decision was later upheld by both the General Court (European Union) and the European Court of Justice.
In November 2024, the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) urged a federal court to impose significant changes on Google to address its monopoly in online search. The proposed measures included forcing Google to sell its Chrome browser, share data and search results with competitors, and implement a range of other restrictions. The DoJ also sought to prohibit Google from re-entering the browser market for five years, selling its Android OS if needed, and halting investments in rival search engines or AI. It also pushed to end exclusive deals where Google paid device makers like Apple to set its search engine as the default. Google called these measures excessive and harmful for consumers, vowing to appeal and a trial was set for April 2025.
Financing and initial public offering
The first funding for Google as a company was secured in August 1998 in the form of a US$100,000 contribution from Andy Bechtolsheim, co-founder of Sun Microsystems, given to a corporation which did not yet exist.
On June 7, 1999, a round of equity funding totalling $25 million was announced, the major investors being rival venture capital firms Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers and Sequoia Capital. While Google still needed more funding for their further expansion, Brin and Page were hesitant to take the company public, despite their financial issues. They were not ready to give up control over Google.
Following the closing of the $25 million financing round, Sequoia encouraged Brin and Page to hire a CEO. Brin and Page ultimately acquiesced and hired Eric Schmidt as Google's first CEO in August 2001.
In October 2003, while discussing a possible initial public offering of shares (IPO), Microsoft approached the company about a possible partnership or merger. The deal never materialized. In January 2004, Google announced the hiring of Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group to arrange an IPO. The IPO was projected to raise as much as $4 billion.
Google's initial public offering took place on August 19, 2004. A total of 19,605,052 shares were offered at a price of $85 per share. Of that, 14,142,135 (another mathematical reference as √2 ≈ 1.4142135) were floated by Google and 5,462,917 by selling stockholders. The sale raised US$1.67 billion, and gave Google a market capitalization of more than $23 billion. Many of Google's employees became instant paper millionaires. Yahoo!, a competitor of Google, also benefited from the IPO because it owned 2.7 million shares of Google.
Following the company's IPO in 2004, founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page and CEO Eric Schmidt requested that their base salary be cut to $1. Subsequent offers by the company to increase their salaries were turned down, primarily because their main compensation continues to come from owning stock in Google. Before 2004, Schmidt made $250,000 per year, and Page and Brin each received an annual salary of $150,000.
There were concerns that Google's IPO would lead to changes in company culture. Reasons ranged from shareholder pressure for employee benefit reductions to the fact that many company executives would become instant paper millionaires. As a reply to this concern, co-founders Brin and Page promised in a report to potential investors that the IPO would not change the company's culture.
The company was listed on the NASDAQ stock exchange under the ticker symbol GOOG. When Alphabet was created as Google's parent company, it retained Google's stock price history and ticker symbol.
Google Cloud has integrated AI into numerous solutions that clients can tailor to meet their specific requirements. This includes DocAI for processing documents, Contact Center AI for enhancing call center operations, Vertex Vision AI for analyzing videos and images, and Translation Hub, which offers translation in over 100 languages at scale.
Name
The name "Google" originated from a misspelling of "googol", which refers to the number represented by a 1 followed by one-hundred zeros. Page and Brin write in their first paper on PageRank: "We chose our systems name, Google, because it is a common spelling of googol, or 10100 and fits well with our goal of building very large-scale search engines."
There are uses of the name going back at least as far as the creation of the comic strip character Barney Google in 1919. British children's author Enid Blyton used the phrase "Google Bun" in The Magic Faraway Tree (published 1941) and The Folk of the Faraway Tree (published 1946), and called a clown character "Google" in Circus Days Again (published 1942). In April 1953 Clifford D Simaks short story "Retrograde Evolution" was published in Science Fiction Plus magazine wherein an alien race called "Googles" evolves from savages to geniuses overnight. There is also the Googleplex Star Thinker from Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. In March 1996, a business called Groove Track Productions applied for a United States trademark for "Google" for various products including several categories of clothing, stuffed toys, board games, and candy. The firm abandoned its application in July 1997.
Having found its way increasingly into everyday language, the verb "google" was added to the Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary and the Oxford English Dictionary in 2006, meaning "to use the Google search engine to obtain information on the internet." The use of the term itself reflects their mission to organize a seemingly infinite amount of information on the web. The first use of "Google" as a verb in pop culture happened on the TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, in 2002. In November 2009, the Global Language Monitor named "Google" No. 7 on its Top Words of the Decade list. In December 2009 the BBC highlighted Google in their "Portrait of the Decade (Words)" series. In May 2012, David Elliott filed a complaint against Google, Inc. claiming that Google's once distinctive mark GOOGLE® has become generic and lacks trademark significance due to its common use as a transitive verb. After losing to Google in UDRP proceedings involving many "Google-related" domain name registrations that he owns, Elliott later sought a declaratory judgment that his domain names are rightfully his, that they do not infringe any trademark rights Google may own, and that all Google's registered GOOGLE® marks should be cancelled since "Google" is now a common generic word worldwide that means "to search the internet."
Partnerships
Google has worked with several corporations, in order to improve production and services. On September 28, 2005, Google announced a long-term research partnership with NASA which would involve Google building a 1,000,000-square-foot (93,000 m2) R&D center at NASA's Ames Research Center. NASA and Google are planning to work together on a variety of areas, including large-scale data management, massively distributed computing, bio-info-nano convergence, and encouragement of the entrepreneurial space industry. The new building would also include labs, offices, and housing for Google engineers. In October 2006, Google formed a partnership with Sun Microsystems to help share and distribute each other's technologies. As part of the partnership Google will hire employees to help the open source office program OpenOffice.org.
Time Warner's AOL unit and Google unveiled an expanded partnership on December 21, 2005, including an enhanced global advertising partnership and a US$1 billion investment by Google for a 5% stake in AOL. As part of the collaboration, Google plans to work with AOL on video search and offer AOL's premium video service within Google Video. This did not allow users of Google Video to search for AOL's premium-video services. Display advertising throughout the Google network will also increase.
In August 2006, Google signed a $900 million offer with News Corp.'s Fox Interactive Media unit to provide search and advertising on MySpace and other News Corp. websites including IGN, AmericanIdol.com, Fox.com, and Rotten Tomatoes, although Fox Sports is not included as a deal already exists between News Corp. and MSN.
On December 6, 2006, British Sky Broadcasting released details of a Sky and Google alliance. This includes a feature where Gmail will link with Sky and host a mail service for Sky, incorporating the email domain "@sky.com".
In 2007, Google displaced America Online as a key partner and sponsor of the NORAD Tracks Santa program.Google Earth was used for the first time to give visitors to the website the impression that they were following Santa Claus' progress in 3-D. The program also made its presence known on YouTube in 2007 as part of its partnership with Google.
In 2008, Google developed a partnership with GeoEye to launch a satellite providing Google with high-resolution (0.41 m monochrome, 1.65 m color) imagery for Google Earth. The satellite was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base on September 6, 2008. Google also announced in 2008 that it was hosting an archive of Life Magazine's photographs.
In January 2009, Google announced a partnership with the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, allowing the Pope to have his own channel on YouTube.
In January 2013, Google announced a partnership with Kia Motors and Hyundai. The partnership integrates Google Maps and Place into new car models to be released later in 2013.
The Alliance for Affordable Internet (A4AI) was launched in October 2013; Google is part of the coalition of public and private organizations that also includes Facebook, Intel, and Microsoft. Led by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the A4AI seeks to make Internet access more affordable so that access is broadened in the developing world, where only 31% of people are online. Google will help to decrease Internet access prices so they fall below the UN Broadband Commission's worldwide target of 5% of monthly income.
On September 21, 2017, HTC announced a "cooperation agreement" in which it would sell non-exclusive rights to certain intellectual property, as well as smartphone talent, to Google for $1.1 billion.
On August 5, 2024, Google would lose a lawsuit which started in 2020 in D.C. Circuit Court, with Judge Amit Mehta finding that the company had an illegal monopoly over Internet search. This monopoly was held to be in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act. On September 10, 2024, the EU Court of Justice, based in Europe, found that Google held an illegal monopoly, in this case with regards to its shopping search, and could not avoid paying €2.4 billion. The EU Court of Justice referred to Google's treatment of rival shopping searches as "discriminatory" and in violation of the Digital Markets Act.
See also
- Timeline of Google Search
- Criticism of Google
- Google logo
- List of Google Easter eggs
- Timeline of Mountain View, California, headquarters of Google since 1999
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Further reading
- Auletta, Ken (2009). Googled: The End of the World as We Know It. New York: Penguin Press. ISBN 978-1-59420-235-3. OCLC 318411527.
- Battelle, John (2005). The Search: How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business and Transformed Our Culture. New York: Portfolio. ISBN 1-59184-088-0. OCLC 72691962.
- Stross, Randall (2008). Planet Google: One Company's Audacious Plan to Organize Everything We Know. New York: Free Press. ISBN 978-1-4165-4691-7. OCLC 261376729.
- Yeo, ShinJoung (2023). Behind the Search Box: Google and the Global Internet Industry. U of Illinois Press. ISBN 0252087127 online
External videos | |
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External links
- Google Corporate History (official)
- David Hart: On the Origins of Google National Science Foundation, August 17, 2004
This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information October 2023 Google was officially launched in 1998 by Larry Page and Sergey Brin to market Google Search which has become the most used web based search engine Larry Page and Sergey Brin students at Stanford University in California developed a search algorithm first 1996 known as BackRub with the help of Scott Hassan and Alan Steremberg The search engine soon proved successful and the expanding company moved several times finally settling at Mountain View in 2003 This marked a phase of rapid growth with the company making its initial public offering in 2004 and quickly becoming one of the world s largest media companies The company launched Google News in 2002 Gmail in 2004 Google Maps in 2005 Google Chrome in 2008 and the social network known as Google in 2011 which was shut down in April 2019 in addition to many other products In 2015 Google became the main subsidiary of the holding company Alphabet Inc The search engine went through many updates in attempts to eradicate search engine optimization Google has engaged in partnerships with NASA AOL Sun Microsystems News Corporation Sky UK and others The company set up a charitable offshoot Google org in 2005 The name Google is a misspelling of Googol the number 1 followed by 100 zeros which was picked to signify that the search engine was intended to provide large quantities of information In August 2024 it was held that Google had an illegal monopoly over Internet search engines In September 2024 it was held Google had an illegal monopoly in Europe with its shopping search HistoryLarry Page and Sergey Brin in 2003The first Google computer at Stanford was housed in custom made enclosures constructed from LEGO bricks failed verification Beginnings Google has its origins in BackRub a research project that was begun in 1996 by Larry Page and Sergey Brin when they were both PhD students at Stanford University in Stanford California The project initially involved an unofficial third founder Scott Hassan the lead programmer who wrote much of the code for the original Google Search engine but he left before Google was officially founded as a company Hassan went on to pursue a career in robotics and founded the company Willow Garage in 2006 Craig Nevill Manning was also invited to join Google at its formation but declined and then joined a little later on In the search of a dissertation theme Larry Page had been considering among other things exploring the mathematical properties of the World Wide Web understanding its link structure as a huge graph His supervisor Terry Winograd encouraged him to pick this idea which Larry Page later recalled as the best advice I ever got and Larry Page focused on the problem of finding out which web pages link to a given page based on the consideration that the number and nature of such backlinks was valuable information about that page with the role of citations in academic publishing in mind Page told his ideas to Hassan who began writing the code to implement Page s ideas The research project was nicknamed BackRub and it was soon joined by Brin who was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship The two had first met in the summer of 1995 when Page was part of a group of potential new students that Brin had volunteered to give a tour around the campus and nearby San Francisco Both Brin and Page were working on the Stanford Digital Library Project SDLP The SDLP s goal was to develop the enabling technologies for a single integrated and universal digital library and it was funded through the National Science Foundation among other federal agencies Brin and Page were also part of a computer science research team at Stanford University that received funding from Massive Digital Data Systems MDDS a program managed for the Central Intelligence Agency CIA and the National Security Agency NSA by large intelligence and military contractors Page s web crawler began exploring the web in March 1996 with Page s own Stanford home page serving as the only starting point To convert the backlink data that is gathered for a given web page into a measure of importance Brin and Page developed the PageRank algorithm While analyzing BackRub s output which for a given URL consisted of a list of backlinks ranked by importance the pair realized that a search engine based on PageRank would produce better results than existing techniques existing search engines at the time essentially ranked results according to how many times the search term appeared on a page Convinced that the pages with the most links to them from other highly relevant Web pages must be the most relevant pages associated with the search Page and Brin tested their thesis as part of their studies and laid the foundation for their search engine The first version of Google was released in August 1996 on the Stanford website It used nearly half of Stanford s entire network bandwidth Some Rough Statistics from August 29 1996 Total indexable HTML urls 75 2306 Million Total content downloaded 207 022 gigabytes BackRub is written in Java and Python and runs on several Sun Ultras and Intel Pentiums running Linux The primary database is kept on a Sun Ultra II with 28GB of disk Scott Hassan and Alan Steremberg have provided a great deal of very talented implementation help Sergey Brin has also been very involved and deserves many thanks Larry Page Scott Hassan and Alan Steremberg were cited by Page and Brin as being critical to the development of Google Rajeev Motwani and Terry Winograd later co authored with Page and Brin the first paper about the project describing PageRank and the initial prototype of the Google search engine published in 1998 Hector Garcia Molina and Jeff Ullman were also cited as contributors to the project While setting up the Google engine Page and Brin used the garage in their friend Susan Wojcicki s Menlo Park home for 1 700 a month PageRank was influenced by a similar page ranking and site scoring algorithm earlier used for RankDex developed by Robin Li in 1996 Larry Page s patent for PageRank filed in 1998 includes a citation to Li s earlier patent Li later went on to create the Chinese search engine Baidu in 2000 Late 1990s Originally the search engine used Stanford s website with the domains google stanford edu and z stanford edu The domain google com was registered on September 15 1997 They formally incorporated their company Google on September 4 1998 in their friend Susan Wojcicki s garage in Menlo Park California Wojcicki eventually became an executive at Google and CEO at YouTube The first iteration of Google production servers was built with inexpensive hardware and was designed to be very fault tolerant Both Brin and Page had been against using advertising pop ups in a search engine or an advertising funded search engines model and they wrote a research paper in 1998 on the topic while still students They changed their minds early on and allowed simple text ads By the end of 1998 Google had an index of about 60 million pages The home page was still marked BETA but an article in Salon com already argued that Google s search results were better than those of competitors like Hotbot or Excite com and praised it for being more technologically innovative than the overloaded portal sites like Yahoo Excite com Lycos Netscape s Netcenter AOL com Go com and MSN com which during the growing dot com bubble were seen as the future of the Web especially by stock market investors Early in 1999 Brin and Page decided they wanted to sell Google to Excite They went to Excite CEO George Bell and offered to sell it to him for 1 million He rejected the offer Vinod Khosla one of Excite s venture capitalists talked the duo down to 750 000 but Bell still rejected it In March 1999 the company moved into offices at 165 University Avenue in Palo Alto home to several other noted Silicon Valley technology startups After quickly outgrowing two other sites the company leased a complex of buildings in Mountain View at 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway from Silicon Graphics SGI in 2003 The company has remained at this location ever since and the complex has since become known as the Googleplex a play on the word googolplex a number that is equal to 1 followed by a googol of zeros In 2006 Google bought the property from SGI for US 319 million 2000s The Google search engine attracted a loyal following among the growing number of Internet users who liked its simple design In 2000 Google began selling advertisements associated with search keywords The ads were text based to maintain an uncluttered page design and to maximize page loading speed Keywords were sold based on a combination of price bid and click throughs with bidding starting at 05 per click This model of selling keyword advertising was first pioneered by Goto com an Idealab spin off created by Bill Gross When the company changed names to Overture Services it sued Google over alleged infringements of the company s pay per click and bidding patents Overture Services would later be bought by Yahoo and renamed Yahoo Search Marketing The case was then settled out of court Google agreed to issue shares of common stock to Yahoo in exchange for a perpetual license While many of its dot com rivals failed in the new Internet marketplace Google quietly rose in stature while generating revenue Google s declared code of conduct is Don t be evil a phrase which they went so far as to include in their prospectus aka S 1 for their 2004 IPO noting that We believe strongly that in the long term we will be better served as shareholders and in all other ways by a company that does good things for the world even if we forgo some short term gains In February 2003 Google acquired Pyra Labs owner of the Blogger website The acquisition secured the company s competitive ability to use information gleaned from blog postings to improve the speed and relevance of articles contained in a companion product to the search engine Google News In February 2004 Yahoo dropped its partnership with Google providing an independent search engine of its own This cost Google some market share yet Yahoo s move highlighted Google s own distinctiveness The verb to google has entered a number of languages first as a slang verb and now as a standard word meaning to perform a web search a possible indication of Google becoming a genericized trademark The relationship between Google Baidu and Yahoo After the IPO Google s stock market capitalization rose greatly and the stock price more than quadrupled On August 19 2004 the number of shares outstanding was 172 85 million while the free float was 19 60 million which makes 89 held by insiders Google has a dual class stock structure in which each Class B share gets ten votes compared to each Class A share getting one Page said in the prospectus that Google has a dual class structure that is biased toward stability and independence and that requires investors to bet on the team especially Sergey and me In June 2005 Google was valued at nearly 52 billion making it one of the world s biggest media companies by stock market value On August 18 2005 one year after the initial IPO Google announced that it would sell 14 159 265 another mathematical reference as p 3 14159265 more shares of its stock to raise money The move would double Google s cash stockpile to 7 billion Google said it would use the money for acquisitions of complementary businesses technologies or other assets With Google s increased size came more competition from large mainstream technology companies One such example is the rivalry between Microsoft and Google Microsoft had been touting its Bing search engine to counter Google s competitive position Furthermore the two companies are increasingly offering overlapping services such as webmail Gmail vs Hotmail search both online and local desktop searching and other applications for example Microsoft s Windows Live Local competes with Google Earth In addition to an Internet Explorer replacement Google designed its own Linux based operating system called ChromeOS to directly compete with Microsoft Windows There were also rumors of a Google web browser fueled much by the fact that Google was the owner of the domain name gbrowser com citation needed These were later proven when Google released Google Chrome This corporate feud boiled over into the courts when Kai Fu Lee a former vice president of Microsoft quit Microsoft to work for Google Microsoft sued to stop his move by citing Lee s non compete contract he had access to much sensitive information regarding Microsoft s plans in China Google and Microsoft reached a settlement out of court on December 22 2005 the terms of which are confidential Click fraud also became a growing problem for Google s business strategy Google s CFO George Reyes said in a December 2004 investor conference that something has to be done about this really really quickly because I think potentially it threatens our business model While the company s primary market is in the web content arena Google has experimented with other markets such as radio and print publications On January 17 2006 Google announced that it had purchased the radio advertising company dMarc which provides an automated system that allows companies to advertise on the radio Google also began an experiment in selling advertisements from its advertisers in offline newspapers and magazines with select advertisements in the Chicago Sun Times During the third quarter of 2005 Google Conference Call Eric Schmidt said We don t do the same thing as everyone else does And so if you try to predict our product strategy by simply saying well so and so has this and Google will do the same thing it s almost always the wrong answer We look at markets as they exist and we assume they are pretty well served by their existing players We try to see new problems and new markets using the technology that others use and we build After months of speculation Google was added to the Standard amp Poor s 500 index S amp P 500 on March 31 2006 Google replaced Burlington Resources a major oil producer based in Houston that had been acquired by ConocoPhillips The day after the announcement Google s share price rose by 7 In 2008 Google launched Knol their own equivalent of Wikipedia which failed four years later Use of cookies Although Google was already deriving the vast majority of its income from advertising at the time of its 2004 IPO it did not use any HTTP cookie based web tracking until 2007 By 2006 Google s Ad revenue was already facing signs of decline as a growing number of advertisers were refusing to buy display ads from Google The Great Recession led Google to institute a hiring freeze In 2007 Google agreed to buy DoubleClick for 3 1 billion marking the start of its use of cookie based tracking Even with the purchase Google only ended up with a 3 revenue in the second quarter of 2009 in the depth of the recession Google initially separated the browsing habits collected from AD tracking from data collected by its other services by default Google removed this last layer of protection in 2016 making its tracking personally identifiable 2010s In 2011 the company launched Google its fourth foray into social networking following Google Buzz launched 2010 retired in 2011 Google Friend Connect launched 2008 retired by March 1 2012 and Orkut launched in 2004 retired in September 2014 As of November 2014 Google operated over 70 offices in more than 41 countries In 2015 Google reorganized its interests as a holding company Alphabet Inc with Google as its leading subsidiary Google continued to serve as the umbrella for Alphabet s Internet interests On September 1 2017 Google Inc announced its plans of restructuring as a limited liability company Google LLC as a wholly owned subsidiary of XXVI Holdings Inc which is formed as a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc to hold the equity of its other subsidiaries including Google LLC and other bets Between 2018 and 2019 tensions between the company s leadership and its workers escalated as staff protested company decisions on internal sexual harassment Dragonfly a censored Chinese search engine and Project Maven a military drone artificial intelligence which had been seen as areas of revenue growth for the company On 25 October 2018 The New York Times published an expose How Google Protected Andy Rubin the Father of Android The company subsequently announced that 48 employees have been fired over the last two years for sexual misconduct On 1 November 2018 Google employees staged a global walk out to protest the company s handling of sexual harassment complaints including the golden parachute exit of former executive Andy Rubin more than 20 000 employees and contractors participated CEO Sundar Pichai was reported to be in support of the protests On March 19 2019 Google announced that it would enter the video game market launching a cloud gaming platform called Google Stadia On June 3 2019 the United States Department of Justice reported that it would investigate Google for antitrust violations This led to the filing of an antitrust lawsuit in October 2020 on the grounds the company had abused a monopoly position in the search and search advertising markets In December 2019 former PayPal chief operating officer Bill Ready became Google s new commerce chief Ready s role will not be directly involved with Google Pay 2020s This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2023 In April 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic Google announced several cost cutting measures Such measures included slowing down hiring for the remainder of 2020 except for a small number of strategic areas recalibrating the focus and pace of investments in areas like data centers and machines and non business essential marketing and travel Google and Apple collaborated on the development of smartphone based contact tracing solutions to address the COVID 19 pandemic Prominent examples of government initiatives in this field include Singapore s TraceTogether and Australia s COVIDSafe apps TraceTogether was notably the first national Bluetooth contact tracing app to be launched globally debuting in March 2020 The 2020 Google services outages disrupted Google services one in August that affected Google Drive among others another in November affecting YouTube and a third in December affecting the entire suite of Google applications All three outages were resolved within hours In January 2021 the Australian Government proposed legislation that would require Google and Facebook to pay media companies for the right to use their content In response Google threatened to close off access to its search engine in Australia In March 2021 Google reportedly paid 20 million for Ubisoft ports on Google Stadia Google spent tens of millions of dollars on getting major publishers such as Ubisoft and Take Two to bring some of their biggest games to Stadia citation needed In April 2021 The Wall Street Journal reported that Google ran a years long program called Project Bernanke that used data from past advertising bids to gain an advantage over competing ad services This was revealed in documents concerning the antitrust lawsuit filed by ten US states against Google in December In June 2023 Google stated it would remove Canadian news links from its services throughout the country due to legislation from the Canadian government Bill C 11 that would require Google and other online platforms such as Facebook to pay for news articles being shown on their platforms In September 2024 Google and its parent company Alphabet Inc were fined 2 42 billion euros by the European Commission for an antitrust case surrounding Google s shopping service The decision was later upheld by both the General Court European Union and the European Court of Justice In November 2024 the U S Department of Justice DoJ urged a federal court to impose significant changes on Google to address its monopoly in online search The proposed measures included forcing Google to sell its Chrome browser share data and search results with competitors and implement a range of other restrictions The DoJ also sought to prohibit Google from re entering the browser market for five years selling its Android OS if needed and halting investments in rival search engines or AI It also pushed to end exclusive deals where Google paid device makers like Apple to set its search engine as the default Google called these measures excessive and harmful for consumers vowing to appeal and a trial was set for April 2025 Financing and initial public offeringThe first funding for Google as a company was secured in August 1998 in the form of a US 100 000 contribution from Andy Bechtolsheim co founder of Sun Microsystems given to a corporation which did not yet exist On June 7 1999 a round of equity funding totalling 25 million was announced the major investors being rival venture capital firms Kleiner Perkins Caufield amp Byers and Sequoia Capital While Google still needed more funding for their further expansion Brin and Page were hesitant to take the company public despite their financial issues They were not ready to give up control over Google Following the closing of the 25 million financing round Sequoia encouraged Brin and Page to hire a CEO Brin and Page ultimately acquiesced and hired Eric Schmidt as Google s first CEO in August 2001 In October 2003 while discussing a possible initial public offering of shares IPO Microsoft approached the company about a possible partnership or merger The deal never materialized In January 2004 Google announced the hiring of Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group to arrange an IPO The IPO was projected to raise as much as 4 billion Google s initial public offering took place on August 19 2004 A total of 19 605 052 shares were offered at a price of 85 per share Of that 14 142 135 another mathematical reference as 2 1 4142135 were floated by Google and 5 462 917 by selling stockholders The sale raised US 1 67 billion and gave Google a market capitalization of more than 23 billion Many of Google s employees became instant paper millionaires Yahoo a competitor of Google also benefited from the IPO because it owned 2 7 million shares of Google Following the company s IPO in 2004 founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page and CEO Eric Schmidt requested that their base salary be cut to 1 Subsequent offers by the company to increase their salaries were turned down primarily because their main compensation continues to come from owning stock in Google Before 2004 Schmidt made 250 000 per year and Page and Brin each received an annual salary of 150 000 There were concerns that Google s IPO would lead to changes in company culture Reasons ranged from shareholder pressure for employee benefit reductions to the fact that many company executives would become instant paper millionaires As a reply to this concern co founders Brin and Page promised in a report to potential investors that the IPO would not change the company s culture The company was listed on the NASDAQ stock exchange under the ticker symbol GOOG When Alphabet was created as Google s parent company it retained Google s stock price history and ticker symbol Google Cloud has integrated AI into numerous solutions that clients can tailor to meet their specific requirements This includes DocAI for processing documents Contact Center AI for enhancing call center operations Vertex Vision AI for analyzing videos and images and Translation Hub which offers translation in over 100 languages at scale NameThe name Google originated from a misspelling of googol which refers to the number represented by a 1 followed by one hundred zeros Page and Brin write in their first paper on PageRank We chose our systems name Google because it is a common spelling of googol or 10100 and fits well with our goal of building very large scale search engines There are uses of the name going back at least as far as the creation of the comic strip character Barney Google in 1919 British children s author Enid Blyton used the phrase Google Bun in The Magic Faraway Tree published 1941 and The Folk of the Faraway Tree published 1946 and called a clown character Google in Circus Days Again published 1942 In April 1953 Clifford D Simaks short story Retrograde Evolution was published in Science Fiction Plus magazine wherein an alien race called Googles evolves from savages to geniuses overnight There is also the Googleplex Star Thinker from Douglas Adams The Hitchhiker s Guide to the Galaxy In March 1996 a business called Groove Track Productions applied for a United States trademark for Google for various products including several categories of clothing stuffed toys board games and candy The firm abandoned its application in July 1997 Having found its way increasingly into everyday language the verb google was added to the Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary and the Oxford English Dictionary in 2006 meaning to use the Google search engine to obtain information on the internet The use of the term itself reflects their mission to organize a seemingly infinite amount of information on the web The first use of Google as a verb in pop culture happened on the TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer in 2002 In November 2009 the Global Language Monitor named Google No 7 on its Top Words of the Decade list In December 2009 the BBC highlighted Google in their Portrait of the Decade Words series In May 2012 David Elliott filed a complaint against Google Inc claiming that Google s once distinctive mark GOOGLE has become generic and lacks trademark significance due to its common use as a transitive verb After losing to Google in UDRP proceedings involving many Google related domain name registrations that he owns Elliott later sought a declaratory judgment that his domain names are rightfully his that they do not infringe any trademark rights Google may own and that all Google s registered GOOGLE marks should be cancelled since Google is now a common generic word worldwide that means to search the internet PartnershipsGoogle has worked with several corporations in order to improve production and services On September 28 2005 Google announced a long term research partnership with NASA which would involve Google building a 1 000 000 square foot 93 000 m2 R amp D center at NASA s Ames Research Center NASA and Google are planning to work together on a variety of areas including large scale data management massively distributed computing bio info nano convergence and encouragement of the entrepreneurial space industry The new building would also include labs offices and housing for Google engineers In October 2006 Google formed a partnership with Sun Microsystems to help share and distribute each other s technologies As part of the partnership Google will hire employees to help the open source office program OpenOffice org Time Warner s AOL unit and Google unveiled an expanded partnership on December 21 2005 including an enhanced global advertising partnership and a US 1 billion investment by Google for a 5 stake in AOL As part of the collaboration Google plans to work with AOL on video search and offer AOL s premium video service within Google Video This did not allow users of Google Video to search for AOL s premium video services Display advertising throughout the Google network will also increase In August 2006 Google signed a 900 million offer with News Corp s Fox Interactive Media unit to provide search and advertising on MySpace and other News Corp websites including IGN AmericanIdol com Fox com and Rotten Tomatoes although Fox Sports is not included as a deal already exists between News Corp and MSN On December 6 2006 British Sky Broadcasting released details of a Sky and Google alliance This includes a feature where Gmail will link with Sky and host a mail service for Sky incorporating the email domain sky com In 2007 Google displaced America Online as a key partner and sponsor of the NORAD Tracks Santa program Google Earth was used for the first time to give visitors to the website the impression that they were following Santa Claus progress in 3 D The program also made its presence known on YouTube in 2007 as part of its partnership with Google In 2008 Google developed a partnership with GeoEye to launch a satellite providing Google with high resolution 0 41 m monochrome 1 65 m color imagery for Google Earth The satellite was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base on September 6 2008 Google also announced in 2008 that it was hosting an archive of Life Magazine s photographs In January 2009 Google announced a partnership with the Pontifical Council for Social Communications allowing the Pope to have his own channel on YouTube In January 2013 Google announced a partnership with Kia Motors and Hyundai The partnership integrates Google Maps and Place into new car models to be released later in 2013 The Alliance for Affordable Internet A4AI was launched in October 2013 Google is part of the coalition of public and private organizations that also includes Facebook Intel and Microsoft Led by Sir Tim Berners Lee the A4AI seeks to make Internet access more affordable so that access is broadened in the developing world where only 31 of people are online Google will help to decrease Internet access prices so they fall below the UN Broadband Commission s worldwide target of 5 of monthly income On September 21 2017 HTC announced a cooperation agreement in which it would sell non exclusive rights to certain intellectual property as well as smartphone talent to Google for 1 1 billion On August 5 2024 Google would lose a lawsuit which started in 2020 in D C Circuit Court with Judge Amit Mehta finding that the company had an illegal monopoly over Internet search This monopoly was held to be in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act On September 10 2024 the EU Court of Justice based in Europe found that Google held an illegal monopoly in this case with regards to its shopping search and could not avoid paying 2 4 billion The EU Court of Justice referred to Google s treatment of rival shopping searches as discriminatory and in violation of the Digital Markets Act See alsoTimeline of Google Search Criticism of Google Google logo List of Google Easter eggs Timeline of Mountain View California headquarters of Google since 1999ReferencesThe Original GOOGLE Computer Storage Page and Brin 1996 Archived October 28 2016 at the Wayback Machine Stanford Computer Science Computer History Display Our history in Depth Archived June 23 2015 at the Wayback Machine Google Retrieved on March 29 2016 Fisher Adam July 10 2018 Brin Page and Mayer on the Accidental Birth of the Company 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Instructions On Tracking Santa With NORAD amp Google The 2007 Edition December 24 2007 Danny Sullivan Search Engine Land December 24 2007 Retrieved December 31 2009 Shalal Esa Andrea September 6 2008 GeoEye launches high resolution satellite Reuters Washington Retrieved February 26 2010 Google gives online life to Life mag s photos Mountain View California Associated Press November 20 2008 Retrieved February 25 2010 Google Inc has opened an online photo gallery that will include millions of images from Life magazine s archives that have never been seen by the public before Stirling Greg November 18 2008 Google Hosting Time Life Photo Archive 10 Million Unpublished Images Now Live Search Engine Land Retrieved July 5 2010 Krause Flavia January 23 2009 Pope Benedict Debuts on YouTube to Reach Out to Catholics Archived June 13 2010 at the Wayback Machine Bloomberg com Retrieved on May 29 2011 Google partners with Hyundai and Kia Motors to integrate Google Maps and Places into new car models The Next Web Retrieved January 2 2013 Gibbs Samuel October 7 2013 Sir Tim Berners Lee and Google lead coalition for cheaper internet The Guardian Retrieved March 15 2017 Balakrishnan Saheli Roy Choudhury Anita September 20 2017 Google agrees to buy part of HTC for 1 1 billion CNBC Retrieved September 21 2017 a href wiki Template Cite news title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Google is buying part of HTC s smartphone team for 1 1 billion The Verge Retrieved September 21 2017 Google signs agreement with HTC continuing our big bet on hardware Google September 21 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 Barakat Matthew Liedtke Michale August 5 2024 Google illegally maintains monopoly over internet search judge rules Associated Press Retrieved August 6 2024 Peters Jay August 6 2024 Now that Google is a monopolist what s next Reaching a decision on what to do about Google Search could take a very long time The Verge Retrieved August 6 2024 Mallin Alexander August 5 2024 Google violated antitrust laws to maintain dominance over online search judge says ABC News Retrieved August 6 2024 A look back Timeline of Mountain View history San Jose Mercury News March 2007Further readingAuletta Ken 2009 Googled The End of the World as We Know It New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 1 59420 235 3 OCLC 318411527 Battelle John 2005 The Search How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business and Transformed Our Culture New York Portfolio ISBN 1 59184 088 0 OCLC 72691962 Stross Randall 2008 Planet Google One Company s Audacious Plan to Organize Everything We Know New York Free Press ISBN 978 1 4165 4691 7 OCLC 261376729 Yeo ShinJoung 2023 Behind the Search Box Google and the Global Internet Industry U of Illinois Press ISBN 0252087127 onlineExternal videosQ amp A interview with Auletta on Googled October 29 2009 C SPANPresentation by Auletta on Googled November 11 2009 C SPANInterview with Auletta on Googled November 11 2010 C SPANExternal linksGoogle Corporate History official David Hart On the Origins of Google National Science Foundation August 17 2004