google enemy |
n its rise to Web dominance, Google has displaced plenty of companies, upended several industries, and made a slew of enemies along the way. Some of the adversaries are industry giants in their own right, such as Microsoft and Apple. Others are little-known start-ups that get publicity for raising concerns about Google but often fade back to obscurity when the news cycle ends.
For some rivals, the enmity runs deep. They accuse Google of poaching employees and infringing on copyrights. And still there are others whose complaints about Google's dominance seems more strategic, an effort to put a hurdle in the way of the Web giant's inexorable march on new markets.
With the Federal Trade Commission opening a probe into Google's competitive practices, those enemies will have a new opportunity to raise their concerns to trustbusters. The list of enemies is long. Here are a few:
Microsoft: There's no company that competes more aggressively with Google over a broader swath of products and services than Microsoft. It starts with search and search advertising, where Google continues to trounce Microsoft, despite billions spent by the software giant to displace it. Google is making headway against Microsoft in the productivity applications business, offering online versions of e-mail, spreadsheet, and word processing programs that compete with Microsoft's Office suite. Its Chrome browser has taken market share from Internet Explorer. Its Android mobile phone operating system emerged as the most viable alternative to theiPhone in the smartphone market, and not Windows Phone. Microsoft's recent bid to acquire Internet video chat provider Skype is seen by many through the spectrum of competition with Google, which has its own Google Voice service. And Microsoft, which knows better than most the difficult of a prolonged scuffle with trustbusters, has been the most active Google competitor running to regulators to voice its concerns..
Apple: It's one of the oldest memes in the world--the best of friends can sometimes turn into the worst of enemies. In its early days, Google and Apple worked closely, so much so that Google's then-CEO Eric Schmidt sat on Apple's board. Those bonds broke, though, as Google began to develop its Android mobile phone operating system. Schmidt stepped down from Apple's board, and soon thereafter Jobs reportedly laid into Google at an internal company meeting, saying, "We did not enter the search business. They entered the phone business. Make no mistake, they want to kill the iPhone." The companies now compete in the browser market, e-mail, voice chat and a host of other services. And with Apple's new iCloud offering, the companies are certain to butt heads in data storage as well.
Facebook: Google's battle with Facebook is really about the future of the Web. If you believe that Facebook, where more and more computer users are spending their Web time, is becoming something of an alternative Internet, then Google has every right to be worried. While computer users are hanging out on Facebook, they're not searching the Web using Google. Indeed, Facebook has forged ties with Microsoft, giving the Redmond rival access to its users to add social-networking features to its Bing search engine. Google has tried to match some Facebook features, most recently offering +1, a service that lets users show love for Web sites much in the same was Facebook users can "Like" a site. But at last month's D9 conference, Schmidt, now Google's executive chairman, acknowledged that he "screwed up" in watching social networking soar without Google.
Oracle: Database software leader Oracle isn't the most obvious enemy for Google. The two companies, who have a common enemy in Microsoft, don't compete in any meaningful way. But Oracle filed suit last year, accusing Google of infringing on Java patents that Oracle acquired when it bought Sun Microsystems in January 2010. Last week, Oracle added another filing to the case, noting that it's seeking damages that run "in the billions of dollars."
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