Advertisement
Promo

Network management Toolkit in association with http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;217618582;14453422;e?http://www.citrix.com/lang/English/lp/lp_1688615.asp

Google CEO wants techies to teach governments

Anne Broache CNET News

Published: 18 Oct 2006 09:05 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Those in the know about technology must spend more time reaching out to governments and helping them understand the Internet's role in society, Google chief executive Eric Schmidt said on Tuesday.

"The average person in government is not of the age of people who are using all this stuff," Schmidt said at a public symposium hosted by the National Academies' Computer Science and Telecommunications Board. "There is a generational gap, and it's very, very real."

Of particular importance on the policy front are Net neutrality, the idea that network operators should not generally be allowed to prioritise content that travels over their pipes — the "revenge of the Bell companies", as Schmidt put it — and digital copyright law. Online service providers such as Google, which routinely grapple with complaints about copyrighted content on their properties, are adequately protected now under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), but any future changes in that area "could significantly change the way the Web works", he said.

Schmidt said he also doesn't expect arguments over the proper balance between individual privacy rights and government intrusion to die down anytime soon. "There's not a single and simple answer," he said.

The Google chief's half-hour talk capped a daylong series of lectures focusing on how aspects of computer science and telecommunications will look in 2016. Standing beside the podium, his right elbow propped casually on its edge, Schmidt wore a dark jacket and slacks and no tie and appeared to be speaking largely without a script.

His speech meandered from his memories of the mainframe age to the growing importance of targeted advertising as a business model to his personal belief, which he mentioned more than once, that the so-called convergence of media will not ultimately result in consumers using "one box that has everything".

"It's clear the number of devices and things we're going to use are going to be very different," he said. He would, however, like to see a world in which he can access the same content on each device, via a single log-in name and password, and have everything be "completely seamless".

One topic that scarcely came up, however, was Google's announcement last week of a $1.65bn deal for online video-sharing dominator YouTube. Asked by CNET News.com after his speech whether the planned acquisition presented any copyright concerns, Schmidt said he had nothing more to say about the transaction — which he noted has not yet closed — saying only that the company operates under the DMCA and "went into this with our eyes open".

Earlier in the afternoon, Microsoft senior vice president for research, Rick Rashid, spoke of a future fuelled by the rise of "human-scale storage". Translation: since nearly anyone should be able to afford terabytes of disk space by 2016 — even today, one can purchase that capacity for less than $500 — new possibilities arise for documenting the world around you.

Viewed another way, it's enough to make a privacy hawk's skin crawl — and Rashid acknowledged that those tensions will always exist. "But the reality is, we will be able to do it," he said.

And there are good reasons why people may want to activate what amounts to a "black box" for humans, he said. He pointed to a study by British researchers showing that the use of such devices (in particular, Microsoft Research's SenseCam) by people with memory loss problems has shown to help them retain information about past events.

"They can keep their life," he said. And more broadly, people "can go back and say, I really want to get that conversation with my father who passed away, I want to get that time back when my 25-year-old first crawled."

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
446 out of 593 people found this useful


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:





Related Citrix Resources

Achieving the lowest server virtualization TCO

Consolidation through server virtualization is a powerful agent for datacenter change, but...

Achieving the lowest server virtualization Total Cost of Ownership

Consolidation through server virtualization is a powerful agent for datacenter change, but...

Citrix XenDesktop: The Best Desktop Delivery System For Today's Demanding Business Needs

Whether you're considering your first virtual desktop solution or trying to salvage an existing...

Desktop Virtualization: A buyer's checklist

Desktop virtualization should do more than just move desktop management to the datacenter—its real...

Five reasons why you need Citrix Essentials for Hyper-V now

This paper explores common challenges associated with server virtualization deployments and the...

See All White Papers

Video icon

Video

On The Road Blog

Mobile business social network tools c...

The APIs that RIM is opening up for the BlackBerry platform leapfrog what’s available on other mobile platforms, with free push updates, unified advertising and payment options and... More

Post a comment

The Crabble stand for your phone

Sometimes something comes along that is so simple yet so very useful that you can’t believe you didn’t think of it first. The Crabble is one such object. Once upon a time smartphones... More

Post a comment

Taking Out the Skype Garbage

I don't write much about Skype any more, mostly because I find the entire company, its product and the situations surrounding it totally disgusting. However, a couple of things have... More

2 comments


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters