Skip to main content

Apology to Kenyan firm ends Google's week from hell


The week has been a rough one for Google, and it's ending on a particularly embarrassing note.

                       Nelson Mattos, vice president for product and engineering in Europe and emerging markets, apologized for the improper use of a Kenyan company's database and misrepresentation to potential customers.
      Nelson Mattos, vice president for product and engineering in Europe and emerging markets, apologized for
              the improper use of a Kenyan company's database and misrepresentation to potential customers.  

First, the company's new Google+ search feature raises the ire of some people and then prompts a complaint to the FTC. Then Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt is forced to defend the fragmentation, I mean "differentiation," in the Android marketthat even Google partners acknowledge is an issue.
And now, shame-faced Google executives are publicly apologizing for some shenanigans that involve their team in Kenya.
Executives at Mocality, an online business directory in Kenya, are accusing the search giant of using Mocality's data to find local businesses to sell Web hosting services to and of falsely telling potential customers that Google was partnering with Mocality.
"We were mortified to learn that a team of people working on a Google project improperly used Mocality's data and misrepresented our relationship with Mocality to encourage customers to create new Web sites," Nelson Mattos, vice president for product and engineering in Europe and emerging markets, said in a statement. "We've already unreservedly apologized to Mocality. We're still investigating exactly how this happened, and as soon as we have all the facts, we'll be taking the appropriate action with the people involved."
The apology apparently didn't mollify Mocality CEO Stefan Magdalinski.
"Since October, Google's GKBO (Getting Kenyan Businesses Online initiative) appears to have been systematically accessing Mocality's database and attempting to sell their competing product to our business owners. They have been telling untruths about their relationship with us, and about our business practices, in order to do so. As of January 11th, nearly 30 percent of our database has apparently been contacted," Magdalinski wrote in a blog post today.
"Furthermore, they now seem to have outsourced this operation from Kenya to India," the post says. "When we started this investigation, I thought that we'd catch a rogue call-center employee, point out to Google that they were violating our terms and conditions (sections 9.12 and 9.17, amongst others), someone would get a slap on the wrist, and life would continue. I did not expect to find a human-powered, systematic, months-long, fraudulent (falsely claiming to be collaborating with us, and worse) attempt to undermine our business, being perpetrated from call centers on 2 continents."
Magdalinski said he was first tipped off to the problem when his firm started receiving calls from customers about Web site services that Mocality doesn't offer. Then server logs showed systematic accessing of the Mocality database. Magdalinski set up a sting operation, creating some fake businesses in the directory and when Google called them the calls were recorded. In one call that Mocality recorded and transcribed, the caller on Google's end accused Mocality of offering free listings and then later trying to charge for service, although Mocality never charges. Later, the Google caller explains that while Google will create the Web site for the business for free there are monthly charges for hosting it.
It's unclear who exactly is responsible for the mess. Google has employees who are involved in the project, as well as contracts with call center companies and other partners in Kenya whose employees may have decided to act on their own. Either way, the actions were not authorized by Google and executives were not aware that it was going on, a source close to Google told CNET.
Meanwhile, it appears the Electronic Privacy Information Center's (EPIC) complaint about Google+ being added to search results did not fall on deaf ears at the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. The FTC is expanding its antitrust investigation of Google now, two people familiar with the situation told Bloomberg today. Competitors have accused Google of unfairly promoting its own services on its search site and rigging results, which Google denies.
EPIC alleges that the new, opt out, Search Plus the World feature, which includes Google+ results but not Twitter, Facebook, or any other social-media results, poses antitrust and privacy issues. EPIC also says the feature may violate a consent order the FTC and Google agreed to in order to settle a complaint over its now defunct Buzz social network that requires the company to make new features opt-in if they provide additional sharing of certain types of private information.
Google includes Twitter and public Facebook content in its search results, but doesn't feature it prominently like it does Google+ content, and it doesn't include any private content from the other sites. Facebook blocks Google's crawler from accessing the private content of its users and the two firms haven't been able to come to agreement on terms to enable access. Microsoft's Bing, however, does integrate Facebook user content in its search results if a Web surfer links the two accounts, and it includes real-time data from Twitter. And Twitter reportedly declined to renew its deal to share real-time content with Google.
It's unclear why Google, Twitter, and Facebook aren't all playing nice so that Web surfers can really get the best possible experience.
At least it's a three-day weekend coming up. I'm sure some Google employees need the break.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Nokia Asha 200 ( Nokia Asha 200 )

Nokia Asha 200 is affordable QWERTY Dual Sim (GSM+GSM) Mobile Phone and offers faster emailing, chatting @ affordable price in India. Nokia 200 Dual Sim Mobile Features: Easily Swap Sim card without switching off the phone Short cut key for SIM card management FM Recording Social networking, email, IM support 2 Megapixel Camera Available in Eight Colors Nokia Asha 200 QWERTY Dual Sim Phone Technical Specifications: Dual GSM Sim Card 900/1800 MHz GPRS/EDGE 2.4” inch QVGA Display screen 10 MB free memory + up to 32GB Memory Card 2MP Camera with 4X Digital Zoom FM recording and Song Capture Bluetooth Powerful Loud Speaker (106 phon) Nokia BL-5J (1430 mAh) Battery Talk time up to 420 Minutes Standby time up to 37 days Dimensions: 115.4 x 61.1 x 14.0 mm Weight: 105 gm Nokia Asha 200 Price in India:  < Rs. 5,000/- INR Nokia 200 Box Includes: Phone, Nokia Charger, Nokia Battery BL-5J and Nokia Stereo Headset WH-102

The joy of Microsoft's 'avoid ghetto' GPS patent

Indeed, not so long ago, one lady  sued Google  because the directions its map offered led her (she believed) to be struck by a  car . Now Microsoft has been  granted a patent  that is designed to make its maps more pedestrian-friendly. Somehow, this patent has immediately been dubbed the  "avoid ghetto" feature . Someone seems to have already attempted a ghetto-related mapping exercise, in Ohio. (Credit:  CC JimBobThe Boss/Flickr ) The gist of it seems to be that Microsoft's GPS--which will  reportedly be inserted  into Windows Phones in the future--will use input from more varied and up-to-date sources in order to create suggested routes. Among these sources are crime statistics. Which has led  some to the thought  that this will somehow be an insult to poor neighborhoods. What is unclear, at least from my reading of the patent--which isn't written by anything resembling a human hand or mind--is what kind of crime statistics the GPS might choose to use. It's o

Microsoft says 'see ya' to CES (live blog)

LAS VEGAS--Microsoft has sung its  CES  swan song. The company announced plans last month  to walk away from the Consumer Electronics Show  after a nearly two-decade involvement with the confab and the organization behind it. That made tonight's keynote address from Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer the beginning of the end. Microsoft  didn't make any major announcements  (other than the fact that Kinect is  coming to Windows on February 1 ). But then, the company has said the timing of the annual confab doesn't generally align with its product news milestones, and that's the key reason it's bailing on the show. Microsoft talked up Windows Phone (its mobile phone operating system that's been getting some praise from the tech press), gave a look at some of the upcoming trim ultrabook computers running  Windows 7 , demoed some previously disclosed features of Windows 8 (which should debut toward the end of 2012), and touted its tile-based Metro interface.