Googland |
- [G] Tips to help you shop safely online
- [G] Google Ideas launches Summit Against Violent Extremism
- [G] Supporting choice, ensuring economic opportunity
- [G] Auto-Directed Video Stabilization with Robust L1 Optimal Camera Paths
- [G] The J. Paul Getty Museum collection comes alive with Google Goggles
- [G] Google Sites owners: Sites now auto-optimizes for mobile devices
- [G] Google Goggles learns Russian and gets a new view
- [G] +1 around the world
- [G] TED + YouTube: Releasing the power of video to shape ideas, 5 years on
- [G] Updated and more detailed Transparency Report
[G] Tips to help you shop safely online Posted: 28 Jun 2011 01:14 AM PDT Google Public Policy Blog: Tips to help you shop safely onlinePosted by Derek Slater, Policy ManagerTen years ago, the vast majority of Internet users said they wouldn't use the Internet for any financial transactions. Today, more than 70 percent of Internet users access their credit card account via the Internet, and worldwide e-commerce spending is expected to exceed $1 trillion by 2013. And it makes sense why – the Internet provides not only vast product and service information, but also the opportunity to buy those goods right away. For consumers and businesses to continue to benefit from online commerce, it's important to keep it safe and secure. That's why today we've posted a new Shopping Safety Tips page. Just as when you're shopping offline, it's vital to be a careful and informed buyer on the web. We work hard to prevent fraud across our services and keep consumers safe online, including recent improvements to keep counterfeits out of ads. However, no individual or company can completely stop these activities on their own. Your help in reporting catch abuse and fraud are critical, and this page also provides links to where you can help us by reporting violations of our policies. URL: http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2011/06/tips-to-help-you-shop-safely-online.html |
[G] Google Ideas launches Summit Against Violent Extremism Posted: 28 Jun 2011 01:14 AM PDT Google Public Policy Blog: Google Ideas launches Summit Against Violent ExtremismPosted by Jared Cohen, Director, Google Ideas(Cross-posted from the European Public Policy Blog.) When Google decided to set up a think/do tank, we vowed to avoid the safe route. Google Ideas seeks to bring the ideas of a wide range of thinkers to bear on the most vexing and intractable challenges of the 21st century. Some of these challenges are aligned with our core business and others with our philanthropic mission. Some are hugely important but few have been willing to tackle them because they are controversial. Given that technology has demonstrated it can be part of every problem, we want to make sure it is part of every solution. We hope to tackle the thorniest of issues. Challenges such as violent extremism. Why does a 13-year old boy in a tough neighborhood in South Central LA join a gang? Why does a high school student in a quiet, Midwestern American town sign on neo-Nazis who preach white supremacy? Why does a young woman in the Middle East abandon her family and future and become a suicide bomber? In order to advance our understanding, Google Ideas is today convening the Summit Against Violent Extremism, bringing together former gang members, right-wing extremists, jihadists and militants in Dublin for three days of debates and workshops. All these "formers" have rejected violence and are working for groups recognized by governments and law enforcement that fight extremism. Extremists have taken advantage of new Internet technologies to spread their message. We believe technology also can become part of the solution, helping to engineer a turn away from violence. We're also inviting survivors of violent extremism who are engaged in some of the most important activism around this issue. They will remind us of the horrors and loss associated with the challenge of violent extremism. Representatives from civil society, along with a stellar group of academics, will participate and provide additional texture. Our partners in this venture are the Council on Foreign Relations, which will look at the policy implications, and the Tribeca Film Festival, which emerged out of the aftermath of the September 11 attacks on the the World Trade Center and which will explore the role of film and music on and in fighting extremism. Together, we aim to initiate a global conversation on how best to prevent young people from becoming radicalised and how to de-radicalise others. The ideas generated at the Dublin summit will be included in a study to be published later in the year. We are undertaking this project without preconceptions. We aren't expecting quick answers or "silver bullets." Instead, we're looking to increase understanding of a critical problem and find some new approaches to combat it. Stay tuned as we attempt to marry ideas and action. URL: http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2011/06/google-ideas-launches-summit-against.html |
[G] Supporting choice, ensuring economic opportunity Posted: 28 Jun 2011 01:14 AM PDT Google Public Policy Blog: Supporting choice, ensuring economic opportunityPosted by Amit Singhal, Google Fellow(Cross-posted from the Official Google Blog.) At Google, we've always focused on putting the user first. We aim to provide relevant answers as quickly as possible—and our product innovation and engineering talent have delivered results that users seem to like, in a world where the competition is only one click away. Still, we recognize that our success has led to greater scrutiny. Yesterday, we received formal notification from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission that it has begun a review of our business. We respect the FTC's process and will be working with them (as we have with other agencies) over the coming months to answer questions about Google and our services. It's still unclear exactly what the FTC's concerns are, but we're clear about where we stand. Since the beginning, we have been guided by the idea that, if we focus on the user, all else will follow. No matter what you're looking for—buying a movie ticket, finding the best burger nearby, or watching a royal wedding—we want to get you the information you want as quickly as possible. Sometimes the best result is a link to another website. Other times it's a news article, sports score, stock quote, a video or a map. Instant answers. New sources of knowledge. Powerful tools—all for free. In just 13 years we've built a model that has changed the way people find answers and helped businesses both large and small create jobs and connect with new customers. Search helps you go anywhere and discover anything, on an open Internet. Using Google is a choice—and there are lots of other choices available to you for getting information: other general-interest search engines, specialized search engines, direct navigation to websites, mobile applications, social networks, and more. Because of the many choices available to you, we work constantly on making search better, and will continue to follow the principles that have guided us from the beginning:
To learn more about our business, please visit www.google.com/press/competition. URL: http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2011/06/supporting-choice-ensuring-economic.html |
[G] Auto-Directed Video Stabilization with Robust L1 Optimal Camera Paths Posted: 27 Jun 2011 11:47 PM PDT Research Blog: Auto-Directed Video Stabilization with Robust L1 Optimal Camera PathsPosted by Matthias Grundmann, Vivek Kwatra, and Irfan Essa, Research TeamEarlier this year, we announced the launch of new features on the YouTube Video Editor, including stabilization for shaky videos, with the ability to preview them in real-time. The core technology behind this feature is detailed in this paper, which will be presented at the IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR 2011). Casually shot videos captured by handheld or mobile cameras suffer from significant amount of shake. Existing in-camera stabilization methods dampen high-frequency jitter but do not suppress low-frequency movements and bounces, such as those observed in videos captured by a walking person. On the other hand, most professionally shot videos usually consist of carefully designed camera configurations, using specialized equipment such as tripods or camera dollies, and employ ease-in and ease-out for transitions. Our goal was to devise a completely automatic method for converting casual shaky footage into more pleasant and professional looking videos. Our technique mimics the cinematographic principles outlined above by automatically determining the best camera path using a robust optimization technique. The original, shaky camera path is divided into a set of segments, each approximated by either a constant, linear or parabolic motion. Our optimization finds the best of all possible partitions using a computationally efficient and stable algorithm. To achieve real-time performance on the web, we distribute the computation across multiple machines in the cloud. This enables us to provide users with a real-time preview and interactive control of the stabilized result. Above we provide a video demonstration of how to use this feature on the YouTube Editor. We will also demo this live at Google's exhibition booth in CVPR 2011. For further details, please read our paper. URL: http://googleresearch.blogspot.com/2011/06/auto-directed-video-stabilization-with.html |
[G] The J. Paul Getty Museum collection comes alive with Google Goggles Posted: 27 Jun 2011 02:22 PM PDT Official Google Mobile Blog: The J. Paul Getty Museum collection comes alive with Google GogglesThe Google Goggles team has worked with The J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles to "Goggles-enable" their permanent collection of paintings. You can use the Google Goggles app on your phone to take a photo of a painting from the collection and instantly access information about it from the Getty's mobile-optimized website and the rest of the web. It's possible to fit only a small amount of information on the wall next to a painting but visitors with Goggles can now enjoy the full story online.Google Goggles results and the Getty webpage for Portrait of the Sisters Bonaparte Learn more on the Official Google Blog. Posted by Shailesh Nalawadi, Product Manager URL: http://googlemobile.blogspot.com/2011/06/j-paul-getty-museum-collection-comes.html |
[G] Google Sites owners: Sites now auto-optimizes for mobile devices Posted: 27 Jun 2011 02:22 PM PDT Official Google Mobile Blog: Google Sites owners: Sites now auto-optimizes for mobile devicesAs the dramatic growth of the mobile web changes the way people consume content, it's becoming increasingly important for publishers to provide a good mobile experience. With this in mind, we just added automatic mobile rendering in Google Sites for iOS 3.0+ and Android 2.2+ devices, and a mobile version of the Google Sites lists. Learn more on the Google Docs blog.Posted by Luciano Cheng, Software Engineer URL: http://googlemobile.blogspot.com/2011/06/google-sites-owners-sites-now-auto.html |
[G] Google Goggles learns Russian and gets a new view Posted: 27 Jun 2011 02:22 PM PDT Official Google Mobile Blog: Google Goggles learns Russian and gets a new viewSome of you may already be using the new optical character recognition (OCR) and translation of Russian in Google Goggles that we previewed at last week's Inside Search event. Starting today, we're pleased to introduce some additional new features, including a map view of your Search History and the ability to copy contact and text results to the clipboard. We've also changed the results interface to make it easier to view and navigate through your results.Russian optical character recognition (OCR) and translation Since Google Goggles first launched in 2009, it has been able to recognize and translate text in a number of different languages, as long as the language used Latin characters. With the launch of OCR for Russian, Goggles is now able to read Cyrillic characters. Goggles will recognize a picture of Russian text and allow you to translate the text into one of over 40 other languages. Russian OCR is also available for users of Google Goggles on the Google Search app for iOS. Очень полезно! You can take a picture of Russian text and translate it into over 40 languages. Map view of your search history If you've enabled search history on Goggles, your history contains a list of all the images that you've searched for, as well as some information about where you performed the search if you chose to share your location with Google. Sometimes this can be a pretty long list, so we wanted to give you another way to sort and visualize your Goggles results. We've added a map view, which shows your Goggles image search history on a map so you can quickly zoom and pan to find a query from a particular location. Easily toggle between map view and list view with the button in the upper right. Copy contact and text results to clipboard Finally, imagine that you wanted to grab a URL or telephone number from a sign and email it to yourself. Now, Goggles gives you the option of copying the recognized text to your phone's clipboard, allowing you to paste the test into a number of applications. To try these new features download Google Goggles 1.5 from Android Market, or scan the QR code below with your phone. Posted by George Nachman, Software Engineer URL: http://googlemobile.blogspot.com/2011/06/google-goggles-learns-russian-and-gets.html |
Posted: 27 Jun 2011 01:04 PM PDT Inside AdSense: +1 around the worldA few months ago we released the +1 button on English search results on google.com. More recently, we've made the +1 button available to sites across the web, making it easy for the people who love your content to recommend it on Google search.Today, +1's will start appearing on Google search pages globally. We'll be starting off with sites like google.co.uk, google.de, google.jp and google.fr, then expanding quickly to most other Google search sites soon after. We've partnered with a few more sites in Europe, Japan, India, Australia and New Zealand where you'll see +1 buttons over the coming days. If you're a publisher based outside of the US, and you've been waiting to put +1 buttons on your site, now's a good time to get started. Visit the +1 button tool on Google Webmaster Central where the +1 button is already available in 44 languages. Adding the +1 button could help your site to stand out by putting personal recommendations right at the moment of decision, on Google search. So if you have users who are fans of your content, encourage them to add their voice with +1! Posted by Nick Radicevic - Product Manager URL: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/tuAm/~3/XCjyTIequ8g/1-around-world.html |
[G] TED + YouTube: Releasing the power of video to shape ideas, 5 years on Posted: 27 Jun 2011 10:41 AM PDT YouTube Blog: TED + YouTube: Releasing the power of video to shape ideas, 5 years onTED has shared a wealth of innovative ideas with you over the years. We wish the TED team the happiest 5th anniversary and look forward to their continued contribution of inspiring content to YouTube and the world. We welcome Emily McManus as a guest to the YouTube blog today to discuss TED's journey with us so far.Today TED celebrates five years of spreading ideas online, and YouTube has been a key part of our mission from the start. In fact, TED and YouTube have grown up together as we've spent the past half-decade unlocking the power of video to set free convention-breaking ideas across the globe. On June 27, 2006 TED flipped the switch on a simple web page with six videos. Now five years later, TEDsters all over the world are using video to spread ideas feverishly across the Internet. We're excited to celebrate with the YouTube community a few amazing TEDTalks to mark our anniversary and pay tribute to the fascinating people who have inspired, intrigued and stirred our hearts and minds! Together we've unlocked all kinds of ideas—from silly memes to paradigm shifts in human ingenuity to political change. Harnessing radical openness of the Internet, in fact, has been the topic of other TEDTalks including Clay Shirky, Sal Khan and Peter Gabriel. And we've found some of our most beloved speakers through YouTube—like Johnny Lee, the Wii-mote hacker, whose demo Chris spotted online early in 2008. A plane ticket later, Lee's demo of creating teaching tools with game controllers was on its way to ruling the web. If you haven't seen it, check out TED's curator Chris Anderson in his own TEDTalk about "How web video powers global innovation." He starts by showing how YouTube-powered video is driving street dance to evolve globally at lightning speed. With 70 million cumulative views, TEDTalks on YouTube is a killer platform for us, for ideas both big—Sam Richards, and and not-so-big—Terry Moore / How to tie your shoes. We treasure you for your smart insights, active commenting and dedicated subscribership to TED. Fan Ghazzawi9 calls us "weekly dosages of pure enlightenment and inspiration." (Thank you!) Today's TEDTalk highlights another amazing YouTube power -- sharing ideas in more than one language. Emiliano Salinas' talk, which he delivered in Spanish, is instantly accessible to viewers around the world through YouTube's and TED's subtitle community. Having reached the 5-year milestone, we look back in awe and look forward with excitement. Thanks, YouTubers, for helping us expand minds, open hearts and inspire others in ways we never expected. Guest to The Official YouTube Blog Emily McManus, Editor of TED.com, on behalf of the worldwide TED team, recently watched "Google Chrome: It Gets Better." URL: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/youtube/PKJx/~3/u-4lY9QeJQs/ted-youtube-releasing-power-of-video-to.html |
[G] Updated and more detailed Transparency Report Posted: 27 Jun 2011 08:45 AM PDT Official Google Blog: Updated and more detailed Transparency ReportOur Transparency Report discloses the information that governments have asked for over the past six months. For our latest batch of data, covering July through December 2010, we wanted to improve the way we give you the information, so we've updated the look of the report and added more details.We've highlighted some significant changes in the data and provided context about why those changes may have occurred during this reporting period. We've also made it easier for you to spot trends in the data yourself. For example, we've changed the format so you can now see data on a country-by-country basis. We're also clearly disclosing the reasons why we've been asked to remove content—such as an allegation of defamation or hate speech. For the first time, we're also revealing the percentage of user data requests we've complied with in whole or in part. This gives you a better idea of how we've dealt with the requests we receive from government agencies—like local and federal police—for data about users of our services and products. Our goal is to provide our users access to information and to protect the privacy of our users. Whenever we receive a request, we first check to make sure it meets both the letter and spirit of the law before complying. When possible, we notify affected users about requests for user data that may affect them. And, if we believe a request is overly broad, we will seek to narrow it. We hope that our website improvements help you to see more clearly how the web is shaped by government influence and how Google responds to requests for information and removals. Posted by Matt Braithwaite, Transparency Engineering URL: http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/06/updated-and-more-detailed-transparency.html |
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