Showing posts with label Bing fires at Google with new social search. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bing fires at Google with new social search. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 October 2012

Google considers mobile patent antitrust settlement, report says

The search giant is deciding whether it should settle with the FTC over the agency's claim that Google refused to grant industry-standard patents to rivals, says a report.


Google is considering a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission over the agency'sclaim that the search giant violated antitrust lawwhen it didn't grant patent licenses to some of its mobile competitors, The Wall Street Journal reported today.
An unnamed source told the Journal that Google is weighing whether or not it should settle.
When asked for comment on a possible settlement, a Google spokeswoman said only:
"We take our commitments to license on fair, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory terms very seriously and are happy to answer any questions [from the FTC]."
CNET has contacted the FTC for comment and will update when we hear back.
The FTC is investigating whether Google's Motorola Mobility unit is improperly blocking access to industry-standard technology that should be licensed to competitors according to traditional industry and legal practice.

These types of patents fall into the category of FRAND licenses, which are often the subject of patent suits, including one Apple brought against Motorola Mobility. FRAND -- also known as "RAND" in the U.S. -- stands for "fair, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory," and is based on the principle that fair licensing of intellectual property is needed to for devices from different manufactures to work together properly.

Saturday, 12 May 2012

Bing fires at Google with new social search


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Microsoft is launching a major overhaul of its also-ran search engine Bing on Thursday, aiming at a weakness it sees in market leader Google.
The most prominent new element in Bing's redesign is "Sidebar," a social search feature that scours users' social networks to surface information relevant to their search queries.
Microsoft's redesigned Bing takes aim at Google's search weaknesses.


                                 Google (GOOGFortune 500) unveiled a similar feature dubbed"Search Plus Your World" in January to decidedly mixed reviews. Though some of the basic features are the same, Microsoft (MSFT,Fortune 500) thinks it has a better solution.
Like Google, Bing's Sidebar will display posts from people in your social networks who have recently discussed a topic related to what you just searched for. A search for "San Francisco restaurants" will return posts from your friends talking about good eats in the city.
That's where the similarities end.
Google's "social search" only displays Google+ posts -- something thatFacebook and Twitter are cranky about. It's a walled garden that fences users inside Google's proprietary network.
Bing's Sidebar works with multiple social networks, including Facebook, Twitter and Google+. It stashes its social search results off to the right side of the page, while Google plops them right into the middle of its main results.
Bing's strategy is pointedly different than that of Google, which is laser-focused on building its own social network. Though Google+ has grown to nearly 100 million users, analysts are still trying to determine how active and engaged they actually are.