Google backs down on plans to base itself at white bay: What’s behind the new decision?
The move is likely a pre-emptive strike by Google to cut down on the risk of backlash from the Bay Area community. And it’s a positive move by Google and California’s tech community for a variety of reasons.
First, Google has been a fierce critic of Google’s actions in San Francisco — in this case, the Bay Area — and other parts of the country, particularly the U.S. South.
As we’ve noted, California isn’t exactly known for having great tech firms. The state’s largest우리카지노 tech companies — Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, and Google — all either made or remain stuck in the dust in recent years.
This year, Google and Apple were also joined by Facebook and other large companies as well as a slew of smaller, regional tech giants who joined a growing list of tech companies calling for an end to Google’s aggressive anticompetitive practices.
This group of groups has come to form the Open Technology Alliance, a coalition of more than 80 tech companies that also includes companies such as Uber and Facebook.
According to a recent blog post from Open Technology Alliance’s CEO, Michael Osborne, California “has lost its way.”
The group wants regulators to hold Google to a “higher standard.” And it’s clear what’s behind this move: Google has been pushing state officials to change its business practices, and the group wants Google to “back down and let us in.”
Here’s Osborne’s post (emphasis added):
Google may be the most hated company on the planet. But it has also become the most hated company because it is the only company that is trying to do everything right. In fact, we found that only about two-thirds of all customers that Google has actually delivered are satisfied, with 99 percent of those customers saying they are “not happy.”
That doesn’t bode well for Google’s reputation among California tech executives and customers who may feel that, by doing right by 바카라사이트the company, they’ve le우리카지노t down their companies. California is becoming a leader in online content; we think the open-minded attitude of the group’s tech leaders should have a big impact on how these issues develop.
The Open Technology Alliance has been actively working with Google and other tech companies to ensure a level playing field for their businesses. So the group is pleased that Google is now abandoning its aggressive anticompetitive practices. In the coming weeks, we expect to have more specific recommendations from the group