- Introduction
- Early investment, rapid growth, and a 2004 IPO
- Strategic acquisitions and monetizing Google’s search engine
- Other services
- Google becomes an Alphabet subsidiary
- References
- Introduction
- Early investment, rapid growth, and a 2004 IPO
- Strategic acquisitions and monetizing Google’s search engine
- Other services
- Google becomes an Alphabet subsidiary
- References
Other services
Google’s expansion, fueled largely by keyword-based Web advertising, provided it with a sound footing to compete in new Web services. Some were meant to broaden the company’s reach across the technology spectrum, but others, such as Google Maps and YouTube, would enhance Google’s search engine dominance by integrating the search experience with other user data, including geolocation, web browsing, and media usage.
Gmail
In 2004 Google began offering a free Web-based email account to select “beta” testers (a beta product being a product not yet in its final form). The service, known as Gmail, was opened to the general public in 2007 while still officially in its beta stage. One of the primary appeals of Gmail was that it gave users an email address that was independent of any particular Internet service provider (ISP), thus making it easier to maintain a permanent address. In addition, the service offered an unprecedented one gigabyte (one billion bytes) of free email storage space, although users were also presented with advertisements based on keywords that the Google search engine found in their messages.
Failure to penetrate the China market
In January 2006, Google launched Google.cn, with its search engine results page (SERP) filtered and censored by the government. But the company faced not only criticism from within the U.S., but also increasingly strict censorship from Chinese authorities, as well as hacking attempts targeting human rights activists and foreign journalists.
In 2010, Google began redirecting its Chinese users from Google.cn to its unfiltered Hong Kong site, Google.com.hk, essentially shuttering its search operation in China. In 2018, Google initiated Project Dragonfly, an effort to revive its search business in China by adhering to the country’s strict censorship and data monitoring requirements. Once again, the backlash from human rights organizations—and many Google employees—proved to be too great, and Project Dragonfly was abruptly terminated.
Since then, Google has maintained an arm’s-length relationship within China, holding minor partnership stakes in a few companies and, as of 2022, a roughly 3% share in the search engine market, where market leader Baidu dominates.
Google later expanded the amount of free storage space given to users to seven gigabytes and allowed users to rent additional space. In 2007 the company acquired Postini, an e-mail services firm, for $625 million in order to improve Gmail’s security, especially in Google’s efforts to sign up businesses. In 2009 Google removed the beta status of Gmail, increasing its appeal to business users.
Google Books
In the early 2000s, Google launched what might have been considered the largest and most ambitious library project ever attempted. Google was planning to scan and digitize all available books across the globe to create the world’s most comprehensive digital library. This project, which began as Google Print in 2004, became Google Books in 2005.
Meanwhile, groups of authors and publishers filed suit to stop the company from making passages from their copyrighted books available over the Internet. In 2008, Google reached a legal settlement in which the company agreed to pay the groups $125 million for past transgressions, although users could continue to read for free up to 20% of each work scanned by Google. In exchange for allowing parts of their works to be read online, the authors and publishers would receive 63% of all advertising revenue generated by page views of their material on Google’s website.
Google Books continues to operate, but its popularity and adoption as originally envisioned remains to be seen. In 2015, Google Books was estimated to have digitized 25 million books. A similar library project, Project Gutenberg, claimed to have 70 million books available in digital form as of 2024, while the number of digitized books in Google Books’ catalog remains largely unknown.