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Google Chrome Is The New “Down For Everyone Or Just Me” (techcrunch.com)
92 points by Garbage on Sept 1, 2010 | hide | past | favorite | 38 comments



This article give me a nervous twinge when I realized that if Google ever got Chrome to be a majority-share browser, they would really know everything there is to know about the web.

In effect, their algorithms/rankings could be peerless because they would actually know what every end user does and sees on the web.

The browser is wonderful but it's quite chatty about all of your Internet habits. I wonder if this message appears even if you turn off all the "send my history to Google" preferences.


Chrome is open source, so in case something like this happen you can either investigate the source code, or create a more privacy compliant version. No such luck with I.E. or Safari.


While Chromium is open source, Chrome is not and could certainly "hide" away such features, but you're right to say that a more-private fork could / would be close behind.


Thanks, I didn't knew that, It seems to be like Android model, where they open source it few weeks after public disclosure of features.


I use the daily build of chromium on my ubuntu linux.

I'm pretty sure that it's the main line of development and I regularly receive new features, new bugs and new bug fixes as days passes. After some time all this goes to the chrome beta and finally in the chrome release.

I don't think that google adds tons of code 'behind' the back of the opensource repository which is then merged only a few weeks later, because I see a gradual change (aka. the phenotype of those changes) in the daily builds from the chromium repository.


Iron is one such browser built off the Chromium source.

For a list of some of differences between Chrome and Iron see: http://www.srware.net/en/software_srware_iron_chrome_vs_iron...


One of the Chrome devs posted an IRC transcript of when an Iron dev dropped by...

http://neugierig.org/software/chromium/notes/2009/12/iron.ht...

...and it was less than flattering.


Here is one guys, early, take on Iron. Pretty much just comments stuff out.

http://chromium.hybridsource.org/the-iron-scam


<Iron> the german people say: google is very evil <jamessan> yet you use google's adsense

Ouch :)


He's naive perhaps, but otherwise I don't see much wrong with his message. You shouldn't trust google, they're a big cooperation.


What's wrong here is that he's refusing to work with a willing upstream. It would be much better for everyone if he submitted patches to Google to allow everyone using Chrome to optionally turn off these tracking features.

Instead he's needlessly forking the project to "bring a lot of publicity to my person and my homepage". That's not being a good open source citizen.


He claims that in Germany he can make a lot of money at this. If he can then it means he's taking an open source project and doing something with it to make money. It doesn't even sound like he's closing the source of his fork (assuming he would even have this option). It's not the most efficient thing but if he really can make money with this I don't see much fault in it. It's risky because someone else could just push these changes back to Chrome killing his revenue stream.


Sure, it's just that the whole thing has a big "Google's all about stealing your data" vibe in its advertisements.

When in fact Google would be happy to take his patches, and most of those data-sharing features are improving the user experience (like type-ahead suggestions etc.).

That just rubs me the wrong way.


Right. You should trust the open source code which everyone has access to.


Safari is based on WebKit, which is definitely open source.


What if they hook everyone on things like free calls on gmail and then make the plugin only work with they version of "crome"?

I know lots of ppl who would not see any problem.

Although it would be very non-google... but lately...


On the other hand, Microsoft has a majority-share browser, along with a search engine, advertising business etc. Are they doing all of this today?


> Are they doing all of this today?

No. Because they don't really care. They're not trying to understand your behavior to display ads you're more likely to click on. Google? it's their core business.


Don't forget they have an OS as well, even if they were doing it today, how could we know? Who knows if they are doing it covertly under the guise of windows updates.

Disclaimer: I don't actually believe they do.


A savvy network admin with Ethereal could find out...


I would have assumed MS would use some encryption on the data they send, which would mean that nobody could ever know except Microsoft. That said, I don't know that any sort of encryption is used for Windows Updates. But they could do it...


Traffic analysis would let you know what kind of data is being sent, even without being able to decrypt the actual data.


Don't be scared of that. Giving Google more information isn't the problem. They already have so much information that they can't use it all.

You should merely be scared of them working for another decade, in their current groove, because many wonders and horrors will be born.


Don't forget about Google Public DNS.


It checks against Google's own "it is down" app not against other users, which is the more practical approach.


But still, in asking Google's servers about the URL, you are telling Google what site you wanted to visit.


I like this bit...

"And you look like an ass for your rant that you just spewed on Twitter (or on Facebook when it’s Twitter that is down)."

Like, you know, this was the civil and normal thing to do: "Something doesn't work, and I payed _nothing_ for it: get the torches and the pitchforks!!!"

Here it's an alternative: just calm down and you won't look like an ass either.


This has been in Chrome for quite a while now.


does it appear always or only if the dns record exists but the server doesn't respond?

I run Chromium 7.0.510.0 and I don't see this page when I hit a page which doesn't exist or when I point to an existing web server host but a random tcp port (s(t)imulating icmp 'connection refused')


I am using Chrome 7.0.503.0 (r57033) Dev on Win7 32bit and never seen this.


I'd like to see this feature getting into other browsers too.


Thanks for sharing, will look out for that message when I get that "Oops" page again.


Ok, HN, why do you downvote this? It is a thankful positive comment.

Above with the same amount of votes, but upvotes, is "This has been in Chrome for quite a while now." which does not seem any more constructive yet spread negativity.

I would understand not upvoting this, as it is no real contribution (though I immediately understand what this was about without having to read the linked article) but why downvote?


I didn't downvote the comment in question, and I hate these meta-discussions, but anyway:

A "thankful positive comment" that adds no new information to the discussion is just noise. People downvote comments like this in order to discourage them, and keep the signal/noise ration high.

"This has been a Chrome for quite a while now", by contrast, at least adds something new-- that this is not a new feature. It's not a great comment, but at least there's some "signal" there.


Ok maybe I'm new on HN but I did read the "Welcome to Hacker News" (http://ycombinator.com/newswelcome.html) guideline which said:

'Empty comments can be ok if they're positive. There's nothing wrong with submitting a comment saying just "Thanks."'

And the definition for a comment worth downvote is "What we especially discourage are comments that are empty and negative—comments that are mere name-calling."

This is all to ensure a positive, encouraging culture on HN, thanks


I like the way you think! ....wait, uhhhh....I've got nothing, downvote me.


Lately I began to observe downvotes patterns here on HN and saw that some people downvote instead of commenting or ignoring when they disagree with a comment or an idea, comments in topics about Microsoft, Google or Apple are a favorite target.


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