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scott summerlin

What is Google's AdWords and AdSense trademark policy? - AdWords Help - 0 views

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    The trademark owner doesn't need to be a Google AdWords advertiser in order to send a complaint. Any such investigation will only affect ads served on or by Google. Google's trademark policy does not apply to search results. Our investigations only apply to sponsored links. For trademark concerns about websites that appear in Google search results, the trademark owner should contact the site owner directly. In the case of an AdSense for Domains trademark complaint, an investigation will affect only the participation of the domain name in question in our AdSense for Domains program. Because Google is not a third-party arbiter, we encourage trademark owners to resolve their disputes directly with the advertisers, particularly because the advertisers may have similar ads running via other advertising programs.
scott summerlin

Google - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

  • Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG, FWB: GGQ1) is a multinational public cloud computing, Internet search, and advertising technologies corporation
  • Google runs over one million servers in data centers around the world,[13] and processes over one billion search requests[14] and twenty petabytes of user-generated data every day.
  • Google runs over one million servers in data centers around the world,[14] and processes over one billion search requests[15] and twenty petabytes of user-generated data every day.[16][17][18] Google's rapid growth since its incorporation has triggered a chain of products, acquisitions and partnerships beyond the company's core search engine. The company offers online productivity software, such as its Gmail e-mail software, and social networking tools, including Orkut and, more recently, Google Buzz.
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    "Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG, FWB: GGQ1) is a multinational public cloud computing, Internet search, and advertising technologies corporation. Google hosts and develops a number of Internet-based services and products,[5] and generates profit primarily from advertising through its AdWords program"
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    Description of Google.
d l

Google | CrunchBase Profile - 0 views

shared by d l on 27 Sep 10 - Cached
  • Google provides search and advertising services, which together aim to organize and monetize the world’s information. In addition to its dominant search engine, it offers a plethora of online tools and platforms including: Gmail, Maps and YouTube. Most of its Web-based products are free, funded by Google’s highly integrated online advertising platforms AdWords and AdSense. Google promotes the idea that advertising should be highly targeted and relevant to users thus providing them with a rich source of information.
  • In 1996, Stanford graduate students Sergey Brin and Larry Page famously started the search company in a Stanford dorm room.
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    Google provides search and advertising services, which together aim to organize and monetize the world's information. In addition to its dominant search engine, it offers a plethora of online tools and platforms including: Gmail, Maps and YouTube. Most of its Web-based products are free, funded by Google's highly integrated online advertising platforms AdWords and AdSense. Google promotes the idea that advertising should be highly targeted and relevant to users thus providing them with a rich source of information.
d l

Advertising and Privacy - Google Privacy Center - 0 views

  • Google offers a range of advertising services through our AdWords and AdSense programs to show you the most useful and relevant ads online. These ads appear on Google’s sites and services, and on partner websites in the Google content network.
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    Google's advertising and privacy .
Steve Madsen

Google Search Knows Where You Are Right Now - Or Will Soon - 0 views

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    Advertisers and tech companies are slowly honing in on the possibilities of localized, mobile advertising. Yesterday on the GoogleMobile blog, the search giant announced a big step in that direction with Search with My Location
scott summerlin

Advertising and Privacy - Google Privacy Center - 0 views

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    Google offers a range of advertising services through our AdWords and AdSense programs to show you the most useful and relevant ads online. These ads appear on Google's sites and services, on partner websites in the Google Display Network and also on Third Party and certain Google Applications and other clients. Some ads are based primarily on your search queries or on the content of the page you're viewing. When providing ads tailored to your interests, we offer useful tools for you to view and manage the information that is being collected and used to serve ads. To protect your privacy, we follow three principles when we serve ads:
Zachary Durnack

BBC News - Facebook 'irresponsible' over beheading videos, says PM - 0 views

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    This article discusses the controversy over Facebook's lack of censorship. Facebook states that its platform is a place for people to freely post, but many governments and politicians around the globe find it appalling that Facebook has not banned such videos as a woman being decapitated. Many advertisers have expressed their concern as well for they do not want to associate themselves with such content.
scott summerlin

Official Google Blog: Do you "Google?" - 0 views

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    Posted by Michael Krantz, Google Blog Team Q: What do zippers, baby oil, brassieres and trampolines have in common? A: No, the answer isn't that they're all part of the setup for a highly inappropriate joke. In fact, the above list (along with thermos, cellophane, escalator, elevator, dry ice and many more) are all words that fell victim to those products' very success and, as they became more and more popular, slipped from trademarked status into common usage. Will "Google" manage to avoid this fate? This year has brought a spate of news stories about the word's addition to the Merriam-Webster and the Oxford English dictionaries, an honor that's simultaneously highly flattering and faintly unsettling. Consider, for example, this passage from a New York Times story published last May: "Jim sent a message introducing himself and asking, 'Do you want to make a movie?'" Mr. Fry recalled in a telephone interview from his home in Buda, Tex. 'So we Googled him, he passed the test, and T called him. That was in March 1996; we spent the summer coming up with the story, and we pitched it that fall.'" Now, since Larry and Sergey didn't actually launch Google until 1998, Mr. Fry's usage of 'Google' is as distressing to our trademark lawyers as it is thrilling to our marketing folks. So, lest our name go the way of the elevators and escalators of yesteryear, we thought it was time we offered this quick semantic primer. A trademark is a word, name, symbol or device that identifies a particular company's products or services. Google is a trademark identifying Google Inc. and our search technology and services. While we're pleased that so many people think of us when they think of searching the web, let's face it, we do have a brand to protect, so we'd like to make clear that you should please only use "Google" when you're actually referring to Google Inc. and our services. Here are some hopefully helpful examples. Usage: 'Google' as noun referring to, well, us.
Connor D

Business and Twitter - 0 views

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    This article is about how companies use Twitter to advertise to customers.
Amanda B

Google's mobile factor may affect rivals - 0 views

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    This article is about how google has advantages in mobile advertisement from Android as opposed to facebook and yahoo which are struggling.
Katie Kennedy

Politics Faces Sweeping Change via the Web - 0 views

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    American politics is transforming due to the Internet. The White House notices changes with the elections through the prompting and rewriting of rules on advertising, fund-raising, and mobilizing supporters. Unfortunately, it also helps the spreading of negative information on Democrats and Republicans.
Gino delaReza

New Focus on Publicizing Information About Political TV Ads - 0 views

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    Local broadcasters, by law, have to disclose the identities of those who buy political advertisements, as well as detailed information about the purchases. They print out the data and store it at their offices for the public to see, theoretically. But few members of the public ever get a chance to.
Gabriella Tirado

Using social media to improve your business - 0 views

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    Talks about how social networks and websites can advertise your business
Brody C

Bing (search engine) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

shared by Brody C on 28 Sep 10 - No Cached
  • Bing (formerly Live Search, Windows Live Search, and MSN Search) is the current web search engine (advertised as a "decision engine")[2] from Microsoft. Bing was unveiled by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer on May 28, 2009 at the All Things Digital conference in San Diego. It went fully online on June 3, 2009,[3] with a preview version released on June 1, 2009.
Kaleb B

Bing (search engine) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Bing (formerly Live Search, Windows Live Search, and MSN Search) is the current web search engine (advertised as a "decision engine")[2] from Microsoft.
  • Notable changes include the listing of search suggestions as queries are entered and a list of related searches (called "Explorer pane") based on[4] semantic technology from Powerset that Microsoft purchased in 2008.
  • On July 29, 2009, Microsoft and Yahoo! announced a deal in which Bing would power Yahoo! Search.
Tori N

Bulletin board system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • electronic mail or in public message boards. Many BBSes also offer on-line games, in which users can compete with each other, and BBSes with
  • such as uploading and downloading software and data
  • Originally BBSes were accessed only over a phone line using a modem, but by the early 1990s some BBSes allowed access via a Telnet, packet switched network, or packet radio connection.
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  • supermarkets, schools, libraries or other public areas where people can post messages, advertisements, or community news.
  • . Bulletin Board Systems were in many ways a precursor to the modern form of the World Wide Web and other aspects of the Internet.
  • A notable precursor to the public Bulletin Board System was Community Memory, started in August, 1973 in Berkeley, California, using hardwired terminals located in neighborhoods.
  • began
  • successfully connected to two hundred and fifty thousand callers, before it was finally retired.
  • BBSes experimented with higher resolution visual formats such as the innovative but obscure Remote Imaging Protocol.
  • Towards the early 1990s, the BBS industry became so popular that it spawned three monthly magazines, Boardwatch, BBS Magazine, and in Asia and Australia, Chips 'n Bits Magazine which devoted extensive coverage of the software and technology innovations and people behind them, and listings to US and worldwide BBSes
  • BBSes rapidly declined in popularity thereafter, and were replaced by systems using the Internet for connectivity. Some of the larger commercial BBSes, such as ExecPC BBS, became actual Internet Service Providers.
  • Software and hardware
  • Networks
  • Many BBS did not infringe on copyright laws by systematically inspecting each file that was added to their public file download library for violations. In
  • Since early BBSes were frequently run by computer hobbyists, they were typically technical in nature with user communities revolving around hardware and software discussions.
  • Some BBSes, called elite, warez or pirate boards, were exclusively used for distributing pirated software, phreaking, and other questionable or unlawful content.
  • Most elite BBSes used some form of new user verification, where new users would have to apply for membership and attempt to prove that they were not a law enforcement officer or a lamer.
  • Some general purpose Bulletin Board Systems had special levels of access that were given to those who paid extra money, uploaded useful files or knew the sysop personally.
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    Bulletin Board System (BBS) was the first social networking system.
Steve Madsen

Search for Tomorrow - Google - 1 views

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    This article give some background on Google but also advertises a book entitled 'Planet Google' by Randall Stross
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    By 1998, the Web was getting big enough that it was hard for human editors to keep up. That's when Larry Page and Sergey Brin founded Google and built a search engine that, by using a computer algorithm, could in theory scale to include an infinite number of Web sites. Google sent a spider into the Web that would index every page it crawled past.
Vicki Davis

Students 'Mix It Up' to promote tolerance | The Montgomery Advertiser | montgomeryadver... - 0 views

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    Such programs are fascinating ways to help promote getting along and working with others. "National Mix It Up Lunch Day, now in its 10th year, is coordinated by the Southern Poverty Law Center's Teaching Tolerance program. It served as the catalyst Tuesday for millions of students, including some locally, to cross social boundaries and foster respect for one another."
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    Now when a school has a good idea, they can post it on the Internet. The battle against cyberbullying is one example of how this is happening.
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