By
Elinor Mills
Monday, October 10 2005 11:12 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,39276458,00.htm
It could take 300 years to index all the world's information and make it
searchable, Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt predicted during the weekend at the
Association of National Advertisers annual conference in Phoenix.
"We did a math exercise and the answer was 300 years," Schmidt said in
response to an audience question asking for a projection of how long the
company's mission will take. "The answer is it's going to be a very long time."
Of the approximately 5 million terabytes of
information out in the world, only about 170 terabytes have been indexed, he
said earlier during his speech.
Schmidt admitted to the audience of advertisers that when he first arrived at
Google four years ago, he viewed ads from a skeptical consumer standpoint. Shown
ads on Google, he thought "You've got to be kidding! People actually click on
this stuff? And they do."
He said he quickly realized, though, that "ads actually do have value if you
can figure out the right ones to show."
Technology and the interactivity it enables, such as the ability to measure
an Internet ad's success rate by viewing how many people click on it, is
shifting power in the advertising industry from executives at corporations to
consumers, he said.
"The power is moving from us to the end user; it's occurring by the power of
the personal computer, by the power of the cell phone," he said. "Thirty years
ago we would make the decision (about ads). Now, that person, that individual
makes that decision."
Advertising is increasing on the Internet and cable television, and showing
modest to no growth in newspapers and magazines, Schmidt said. "The cost per
revenue dollar of online ad systems is so much lower than" for offline advertising, he said.
Of the estimated US$283 billion spent on advertising in the United States,
US$11.3 billion is spent on the Internet, with Google taking in about 1 percent of
that, Schmidt said.
Despite the slowdown in print advertising, Google is testing a campaign in
which the search giant is using its audience targeting technology to help
customers place ads in magazines, he said.
Schmidt predicted there will always be ads on the Internet but that there may
be an "ad-free subset" of the Internet that might offer a different way for
people to pay for things, such as using micro-payments.
During the question-and-answer session, audience members turned to social,
ethical and legal topics. One question dealt with criticism Google and Yahoo
have received for cooperating with Chinese government censorship efforts.
"The technology is neutral. It can be applied for good or evil," he said.
"Overwhelmingly, the message of technology is a positive one."
Asked to explain why Google has submitted a proposal to provide the city of
San Francisco with free wireless Internet service, Schmidt said the plan arose
out of work several engineers did on a system that would allow companies to make
money offering such a service. "It's an interesting experiment," he said. "If it
scales and if it is successful, we think it's going to be very good for the world."
Schmidt also responded to a question about complaints Google has endured,
including a lawsuit filed by the Authors Guild over its plan to digitize books
and make them searchable online. Google's Print Library Project adheres to U.S.
copyright law, he said. A "fair use" provision under the law allows for excerpts
of copyrighted material to be used and Google will only display snippets of
copyrighted text, he said. "That model seems to be durable," he said. "We're
very, very careful if copyright is owned..."