Google Gets E-Mail

Published: 2 April 2004 y., Friday
The company is testing Gmail, a free, ad-supported Web-based e-mail service that leverages the company's dominance in search. The move pits Google even more strongly against Yahoo! and Microsoft, both of which offer extremely popular free e-mail services. It also more firmly establishes Google as a portal, rather than simply a search destination. The Mountain View, Calif.-based company says a "handful" of users are currently testing the Webmail service, built on the idea that e-mail should be easy to search and store. Gmail organizes messages by "conversations" that show messages in the context of the replies sent in response to them, the company said. Google is also boasting about the spam-fighting capabilities of the service, and the unprecedented storage capacity of 1 gigabyte. A formal release date hasn't yet been set. "We're trying to fundamentally change the way people use mail," said Jonathan Rosenberg, vice president of products at Google. Rosenberg explained the company wants to free people from the need to file e-mail or deciding what should be deleted and what should be kept. To do that, he said, "you have to marry search with a very, very deep storage level." Google intends to include contextually targeted advertising within the Web e-mail client, a move likely to raise privacy concerns. To target ads, Google's technology will scan the text of the e-mail, map the content to a keyword, and serve an AdWords ad accordingly. The technique is similar to what Google uses for its AdSense program, which distributes ads to publisher sites. Anticipating concerns, Google assures users computers, not humans, analyze e-mail content to determine what ads to serve.
Šaltinis: ClickZ News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

New Worm Takes On Kiddie Porn

A new e-mail worm that's just beginning to wiggle its way across the Internet scours infected computers for image files containing child pornography, and alerts government agencies if any suspicious files are discovered. more »

A+ tool for the wireless Web

Two Teen Tech Titans Make the Grade more »

Wireless Not WAP

The news that the Meta Group has found that between 65 and 75 percent of WAP users in Europe and Asia are no longer using their WAP services via their mobile phones, is indicative of this market segment. more »

VeriSign Pulls the Plug on Domain-Policy Mailing List

Trust services firm VeriSign Inc., owner of Network Solutions Inc., the largest registry/registrar in the world, Thursday threw the switch on its long-running Domain-Policy mailing list. more »

Can Television Survive the Internet?

If a Canadian firm successfully follows through with plans to retransmit network television content over the Internet, the multibillion-dollar entertainment industry could be thrown into the same sort of turmoil that the music industry faced because of th more »

IFCC Charges 90 in Internet Fraud Cases

Criminal charges were brought against 90 people and companies Wednesday as part of a joint operation between the Justice Department and the National White Collar Crime Center -- charged with cutting down on Internet fraud. more »

VoiceStream Adds AOL's Instant Messenger

America Online, Inc.'s Instant Messenger service (AIM) is now available to VoiceStream Corp.'s 4 million subscribers. more »

A web presence

The web is often thought of either as a lawless place, filled with pornographers, gamblers, criminals and anarchists, or a vast virtual shopping mall where hordes of crazed consumers are feverishly maxing out their credit cards. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »