GOOGLE geknackt!
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die Google Suchseite ist über die DE Domaine nicht erreichbar, desweiteren hat wohl ein Eigentümerwechsel stattgefunden!
Als neuer Google.de Eigentümer wird eine Privatperson aus Frankfurt genannt, die von einer goneo Internet GmbH die Seite hosten lässt.
Sicher dürfte dies morgen auch einen sehr faden Beigeschmack beim Google Börsenkurs haben... ...ich setze auf deutlich sinkende Kurse... ;-)
Das gibt morgen echt ein böses erwachen für die Googler hier in Deutschland.
Google.de nach Domain-Grabbing nicht erreichbar
In der Nacht zum Dienstag ist die deutsche Adresse der Suchmaschine an eine Wiesbadener Internetfirma übertragen worden. Daher kann es im Laufe des Tages noch zu Schwierigkeiten kommen, die Suche zu erreichen. Um einen Hackerangriff soll es sich jedoch nicht gehandelt haben.
Hamburg - Die deutsche Domain der Internet-Suchmaschine Google ist in der Nacht zum Dienstag kurzfristig gekapert worden. Wie das Unternehmen in Hamburg mitteilte, war die Homepage deshalb für einige Internetnutzer in Deutschland vorübergehend nicht erreichbar. Das Problem sei jedoch „innerhalb kurzer Zeit behoben“ worden. Wie es zu der Übertragung der Domain google.de an eine Wiesbadener Internetfirma kam, war zunächst nicht bekannt. Normalerweise ist dies nur mit der Einwilligung des Domain-Inhabers möglich - oder aber, wenn die gebührenpflichtige Registrierung der Domain durch den Inhaber nicht verlängert wird. Eine Domain ist der Name, unter dem ein Internetangebot zu erreichen ist.
Es habe sich nicht um einen Hacker-Angriff gehandelt, sagte ein Google-Sprecher am Morgen. Auf Grund der Zwischenspeicher-Funktion des Internet könne es vereinzelt weiter zu Problemen beim Zugang zur Google-Seite kommen. Am erwarte aber, „dass für alle Nutzer die volle Funktionalität in Kürze wieder hergestellt ist.“ morgenpost.de/dpa
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...Palme...
schaut mal im Denic nach, da ist Google nämlich immer noch nicht als Eigentümer eingetragen, bDie Nameserver wurden zwar umgestellt aber irgend etwas ist da noch mega faul!!!
...das die Besitzer heute Nacht im Minutenrythmus gewechselt haben wird vollkommen unter den Tisch fallen lassen, die wollen nicht, das die Öffentlichkeit erfährt, das da Hacker am Werk waren... ...sehr komisch!
Bei Freunden, die ich per ICQ drauf aufmerksam gemacht habe, tauchte dieses Problem allerdings nictht auf. Die konnten ganz einfach an Google.
Hmmm, ob das nun wirklich Auswirkungen auf den Kurs hat? We will see....
Last Update: 10:08 PM ET Jan 25, 2007
-- Google Inc. is expected to report a big jump in fourth-quarter profit on Wednesday, on the strength of its dominating Internet search engine and advertising business.
For the period ended Dec. 6, Google's (GOOG :
google inc
expected to post a profit of $2.90 a share, which is an 88% increase from a year ago. Meanwhile, Google sales should top $2.2 billion, according to a Thomson Financial survey.
Google, based in Mountain View, Calif., is benefiting from a surge in the amount of Internet advertising spending, which increased about 20% last year to more than $20 billion.
Because it operates the No. 1 ranked Internet search engine, Google has also become a virtual magnet for spending on Internet search ads, which are text ads, or sponsored Web links, that appear next to its search engine results.
According to several estimates, Google's share of the Internet search market grew beyond 45% in December, which is nearly twice the market share of Yahoo Inc.'s No. 2 Internet search engine, and four times that of other top five ranked engines.
There's also growing analyst consensus that Google may exceed expectations on Wednesday, having done so during all but one of its quarters since going public.
That's especially so for its just concluded fourth-quarter, given how Yahoo, which had a tumultuous quarter that included an executive shake-up, was able to report a 13% gain in its advertising sales earlier this week.
By comparison, Google's fourth-quarter was smooth sailing.
"All boat's are being lifted," Global Equity Research analyst Trip Chowdhry said in an interview. "If Yahoo can report a 13% gain in sales, then imagine what Google's going to do." End of Story
GOOG 495.84Jan-26-2007 7.75 490.94 497.9 487.035,495,419
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Analysis Overall ShortIntermediate Long§
Bullish (0.33) Neutral (0.19) Bullish (0.42) Bullish (0.39)
Type Value Conf. §
resist. 539.42 1 §
resist. 507.14 6 §
supp 484.94 17 §
supp 467.50 4 §
supp 455.90 3 §
supp 431.56 2 §
supp 418.49 5 §
supp 401.29 2 §
supp 393.92 2 §
supp 385.11 6 §
supp 374.90 4 §
supp 368.50§2
Programs will be sold to businesses
By ROBERT WEISMAN
THE BOSTON GLOBE
Search provider Google Inc., moving to broaden its revenue beyond advertising, is poised to shake up the business software market.
The company is bundling the Web-based software programs it offers free to consumers into a premium package and, in a challenge to Microsoft Corp., it will be selling a paid version to businesses.
Google's enterprise product, which will include e-mail, calendar, word processing, spreadsheet, instant messaging and voice-over-Internet programs, is expected soon, said Dave Girouard, vice president and general manager for enterprise at the Mountain View, Calif., company.
The move comes as Microsoft rolls out Office 2007, the new version of its best-selling productivity software suite, as well as Vista, the latest upgrade of its ubiquitous operating system.
Some businesses, faced with the cost and disruption of upgrading their software, may be ready to turn to Google, said Rebecca Wettemann, vice president at Nucleus Research in Wellesley, Mass.
"I think this could pose a significant threat to Microsoft," she said. "Had this happened 10 years ago, it would have been a different story. But we see a lot of folks willing to explore the Google applications right now."
Girouard, in Boston last week to address the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council, said Google won't market its corporate product as a direct substitute for Office or Outlook, the Microsoft e-mail program. Rather, the Google software will be offered as "a set of tools that will give business people more choices," he said.
But he acknowledged that the Google choice represents a challenge to existing software suites on desktops across corporate America. Google also is selling customized business search engines.
"There's not a CEO I've talked to who doesn't want to investigate," said Girouard, a veteran technology executive. "There's curiosity, but there's also caution."
advertising
Much of the caution stems from Google's model of hosting software, such as its free e-mail application, on its own servers rather than those of its customers, meaning they would be outsourcing software programs that are critical to running their business.
Thousands of small and midsize companies, along with dozens of colleges and universities, already use a free version of Google's product called Google Apps for Your Domain, which was introduced in a beta test version in August. Google adopted the Web-based productivity suite for its own business in October. The company's executives won't give details of what they will add to make the premium package appeal to paying customers, when it will be launched, or what they will charge.
Microsoft recognizes Google's bundled applications as an effort to fashion a rival software ecosystem for enterprise customers.
"It's bigger than any one application," said Don Dodge, senior technical evangelist for Microsoft's emerging business team in Waltham, Mass., who heard Girouard's presentation to the technology leadership council. "Essentially, they're saying they'll take over your infrastructure and free you up to do other things."
Dodge said Microsoft, while continuing to improve its robust productivity applications, is countering Google by developing its own Web-based business software, called Office Live, marketed to smaller businesses. "We're both going in the same direction," he said.
Serial software entrepreneur Mike Kinkead said Microsoft's new Office and Vista releases could present an opening for Google, because many businesses will be pondering whether and how to upgrade their productivity software.
Google CEO Eric Schmidt yesterday spoke about Google's mobile plans during the company's fourth quarter earnings report. Schmidt highlighted Google's wireless deals with China Mobile (the world's biggest wireless carrier), Apple and its mapping app for the iPhone, cell phone maker Samsung, and Korean carrier SK Telecom. It was obvious was Schmidt's comments that Google is betting big on mobile.
Schmidt also made it clear that Google plans to double down on mobile search advertising in 2007:
It is clear that 2007 will be the year that mobile search query traffic grows substantially. Our current model is to use targeted text ads and we have evidence that the monetization of those ads is higher than in non-mobile uses. So it looks like the advertising revenue on a per-search query is likely to be significantly higher on mobile than on non-mobile.
Well, that's interesting for the consumer online ad market. But what about enterprise IT?
The unspoken strategy here is the consumer effect. Google plans to make headway in the desktop enterprise market by first introducing consumers to Google Apps. Then, Google will expose more IT managers to the applications, while convincing them that enterprises can safely make the switch from Office. I think Google's mobile services hook will look very similar.
As I posted yesterday, I think Google has a mobile strategy for the enterprise, but they're not coming out and showing their cards like they are in the consumer space.
Die indische Regierung befürchtet, dass Terroristen mit dem Satellitenbilder-Dienst strategisch wichtige Ziele ausspionieren könnten. Um diese Sorgen zu zerstreuen, versprach Google Earth, gefährdete Orte nur noch in schlechterer Auflösung zu zeigen.
Neu Delhi - Der populäre Satellitenbilder-Dienst Google Earth hat sich bereit erklärt, in Indien Positionen von Verteidigungsanlagen und bedeutenden Forschungsinstituten zu verschleiern. Satellitenaufnahmen dieser Orte würden künftig in einer deutlich niedrigen Auflösung angeboten, berichtete die „Times of India“ am Sonntag. Damit solle der Sorge der indischen Regierung Rechnung getragen, dass Terroristen die Software nutzen könnten, um Ziele auszuspionieren.
Neben rüstungsrelevanten Anlagen, die künftig in schlechterer Auflösung angeboten werden, sollen demnach auch internationale Flughäfen und Atomanlagen verschleiert werden. Der indische Präsident APJ Abdul Kalam hatte im vergangenen Jahr strengere Gesetze angekündigt, um das Verbreiten hochauflösender Satellitenbilder im Internet zu unterbinden.
Vor einigen Wochen hatte britische Zeitungen berichtet, Terroristen im Irak hätten Google Earth möglicherweise genutzt, um Angriffe auf britische Militärlager vorzubereiten. Diese Ziele seien anschließend dann mit Mörsern unter Beschuss genommen worden, schrieb der „Daily Telegraph“ unter Berufung auf Geheimdienstkreise.
WELT.de
Quelle: http://www.welt.de/data/2007/02/04/1200722.html
Artikel erschienen am 04.02.2007
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