Google Watch - Evil Google - Microsoft, Not Google, Makes Most Ethical List (Sweet Irony?) | eWeek

Microsoft, Not Google, Makes Most Ethical List (Sweet Irony?)

Écrit par
Clint Boulton
Clint Boulton
Mar 18, 2011
2 minute read
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Business ethics think tank Ethisphere has declared its list of top 110 most ethical companies, which “demonstrate real and sustained ethical leadership within their industries, putting into real business practice the Institute’s credo of ‘Good. Smart. Business. Profit.'”

Over 3,000 businesses of all types were urged to apply. A methodology committee of “leading attorneys, professors, government officials and organization leaders” concocted the list.

Guess what? For the software maker category, Google isn’t on it. As you can see from the brief list to the right, Microsoft is on it, which has the blogosphere hopping.

Why? Because we in the media like cruel twists and delicious ironies and it’s twisty and ironic that Google of “Don’t Be Evil Fame” didn’t make the list but convicted monopolist Microsoft did. Silicon Alley Insider explains why Microsoft made the cut.

See the irony? Well, it could have something to do with the fact that Google is viewed as anti-competitive by other businesses in the broader search market.

Dropping smaller rivals in search results is the claim, which is possibly illegal and certainly unethical if true; regulators in the U.S. and Europe are taking Google to task for this.

Regulatory infractions, corporate philanthropy and peer review are also part of the mix. Google is darn good on the first two, probably not so good on the third if you ask businesses fighting to improve their page rank.

I don’t care what these companies do to each other or what they think of each other. If companies provide me with Web services I value and articulate our data consumption relationship — in the sense that Google, Facebook or whoever saves my data in exchange for a free service without subjecting — we’re quite simpatico.

I don’t care that Google steals Microsoft employees, or that Facebook steals Google and Microsoft employees. Just give me the apps and other tools I need to flit around the Internet like a rock star and we’re just fine.

Violate my privacy (and that of others) and prepare to face the class-action lawsuit (Google Buzz, Facebook Beacon, anyone?).

Respect our data relationship or charge me fair prices for subscriptions, and I don’t care what you do.

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