Glass. The name is not spectacular, but the intelligent glasses that Google is now developing in California are. They recognize buildings, faces and images and deliver all the information that can be found about them via Google’s powerful search engine, as a permanent subtitle to your world.
At a glance you know everything about the people and things around you; Google makes the paranormal completely normal. But social codes, privacy laws, security policies, there is hardly any domain of society that will not have to be rethought and reorganized if the Google glasses are to go ahead.
“We want Google to be the third part of your brain” – Sergey Brin
On August 19, 2004, Google shares were listed on the American technology exchange Nasdaq for the first time. Google’s IPO list to data almost didn’t happen because Larry Page and Sergey Brin had given an interview to Playboy magazine just before the introduction.
A violation of the so-called ‘quiet period’ for the listing of the new share. Just before the IPO, it is forbidden to reveal information that could influence the price of the share. In order to calm the mood, Page and Brin hastily included the interview in their prospectus and the issue of Google shares could still take place.
In the Playboy interview, Brin and Page spoke about how they saw Google’s future. Brin in particular made a memorable statement:
“You want access to as much [information] as possible, so you can discern what is most relevant and correct. The solution isn’t to limit the information you receive. Ultimately you want to have the entire world’s knowledge connected directly to your mind.”
A statement that Brin later repeated in 2005 in David Vise’s book “The Google Story”
“Why not improve the brain? Perhaps in the future, we can attach a little version of Google that just plugs into your brain.”
Larry Page has a similar vision. Although he doesn’t talk about plugging Google into the human brain. He believes much more in compliance with gdpr regulations a Google that will eventually equal the human brain. On May 1, 2002, Page explained his vision of Google’s future in a Q&A session at Stanford University:
“The mission that I laid out for you will take us a little while, since that’s AI-Complete. I don’t know if you guys know what it means singapore lead It means artificial intelligence. […] If you solve search, you can answer any question, that means that you can do basically anything.”