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Let me rephrase what I said to be more specific:

Five or ten years ago, I trusted Google to act in the best interests of the web and humanity in general. This is the specific trust that I and many others have now lost. It can now be assumed that Google will act in their own corporate bests interests whenever possible. This is not terribly surprising, as it is the basic mode of operation for companies such as Microsoft and Oracle, but it is a change for Google. I now trust Google to wiretap my communications in any and all countries with surveillance programs. I now trust Google to terminate any projects that are beneficial to the market but not to Google. I expect Google to modify public-friendly projects such as Chrome and Android to be public-hostile and Google-friendly.

I'm very sure I am not alone here. I'm talking to the people here on HN who feel the same way that I do:

How are we going to make this work? Should we fork Chrome and Android and try to get community backing for forks that we can control before it becomes too late? If we act now, we may be able to do something before we end up with the kind of stagnation we had from IE6.



> I now trust Google to wiretap my communications in any and all countries with surveillance programs.

Let's not focus anger at the wrong people. USgov is to blame for that stuff, not Google. Google is an American company and at the end of the day, they _must_ adhere to the law, right? I personally don't care if they fight the law, or obey it immediately. I only care that the law was made in the first place and which groups of people made the law. No point debating what a company should/shouldn't/did/didn't do in the face of an unfair law. Focus should be on the flaw in the system that allowed the law to be created to begin with.


An individual or a corporation is not only to be judged by the laws that are applied. It is also judged by the laws above those laws, like human rights. Someone violating those laws can by prosecuted, and in every case, they can be judged on an ethical level.

If a company bows to laws that are unethical, that lead to the possibility of a huge surveillance regime occupying the world, it is perfectly sound to focus also on the people complying and not only on the people making the laws. There is always another option.


> If a company bows to laws that are unethical,

None of you people have ever listed another alternative for them, that is based on anything but fantasy.


I think some of the anger might come from the fact that any normal person, or any normal group of people, don't have the clout to influence those kinds of laws — Google does. However, they chose to bow to those laws (and charge the government for the privilege.) If Google, the one company tech enthusiasts would trust to be on their side, doesn't want to change those laws, what chance do you think any of us have?


Please provide one shred of evidence for your belief that Google doesn't want to change those laws.


When a dictator comes to power he does so and remains in power because of the support of the people around them. Wrongs are perpetuated and maintained all in the name of 'laws'.


> Five or ten years ago, I trusted Google to act in the best interests of the web and humanity in general.

It is naive to think you're going to be able to find companies that act "in the best interests of ... humanity in general." I suggest you work to deal with companies that provide you a quality service in exchange for a fair price. You're buying a product, not looking for a spouse.


> forks that we can control before it becomes too late

Too late?

You have the entire history of Chrome and Android at your finger-tips.

If ever they do something public-hostile, you can fork immediately before then. If they ever stagnate like IE, you can fork and add your own features then.

Until then, what's your problem? Why would you even consider forking?




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