Fred Harteis Business News - Google CEO: Free cellphones for all, if...
Fred Harteis Business News - Web search leader Google Inc.'s chief executive, Eric Schmidt, sees a future where mobile phones are free
to consumers who accept watching targeted forms of advertising.
Schmidt said Saturday that
as mobile phones become more like handheld computers and consumers spend as much as eight to 10 hours a day talking, texting
and using the Web on these devices, advertising becomes a viable form of subsidy.
"Your mobile phone should
be free," Schmidt told Reuters. "It just makes sense that subsidies should increase" as advertising rises on mobile phones.
He was interviewed following
a speech on the theme of business innovation organized by Italian student groups and the Graduate School of Business at Stanford
University.
Schmidt also said his company
was working on how to allow users to maintain basic control of their personal data.
Currently, Google stores
consumer data on hundreds of thousands of its own computers in order to provide additional services to individual users. The
company is looking to allow consumers to export their Web search history or e-mail archives and move them to other sites,
if they so choose.
"We are working to ensure
that as long as it is yours, we want to give you the equivalent of number portability," Schmidt said at another conference
earlier this week. Portability is a government-mandated program that allows consumers to retain their mobile phone numbers
when they switch carriers.
This undertaking is both
a recognition of users' right to control their personal information, an effort to head off regulatory action and a response
to an increasing trend on the Internet toward openness rather than exclusivity, he said.
"Data should never be held
hostage. We might as well get ahead of it before a law gets passed forcing us to do that."
Google is experimenting
with delivering text, brand-image and video ads onto small-screen mobile phones. It is enjoying early success in its strategy
to win phone network allies in Japan,
where TV viewing and shopping on phones is advanced, he said.
Source: Cnn.com
About Fred Harteis: Fred Harteis leads Harteis International. Fred Harteis has a background in agriculture and has created many successful business ventures.