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  • A person holds an iphone showing the app for Google chrome search engine. PA Photo. Picture date: Friday January 3, 2020. Photo credit should read: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire (Photo by Andrew Matthews/PA Images via Getty Images)

    Google promises better search results for recipes, jobs and shopping

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    08.18.2020

    It also rolled out Assistant-powered audio messages on Android.

  • Big box store closed due to Coronavirus.  Composite image.

    Google displays unemployment benefit details based on your state

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    04.16.2020

    The search engine will display official guidance on claiming benefits by state.

  • vzphotos via Getty Images

    Google dresses up search for the Oscars with a dedicated hub

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    02.05.2020

    This year's Academy Awards ceremony is only a few days away and Google's getting ready for the big night with Oscar-focused updates to Search and Assistant. Search for "Oscars 2020" on your phone starting today and you'll see a dedicated hub for the awards with this year's nominees and past winners in each category. You can also get some insight into what it's like to receive an Academy Award nod from nominees through some short Cameos videos.

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    Google's search results will highlight original reporting

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    09.12.2019

    Google has updated its search algorithm to give more prominence to original reporting. The company's vice president of news, Richard Gingras, wrote in a blog post that it should be easier for people to find the origins of a news story.

  • SIPA USA/PA Images

    Google recreates Apollo 11's command module with AR

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    07.10.2019

    The 50th anniversary of our first successful trip to the moon is fast approaching. And Google, which rarely shies away from marking a significant moment in history, has laid out some of the ways in which it'll celebrate the half-century since Apollo 11 reached the lunar surface.

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    Now it's easy to order food in Google Assistant, Search and Maps

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    05.23.2019

    Starting today, you'll be able to order food via Google Assistant, Search and Maps in the US. At the outset, Google is working with DoorDash, Postmates, Delivery.com, Slice and ChowNow, with support for Zuppler and more on the way.

  • Google makes it easier to find work-from-home jobs

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    04.24.2019

    While truck drivers can't operate their rigs from a home office just yet, telecommuting is an increasingly attractive option to many people for a host of reasons (wearing pajamas all day, for one thing). But having to slog through job postings to find ones that embrace remote work can be an exasperating experience. So, Google is aiming to make the working-from-home employment hunt more palatable by refining its job search options.

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    Shocking deaths top Google's trending searches in 2018

    by 
    AJ Dellinger
    AJ Dellinger
    12.12.2018

    As is the annual tradition, Google has released its list of top trending searches for the year. If 2018 was dominated by anything, it was untimely and unexpected celebrity deaths. The top 10 trending searches included DJ and musician Avicii, rapper Mac Miller, legendary comics creator Stan Lee, celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain, controversial rapper XXXTentacion, theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking, and fashion designer Kate Spade -- all of whom passed away during the year.

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    Tim Cook defends Apple's search deals with Google

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    11.19.2018

    Apple's Tim Cook is always on hand to explain why his company is better at privacy than its rivals (read Google and Facebook), which have been mired in data scandals of late. When Cook said personal information is being "weaponized against us with military efficiency," while calling on GDPR-style rules in the US, it was clear who his targets were. Reality, however, is a lot more complicated than that. Though Apple doesn't have a targeted advertising business, it still stocks Facebook's apps in its App Store and receives billions from Google to make it the default search engine on its platforms.

  • Google

    Google can tell you how and where to vote on Election Day

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    11.06.2018

    You can add Google to the list of tech companies nudging you to get out to the polls today. The big G's search engine is the go-to source for our most pressing, and prosaic, questions. And once again, it can act as your Election Day info hub, built around your search queries.

  • Google

    Google's Halloween game puts a ghoulish twist on 'Slither.io'

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    10.31.2018

    Head on over to Google.com today and you'll be able to play an interactive doodle game to mark Halloween. Great Ghoul Duel is a team multiplayer showdown set in a haunted house that sees two squads of neon ghosts munching "spirit flames". Each little light you eat gets added to your tail, with players snatching them from one another en route to depositing them in their respective zones for points. The team with the highest score at the end wins.

  • Google

    Google simplifies search data controls in wake of security issues

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    10.24.2018

    As part of its efforts to bolster security following the Google+ data exposure, Google is giving you access to data controls from directly within its most-used product: Search. Starting today, you'll be able to review and delete your recent Search activity, get quick access to relevant privacy controls in your Google Account, and be able to learn more about how Search works with your data. These options will be available from within Search on desktop and mobile, and in the Google app for iOS and Android in the coming weeks.

  • NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Google appeals its $5 billion EU antitrust fine

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    10.09.2018

    In July, the European Commission fined Google a record-setting €4.3 billion ($5 billion) for antitrust violations regarding its Android OS. Now, Google's pushing back on that fine. "We have now filed our appeal of the EC's Android decision at the General Court of the EU," the company told Reuters. Google said back in July that it planned to pursue an appeal and it argued at the time that its product has given consumers more choice, not less, like the EC has claimed. "Android has created more choice for everyone, not less. A vibrant ecosystem, rapid innovation and lower prices are classic hallmarks of robust competition," it said.

  • AOL

    Just Google it: The journey from search to desktop OS

    by 
    Cherlynn Low
    Cherlynn Low
    09.27.2018

    It's hard to imagine, but only 10 years has passed since Google launched the Chrome browser in September 2008. A world without Chrome feels like a distant past -- it's now the most popular browser by a wide margin. Barely a year after Chrome debuted, Google introduced Chrome OS. "It's our attempt to re-think what operating systems should be," Sundar Pichai, then the VP of product management, wrote in a blog post at the time. He described Chrome OS as an open-source desktop operating system that was a "natural extension" of the browser.

  • Joshua Roberts / Reuters

    Google confirms secret Dragonfly project, but won’t say what it is

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    09.26.2018

    Representatives from a number of major tech companies appeared before the US Senate Committee on Commerce, Energy and Transportation today, discussing data privacy and concerns over consumer protection. Google sent its new chief privacy officer, Keith Enright, to the hearing, who was questioned multiple times over rumors that Google is working on a censored search engine for China. VentureBeat reports that Enright confirmed a project codenamed Dragonfly, though he stopped short of discussing what that project entailed. "I am not clear on the contours of what is in scope or out of scope for that project," Enright told Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX).

  • SEASTOCK via Getty Images

    The Google graveyard: Remembering three dead search engines

    by 
    Jessica Conditt
    Jessica Conditt
    09.25.2018

    Buffy the Vampire Slayer was the first show on American television to use the word "Google" as a transitive verb. It was 2002, in the fourth episode of the show's seventh and final season. Buffy, Willow, Xander and the gang are trying to help Cassie, a high school student who cryptically says she's going to die next week. In Buffy's dining room, they search through hard copies of Cassie's medical records and find nothing noteworthy. Willow, tapping away on a thick white iBook, turns to Buffy and asks, "Have you Googled her yet?" Xander replies, jokingly, "Willow, she's 17." "It's a search engine," Willow explains, because that's something that had to be done in 2002.

  • Google

    Google Lens is coming to Image search results

    by 
    Cherlynn Low
    Cherlynn Low
    09.24.2018

    Google is celebrating the twentieth birthday of its search engine, and is continuing to make changes to the way we find information. Searches are getting more visual, and the results that Google delivers need to cater to what we're looking for -- like a stunning gown Jennifer Lopez wore at a red carpet, for example. Google will launch Featured Videos and further emphasize its existing AMP Stories in search. It'll also bring Google Lens to its image results so you can do more with the photos you find on the search engine.

  • Google

    Google's new activity cards will save your previous searches

    by 
    Cherlynn Low
    Cherlynn Low
    09.24.2018

    It's been twenty years since Google launched its search engine, and today it's hard to imagine a world without it. At an event in San Francisco today, the company announced new features to Search that would change the way we use the internet in the decades to come. The next chapter of search, according to the company, will be powered by AI, and starts with a new "activity card" and collections of results. It will use information from your previous searches to show you what you've already found, and surface relevant data for activities it looks like you're about to start.

  • NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Google defends search policy following Trump accusations

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    08.28.2018

    In response to accusations tweeted today by Donald Trump, Google has issued a statement saying that it doesn't tailor its search results based on political ideologies. Across two tweets, the president claimed that Google searches for "Trump News" surfaced mostly negative coverage of him from left-wing media outlets and that the company was "suppressing" conservative voices. "This is a very serious situation-will be addressed," he wrote.

  • Google

    Google refines search to automatically show relevant subtopics

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    08.16.2018

    Google periodically refines its search functionality to provide better -- or more necessary -- information. If you use it to look something up now, you'll see something new: A panel with basic details and a slew of subtopics contextually relevant to your inquiry. If you don't see it immediately, don't worry, as the improved search is expected to roll out in the next few days.