This is why Google Maps and YouTube are no longer in the core of iOS

While the exact numbers are hotly debated, it's long been said Google makes more money off iOS than they do off their own Android operating system. The reason for this is simple -- mainstream iOS users tend to use the web and apps more than mainstream Android users, and iOS is currently filled with Google services. The built-in iOS 5 Maps app is powered by Google and provides sponsored search results and a huge amount of location data to Google. The built-in iOS 5 Safari web browser defaults to Google Search, serves Google Search ads, and can provide even more varied types of data. When iOS users use those services, Google makes money and gets more data.

That's Google's business. It doesn't make money when you search its index, it makes money recording your information, aggregating it, and brokering deals for it. Search isn't the product it sells. We are. If Apple steps in and makes the queries on our behalf, and returns them on Google's behalf, Google is cut out of the important parts -- the money.

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Do we all work for Google?

Dave Winer of Scripting News wrote a thought provoking post called Maybe we're writing for Google?. Dave suggest that bloggers are actually writing for Google and the on-line news outlets.

Like the public radio stations, maybe we're fooling ourselves if we think we're not writing for Google, as they are fooling themselves into thinking they're not creating for NPR. -- Dave Winer

I think the central point of Dave's thesis is sound. Many blogs are editorials; opinions on news items or other commentary found elsewhere on the web. We write our thoughts on the story and link back to the source material driving traffic to those sites. This increases their page rank.

PageRank relies on the uniquely democratic nature of the web by using its vast link structure as an indicator of an individual page's value. In essence, Google interprets a link from page A to page B as a vote, by page A, for page B. -- Google Page Rank

As more blogs link to a story the more votes it receives and the more traffic driven to the site. It is this page ranking system that makes Google Search so useful. I can be very certain that the first 10 items in the search results are relevant to what I seek. This increase Google's value to me making me come back to Google each time. This ensures Google a market for it's advertising.

So, the question is, are bloggers really independent or just the "sucker fish" on the underbelly of the whale?