• carbotect@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    It would be worse than the burning of the library of Alexandria. So much data stored on Youtube, Gdrive, Google Photos, Gmail etc etc etc would be lost forever, without backups for probably most of it.

    The Internet Archive and some US agency (I think it was the NSA) have backups for a lot of the public-facing data. But lots of data would simply be lost media forever as well.

    I wonder tho, if some artworks that have been saved only on Google servers, will live on solely through AI algorithms, that have included these in their datasets.

    Google will never die, at least not all at once. If Google were to die sometime in the future, it would die a very slow death, with all there side-businesses being slowly sold off one by one. Plenty of time to switch to alternatives and to save all your important data (which you should probably do always regardless)

  • jarfil@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Long term? Minimal. All the niches it fills, have alternatives that would just grow to fill them in.

    Short term? Catastrophic. Losing GMail and “login with Google” would leave a lot of people with no email, no way to login to other services, and no way to recover their passwords (through email). The loss of Photo backups would also upset many, Drive and Docs would leave a lot of people and businesses without their daily tools. Search would likely be the less affected, with plenty of alternatives already to pick from.

    • christophski@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      More catastrophic than any of that would be the loss of Google Cloud Platform. A huge amount of the Internet runs on Google cloud platform, millions of businesses, even Spotify and Twitter are hosted on Google cloud platform. So unless they have a hybrid-cloud strategy, which I can guarantee for 99.99999% they do not, then a huge section of the Internet and business in general goes down.

    • Deemo@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Second question would the US gov consider google “to big to fail” and just inject a ton of money to restore it (or give enought time to break it up)?

      Kinda curious 😉

    • InfiniteLoop@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      When I read the post I was initially focused on google search but man….if gmail were to die, the pile-on effects would be seriously catastrophic and it would take a very long time for things to stabilize again. It’s not just personal emails that are handled by gmail - their corporate offerings are used by a ton of companies, and there are plenty of school districts as well that rely on it for their email (and thus associated logins). If you’ve ever worked near education, you know what a cluster that would be as all the IT departments scrambled to figure out who would be responsible for a migration.

      I don’t really see it happening, but it’s very scary to think about what would happen if gmail were to fall.

  • sculd@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Why do people here think it would just “disappear” one day? If Google is to fail it would be a years-long process and everyone would have plenty of time to migrate from their services.

    I was able to de-google is a matter of months. Btw if you are reading this post please consider moving away from Gmail now.

    • while1malloc0@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      As you said, it’s exceedingly unlikely that Google would just disappear one day. AOL still exists. Yahoo still exists. These large companies don’t disappear generally, they just become shadows of their former selves and reasonably attractive acquisition targets. And in that event, there’d be ample notice for everyone to switch to alternatives. If, for the sake of argument, Google were to actually disappear immediately, it implies something very bad has happened in the world.

  • Bookwormy@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Really, really bad for nonprofits, including schools and health centers, that rely on Google Workspace (Gmail, Docs, etc) for providing MS Office-type software for cheap or even free. And these organizations are usually understaffed in terms of IT, so it would take them a long time to get back on their feet.

  • Mustafa Albazy@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    As of today it wouldn’t be that hard, alternatives are available and some of them are as good but don’t have the same market share.

  • Brkdncr@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    A significant amount of trade skill knowledge and examples are tied up in YouTube. Does anyone remember building a deck before YT? You would go to the library, make copies of books or magazines that had a general idea on how to do it, then you would try to do it yourself and things would go wrong constantly.

    There’s a lot of this type of stuff that would simply be lost. It’s not unusual to find videos from 15 years ago that are still relevant today.

  • techviator@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    At this point it would not fail, it may be relegated by a newer service, like IBM and Xerox gave way to Microsoft and Apple. The big old corporations are still there, but they are not what they were in the 1980s.

    Or if there was a big technology shift to something they have not yet mastered they could be made irrelevant, but still exist like Kodak.

    They are too big to fail unless it is by their own failure to adapt or bad financial decisions (look at Blockbuster, Borders and Polaroid).

  • Meow.tar.gz@lemmy.goblackcat.com
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    1 year ago

    There would be some initial shock but we would quickly get over it. Personally, I would be delighted if Google were to do a complete epic fail and close down.

    • EnderWi99in@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’d prefer not to leave Apple with pretty much no competition in mobile OS if Android were to fail, unless we’re just referring to Google the search engine, and not the parent company Alphabet.

    • BigMotherTrucker@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I think you’re under estimating the importance of Google on the internet. Sure if search were to fail we’d find a way, in a probably worse off over all internet.

      Google also provides gdocs. The only good competitor to Microsoft office. Tons of businesses are extremely reliant on gdocs. It’s cloud base infra would make it’s loss more painful than the loss of ms office. We’d also lose drive, which is heavily integrated into a lot of web apps.

      We’d lose their support on android. While android would survive it would he a detriment to the software. Especially future features. As well as it’s tight integration with non phone devices.

      Google is a major funder of a long list of FOSS applications. It would seriously damage FOSS software.

      Google runs YouTube.

      • astromd@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Docs is the easiest thing to replace, honestly. It’s good, but there are so many alternatives. Sheets, however, as a connected collaborative spreadsheet is harder to replace. Excel is terrible online and tools like Airtable are too cooked for most people.

  • stratoscaster@lemmy.zip
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    1 year ago

    It really depends on how much time people would have to migrate data and swap email accounts. If it’s years, we would probably be fine although the financial and data loss would be still be incalculable.

    If we didn’t have much or any time to migrate… I don’t even want to think about it. If email accounts suddenly got shut down many people would lose banking access, among many other things. It would probably cause a global recession if I had to guess (talking out my ass on this one but I wouldn’t be surprised).

    • Big P@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      Think of how many companies use gsuite for their entire operation, or how many services are hosted entirely in Google cloud, too