October 27, 2005 6:36 AM PDT

All your 'base' are belong to Google

by Margaret Kane
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Google is testing a new service that would allow consumers to post and make searchable any type of content, the company confirmed this week.

google

Screenshots of the "Google Base" service surfaced this week, immediately prompting speculation that the search giant was getting ready to take on...someone.

Was the new offering the precursor to a new e-commerce site that could wipe eBay and Craigslist off the map? Or maybe Google was developing a massive information storage service?

For its part, a Google spokeswoman stated that the site was merely experimenting with a way to "provide content owners an easy way to give us access to their content."

But as bloggers and analysts have had more time to think about it, one theme emerged--by combining search, commerce, community and other features, the new offering had the potential to be something far bigger than a simple online store.

(So why exactly is the headline of this item ungrammatical? It's a reference to an infamously tin-eared translation in the English-language version of a Japanese video game--a phrase that in turn gave birth to a separate Internet fad. Read all about it in this entry in Wikipedia.)

Blog community response:

"Rather than scrape existing databases, Google is going to encourage people, businesses, and organizations to submit their listings directly to Google. This avoids any potential 'cease and desist' orders like the one that Oodle.com recently received from Craigslist.org for scrapping its listings. By actually owning a structured database that's clean from the start...Google can focus on what it does best--getting loads of consumers and businesses to use its services."
--Charlene Li's Blog

"I think if Google is simply aggregating user listings, like it aggregates text CPC ads, then Craigslist has less to fear from Google Base. If Google Base is going to build a community, like Tribe or MySpace, then everyone has a lot to fear."
--A VC

"Rather than create a bunch of distinct services, Google could potentially provide a platform, into which any number of files could be placed, accessed/shared, and saved. Picasa, GMail, Blogger, Google Maps, etc, etc, etc simply become inputs to your own database."
--Gary Stein

Margaret is news editor for CNET News, based in the Boston bureau. She also oversees the CNET Blog Network. E-mail Margaret.
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by quickregister June 5, 2009 2:51 PM PDT
I have started to experiment with Google Base and it is working. I think you need to upload hundreds of products though to get meaningful results. I did a little video explaining how to set up a Google Base product one at a time.
http://www.quickregsiter.net/googlebase

Thanks

Matt
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