Google
claims that it can help its users run their lives using the personal information
it builds up about their search habits.
The company is planning to create the world's most comprehensive database of
personal data to learn what its users like and help them make important
decisions about their lives.
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"The goal is to enable Google users to ask questions such as 'What shall I do
tomorrow?' and 'What job shall I take?'" chief executive Eric Schmidt told
The Independent.
However, he added that the technology is still being developed and would
continue to improve over time.
"We are very early in the total information we have within Google. The
algorithms will get better and we will get better at personalisation," he said.
Google
recently paid
$3.1bn for online advertising firm
DoubleClick
which uses cookies stored on a user's PC to track which sites they visit.
Google could combine this information with the user's search activity to
build up a fuller picture of their habits.
The search giant has previously stated that it will only hold information for
a maximum of two years.
The Article 29 Working Group, a European body made up of data protection
watchdogs including the UK's Information Commissioner's Office, has written to
Google asking how long it plans to retain the information in its database.
Rival search firm
Yahoo
announced its own
Project
Panama search technology in April 2007. The software builds up a profile of
visitors to Yahoo sites by monitoring their internet activity.
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