> I wonder if the loss of data would be worth the increase in users though.
I think that's the wrong way for Google to look at it. The question should be "how many users will I lose if I don't enable something like this in my services soon?"
The best thing American companies could do right now, especially large ones like Google, to make sure regions like Latina America or Europe don't take a "you have to build your datacenter here" stance and make things much more expensive for them, is to ensure that the data is private, even if it's on American servers, because they've adopted trustless protocols, and even they can't see what's inside.
That's what's going to stop users and institutions from other countries from bailing on American corporations like Google. So losing a little data signal from the ad tracking data is hardly a big loss in comparison, and could help Google regain at least some of the trust they lost post-NSA revelations.
> I think that's the wrong way for Google to look at it. The question should be "how many users will I lose if I don't enable something like this in my services soon?"
Since this answer is "an insignificant amount", I think you'd be happier if Google looked at it the wrong way.
Insignificant only when you look at the way things work right now. This is the problem with monopolies such as Comcast, too. They think "hey why bother improving the service, and cost us money, when we're not going to lose customers to anyone anyway"?
That only works when there's no competition or the competition isn't serious enough. But as soon as something like Google Fiber comes out, they start freaking out, because they know customers have developed a lot of resentment towards them when they kept thinking "why bother improving the service?", and they will quit them as soon as a much better alternative is available.
The same can happen to Google, too. Imagine if this was Microsoft coming out today and saying they are going to implement PGP or something even better for true privacy - and imagine then they would do campaigns like Scroogled and Gmail Man. Now do you still think it's a mistake for Google to do this from a strategic point of view, so they don't lose customers in the future?
If Google wants Gmail to remain the #1 e-mail service, then they need to do such moves first, not as a reaction to other competitors. Because by then the exodus may be too hard to reverse, if the perception of Google's services becomes much poorer and they've lost most users' loyalty (not necessarily the users themselves up to that point - but the loyalty of those users).
No, but speculation makes any conclusion you want to draw possible.
If you want to argue that Microsoft will come out and implement PGP, that's one thing. Hell, maybe Google will decide that it's more profitable to shut down Gmail. Would that also be a mistake from a strategic point of view? I couldn't fault them for it.
But all you have are wishes and fantasies. That's not strategy. That's a pipe dream.
I think that's the wrong way for Google to look at it. The question should be "how many users will I lose if I don't enable something like this in my services soon?"
The best thing American companies could do right now, especially large ones like Google, to make sure regions like Latina America or Europe don't take a "you have to build your datacenter here" stance and make things much more expensive for them, is to ensure that the data is private, even if it's on American servers, because they've adopted trustless protocols, and even they can't see what's inside.
That's what's going to stop users and institutions from other countries from bailing on American corporations like Google. So losing a little data signal from the ad tracking data is hardly a big loss in comparison, and could help Google regain at least some of the trust they lost post-NSA revelations.