One big reason Windows 10 should scare Google
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But one big question remains: Why would Microsoft give Windows 10 away for free?
Here's one possible answer. And it should keep Google awake at night.
Google gives you all of its goodies for free, from search to Gmail to YouTube, because it wants to harvest your personal data and use it to serve you more ads.
Meanwhile, with Windows 10, Microsoft is trying something a little different. Rather than treating the operating system itself as the cash cow, as it used to, it's now all about subscription services, microtransactions, and all kinds of other ways it can make money off of you.
One of those money-making methods is advertising. Mostly search advertising on Bing. (Microsoft recently offloaded its display ad business.)
By default, Microsoft collects a whole bunch of information from you and anonymously shares it with advertisers. If you sift through Microsoft's privacy statements, that includes the content of emails, instant messages, documents uploaded to OneDrive, the searches you do with Bing, and so on.
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But a lot of these services - these potential sources of personal information - are baked in to Windows 10. If Microsoft ships 1 billion Windows 10 devices in three years, as it hopes to do, that's a lot of personal information to sell ads against.
Google got where it is by giving customers a whole bunch of useful tools that work on just about any device that they have, all tied together by one account that makes it easier to track them across devices.
Similarly. Microsoft is making all of its best stuff - Office, Outlook, even the Cortana digital assistant that comes with Windows 10 - available for free on Android and iOS, requiring just a Microsoft login. Microsoft can sell hyper-accurate information to advertisers, because you'll be using your same account on desktop and mobile alike.
And speaking of Cortana, the whole sales pitch there is that she gets smarter the more that you use her, presenting you with ever-more-relevant news, links, and information.
Of course, that also means that Microsoft learns even more about you, and can deliver that to advertisers. Plus, by default, Cortana and the new Edge browser both use Bing as the default search engine, goosing up the number of actual ads it delivers to users.
If you're worried, Microsoft has a site to opt out of advertising, and you might want to go to the "Privacy" page in Windows 10's Settings menu and turn everything off.
Matt Weinberger
In short, despite being way behind in search market share, Microsoft hasn't given up on Google's game: providing lots of web services that it can turn into a profitable advertising business. And Windows 10 itself could be the secret weapon that makes it a credible threat to the Google advertising empire.
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