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There is so little information here. Maybe it was just an accidendt that will get corrected? You know, even the largest site on the Internet makes mistakes. Google isn't immune just because they have infinity dollars.
And maybe his account was removed for another reason. Maybe it had something to do with child pornography or some kind of government/police inquiry, for which Google can't be held responsible?
But no, Google shuts out a single user, and suddenly they have something to learn from startups. And the fact that Twitter is even mentioned in this post is somewhat hilarious. Perhaps what Google should really do is come up with a Fail Whale of their own, and just direct banned users to that instead.
Lijit knows that service and value to our publishers is a major differentiator that we can and will provide. Google is an amazing success story (and a great partner of ours), but i can imagine it becomes increasingly more difficult for them to provide the personal touch that is lacking in the internet space.
It's just the challenge of "getting big", really, really big!
Todd Vernon / CEO Lijit
1.) Once you're locked out of Google accounts, if you're like me and you live in the clouds, you lose access to a lot of things. In MY case, it would be deadly:
*mail (yes, I have backup)
*calendar
*docs
*reader
to name a few.
2.) Without SOME sense of contact with a human, this is a bit upsetting. Nothing in Nick's account was mission critical to the business, but it *was* a tool he was using for doing things on the web. Aren't lots of us?
B
Got friends working at Google to file bugs for me. Nothing. Been told privately that because I was the only one suffering from this strange Gtalk problem, they haven't paid it any attention.
Sent in troubleshooting request via the very difficult to find Help/Contact us form. Nothing.
I love Google, I just wish they could afford the time to pay attention to the little things that won't necessarily change the world, but might make someone -- or a few people -- happy. Or hire someone to do this, dammit.
http://tinyurl.com/6ylrmp
The fact that these companies can act like this is terrible. Soon a lot of them will think that it's acceptable behavior!
Shame there will never be a group of disgruntled customers in their parking lot.
IT's hard to drive there from asia, europe and such...
Serious issue for Google to sort out, obviously.