Google envy: subsidized search engines.

AuthorDoherty, Brian
PositionCitings - Brief article

IN 2005 France and Germany decided to subsidize and develop a new Internet search engine, to go by the name Quaero (Latin for "I seek"). Germany--whose current chancellor, Angela Merkel, was never a fan of the project--backed out last December, but France plans to proceed with nearly a dozen private corporate partners. Germany, rather than sighing with relief at dodging a boondoggle bullet, will fund its own domestic search engine project, dubbed Theseus.

While Theseus will be a traditional text-based search engine, Quaero's architects hope to innovate in areas Google has so far failed to conquer--searches of sounds and images, not merely words. But France may have more in mind than a better product. A member of its steering committee has confessed to The Economist that one inspiration for the project was "to secure access that does not have to be channeled through American technology."

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