Google’s features are designed to make it easier to connect people as quickly as possible to the information they seek, not to keep users on our platforms. When you don’t find what you’re looking for right away, it’s frustrating to need to do additional searches. So over the years, we’ve developed new ways to organize and display results to help you find what you’re looking for faster.
If you search for a local coffee shop, we may show you their menu, how far away they are, whether they’re busy right now, or if they offer delivery. Or if you search for the weather, we’ll show you the local temperature forecast. These results are helpful for users, and part of our ongoing work to make Google Search better every day.
Finally, we want people to use our products and services because they prefer them, not because they feel locked in. This principle is at the heart of Takeout, our data portability tool that helps people export copies of their data from more than 70 Google products, including Gmail, Drive and Photos. The principles that underpin Takeout also apply to the Data Transfer Project (DTP), an industry-wide effort that we founded and continue to lead with Microsoft, Twitter, Facebook, and Apple.