The Man Who Killed Google
The Silent Greed That’s Destroying the Internet as We Know It
Google is dead.
Not in a spectacular explosion or dramatic collapse, but in a slow and silent death, murdered from within by those who swore to protect it.
And the main culprit?
Prabhakar Raghavan, the man who transformed humanity’s greatest knowledge tool into a soulless money-making machine.
We’re all passively watching the biggest assault on digital democracy in our era. And the scariest part? Almost nobody is talking about it.
What’s happening at Google isn’t natural evolution or necessary market adaptation. It’s a conscious, calculated choice to prioritize profits over the search engine’s original purpose — connecting people with relevant, quality information.
When Raghavan took over Google’s search division, he brought a vision that, frankly, terrifies me. Instead of perfecting search, he decided to transform it. And not for the better.
The result? A increasingly closed digital ecosystem where Google is no longer a window to the web, but a high wall that keeps users trapped inside its walled garden.
Let’s look at the facts:
- The death of small content creators Under…