Early years and
Sergey Brin in 2003 Google began in January 1996 as a research project by
Larry Page and
Sergey Brin while they were both
PhD students at
Stanford University in
California, United States. The project initially involved an unofficial "third founder",
Scott Hassan, the original lead programmer who wrote much of the code for the original Google Search engine, but he left before Google was officially founded as a company; Hassan went on to pursue a career in
robotics and founded the company
Willow Garage in 2006. (left) with co-founders
Sergey Brin (center) and
Larry Page (right) in 2008|alt=Eric Schmidt, Sergey Brin, and Larry Page sitting together While conventional
search engines ranked results by counting how many times the search terms appeared on the page, they theorized about a better system that analyzed the relationships among websites. They called this algorithm
PageRank; it determined a website's
relevance by the number of pages, and the importance of those pages that linked back to the original site. Page and Brin originally nicknamed the new search engine "BackRub" because the system checked backlinks to estimate the importance of a site. Hassan, as well as Alan Steremberg were cited by Page and Brin as being critical to the development of Google.
Rajeev Motwani and
Terry Winograd later co-authored with Page and Brin the first paper about the project, describing PageRank and the initial prototype of the Google search engine, published in 1998.
Héctor García-Molina and
Jeffrey Ullman were also cited as contributors to the project. Eventually, they changed the name to
Google; the name of the search engine was a misspelling of the word
googol, a very large number written
10100 (1 followed by 100 zeros), picked to signify that the search engine was intended to provide large quantities of information. Google was initially funded by an August 1998 investment of $100,000 from
Andy Bechtolsheim, Page and Brin initially approached
David Cheriton for advice because he had a nearby office in Stanford, and they knew he had startup experience, having recently sold the company he co-founded, Granite Systems, to
Cisco for $220 million. David arranged a meeting with Page and Brin and his Granite co-founder Andy Bechtolsheim. The meeting was set for 8 a.m. at the front porch of David's home in
Palo Alto and it had to be brief because Andy had another meeting at Cisco, where he now worked after the acquisition, at 9 a.m. Andy briefly tested a demo of the website, liked what he saw, and then went back to his car to grab the check. David Cheriton later also joined in with around $200,000 investment. , the
markup language used for designing web pages.|alt=Google's homepage in 1998 Google received money from two other
angel investors in 1998, including
Amazon founder
Jeff Bezos, and entrepreneur
Ram Shriram. Page and Brin had first approached Shriram, who was a venture capitalist, for funding and counsel, and Shriram invested $250,000 in Google in February 1998. Shriram knew
Bezos because Amazon had acquired Junglee, at which Shriram was the president. It was Shriram who told Bezos about Google. Bezos asked Shriram to meet Google's founders and they met six months after Shriram had made his investment when Bezos and his wife were on a vacation trip to the Bay Area. Google's initial funding round had already formally closed but Bezos' status as CEO of Amazon was enough to persuade Page and Brin to extend the round and accept his investment. Between these initial investors, friends, and family, Google raised around $1,000,000, which is what allowed them to open up their original shop in
Menlo Park, California.
Craig Silverstein, a fellow PhD student at Stanford, was hired as the first employee. After some additional small investments through the end of 1998 to early 1999, with major investors including the
venture capital firms
Kleiner Perkins and
Sequoia Capital. In 1998, Page and Brin proposed to sell Google to
Yahoo for $1 million, but Yahoo refused. A more significant opportunity for Yahoo to acquire Google came in 2002.
Terry Semel, Yahoo's then-CEO, offered $3 billion to purchase the company, but Page and Brin reportedly held firm on a $5 billion valuation. After Yahoo refused to raise its offer, the deal fell through, a move that would later be considered a major strategic misstep for Yahoo.
Growth In March 1999, the company moved its offices to
Palo Alto, California, which is home to several prominent
Silicon Valley technology start-ups. The next year, Google began selling advertisements associated with search keywords against Page and Brin's initial opposition toward an advertising-funded search engine. In June 2000, it was announced that Google would become the default search engine provider for
Yahoo!, one of the most popular websites at the time, replacing
Inktomi. In 2001, Google's investors felt the need to have a strong internal management, and they agreed to hire
Eric Schmidt as the chairman and CEO of Google. In 2003, after outgrowing two other locations, the company leased an office complex from
Silicon Graphics, at 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway in
Mountain View, California. The complex became known as the
Googleplex, a play on the word
googolplex, the number one followed by a googol of zeroes. Three years later, Google bought the property from SGI for $319 million. By that time, the name "Google" had found its way into everyday language, causing the verb "
google" to be added to the
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary and the
Oxford English Dictionary, denoted as: "to use the Google search engine to obtain information on the Internet". The first use of the verb on television appeared in an October 2002 episode of
Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
Initial public offering , CEO of Google from 2001 to 2011 On August 19, 2004, Google became a
public company via an initial public offering. At that time Page, Brin and Schmidt agreed to work together at Google for 20 years, until the year 2024. The company opened on the
NASDAQ National Market under the five-letter ticker symbol GOOGL with an offering of 19,605,052 shares at a price of $85 per share. Shares were sold in an online auction format using a system built by
Morgan Stanley and
Credit Suisse, underwriters for the deal. The sale of $1.67 billion gave Google a
market capitalization of more than $23 billion. On October 9, 2006, Google acquired
YouTube for $1.65 billion in Google stock. On July 20, 2007, Google bid $4.6 billion for the wireless-spectrum auction by the
FCC. On March 11, 2008, Google acquired
DoubleClick for $3.1 billion, transferring to Google valuable relationships that DoubleClick had with Web publishers and advertising agencies. By 2011, Google was handling approximately 3 billion searches per day. To handle this workload, Google built 11
data centers around the world with several thousand servers in each. These data centers allowed Google to handle the ever-changing workload more efficiently. In May 2012, Google acquired
Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion, in its largest acquisition to date. This purchase was made in part to help Google gain Motorola's considerable patent portfolio on mobile phones and wireless technologies, to help protect Google in its ongoing patent disputes with other companies, mainly
Apple and
Microsoft, and to allow it to continue to freely offer Android.
2012 onwards In June 2013, Google acquired
Waze for $966 million. While Waze would remain an independent entity, its social features, such as its crowdsourced location platform, were reportedly valuable integrations between Waze and
Google Maps, Google's own mapping service. Google announced the launch of a new company, called
Calico, on September 19, 2013, to be led by Apple Inc. chairman
Arthur Levinson. In the official public statement, Page explained that the "health and well-being" company would focus on "the challenge of ageing and associated diseases". On January 26, 2014, Google announced it had agreed to acquire
DeepMind Technologies, a privately held AI company from
London. Technology news website
Recode reported that the company was purchased for $400 million, yet the source of the information was not disclosed. A Google spokesperson declined to comment on the price. The purchase of DeepMind aids in Google's recent growth in the AI and robotics community. In 2015, DeepMind's
AlphaGo became the first computer program to
defeat a top human pro at the game of Go. According to Interbrand's annual Best Global Brands report, Google has been the second most valuable brand in the world (behind Apple Inc.) in 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016, with a valuation of $133 billion. with Indian prime minister
Narendra Modi On August 10, 2015, Google announced plans to reorganize its various interests as a
conglomerate named Alphabet Inc. Google became Alphabet's largest subsidiary and the
umbrella company for Alphabet's Internet interests. Upon completion of the restructuring, Sundar Pichai became
CEO of Google, replacing Page, who became CEO of Alphabet. On August 8, 2017, Google fired employee
James Damore after he distributed a memo throughout the company that argued bias and "
Google's Ideological Echo Chamber" clouded their thinking about diversity and inclusion, and that it is also biological factors, not discrimination alone, that cause the average woman to be less interested than men in technical positions. Google CEO Sundar Pichai accused Damore of violating company policy by "advancing harmful gender stereotypes in our workplace", and he was fired on the same day. Between 2018 and 2019,
tensions between the company's leadership and its workers escalated as staff protested company decisions on internal sexual harassment,
Dragonfly, a censored Chinese search engine, and
Project Maven, a military drone artificial intelligence, which had been seen as areas of revenue growth for the company. On October 25, 2018,
The New York Times published the
exposé, "How Google Protected
Andy Rubin, the 'Father of Android'". The company subsequently announced that "48 employees have been fired over the last two years" for sexual misconduct. On November 1, 2018, more than 20,000 Google employees and contractors staged a global walk-out to protest the company's handling of sexual harassment complaints. CEO Sundar Pichai was reported to be in support of the protests. Later in 2019, some workers accused the company of retaliating against internal activists. On March 19, 2019, Google announced that it would enter the video game market, launching a
cloud gaming platform called
Google Stadia. On June 3, 2019, the
U.S. Department of Justice reported that it would investigate Google for
antitrust violations. This led to the filing of an antitrust lawsuit in October 2020, on the grounds the company had abused a monopoly position in the
search and
search advertising markets. In December 2019, former
PayPal chief operating officer Bill Ready became Google's new commerce chief. Ready's role will not be directly involved with
Google Pay. In April 2020, due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, Google announced several cost-cutting measures. Such measures included slowing down hiring for the remainder of 2020, except for a small number of strategic areas, recalibrating the focus and pace of investments in areas like data centers and machines, and non-business essential marketing and travel. Most employees were also working from home due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the success of it even led to Google announcing that they would be permanently converting some of their jobs to work from home The
2020 Google services outages disrupted Google services: one in August that affected
Google Drive among others, another in November affecting
YouTube, and a third in December affecting the entire suite of Google applications. All three outages were resolved within hours. In 2021, the
Alphabet Workers Union was founded, composed mostly of Google employees. In January 2021, the
Australian Government proposed legislation that would require Google and Facebook to pay media companies for the right to use their content. In response, Google threatened to close off access to its search engine in Australia. In March 2021, Google reportedly paid $20 million for
Ubisoft ports on Google Stadia. Google spent "tens of millions of dollars" on getting major publishers such as Ubisoft and
Take-Two to bring some of their biggest games to Stadia. In April 2021,
The Wall Street Journal reported that Google ran a years-long program called "Project Bernanke" that used data from past advertising bids to gain an advantage over competing for ad services. This was revealed in documents concerning the antitrust lawsuit filed by ten US states against Google in December. In September 2021, the Australian government announced plans to curb Google's capability to sell targeted ads, claiming that the company has a monopoly on the market harming publishers, advertisers, and consumers. In 2022, Google began accepting requests for the removal of phone numbers, physical addresses and email addresses from its search results. It had previously accepted requests for removing confidential data only, such as Social Security numbers, bank account and credit card numbers, personal signatures, and medical records. Even with the new policy, Google may remove information from only certain but not all search queries. It would not remove content that is "broadly useful", such as news articles, or already part of the public record. In May 2022, Google announced that the company had acquired California based, MicroLED display technology development and manufacturing Start-up company Raxium. Raxium is set to join Google's Devices and Services team to aid in the development of micro-optics, monolithic integration, and system integration. In December 2022, Google debuted OSV-Scanner, a
Go tool for finding
security holes in
open source software, which pulls from the largest open source
vulnerability database of its kind to defend against
supply chain attacks. Following the success of
ChatGPT and concerns that Google was falling behind in the AI race, Google's senior management issued a "code red" and a "directive that all of its most important products—those with more than a billion users—must incorporate generative AI within months". In March 2023, in direct response to the rapid rise of ChatGPT, Google released Bard (now
Gemini), a
generative artificial intelligence chatbot. In early May 2023, Google announced its plans to build two additional data centers in Ohio. These centers, which will be built in Columbus and Lancaster, will power up the company's tools, including AI technology. The said data hub will add to the already operational center near Columbus, bringing Google's total investment in Ohio to over $2 billion. In August 2024, Google would lose a
lawsuit which started in 2020 in lower court, as it was found that the company had an illegal monopoly over Internet search. D.C. Circuit Court Judge Amit Mehta held that this monopoly was in violation of Section 2 of the
Sherman Act. In September 2024, the
Court of Justice of the European Union (EU), based in Luxembourg, also found that Google held an illegal monopoly, in this case with regards to its shopping search, and could not avoid paying a €2.4 billion fine. The EU Court of Justice found that Google's treatment of rival shopping searches, which the court referred to as "discriminatory", was in violation of the
Digital Markets Act. In November 2024, Google announced the establishment of a new AI hub in Saudi Arabia, aiming to support the Kingdom's economic growth and technological development as part of its Vision 2030 initiative. This AI hub is projected to contribute up to $71 billion to Saudi Arabia's economy by advancing AI-driven solutions tailored to the region's specific needs and training local talent. The partnership between Google and Saudi Arabia includes collaboration with key stakeholders, such as the Public Investment Fund (PIF), to develop AI applications that will benefit sectors like healthcare, finance, oil and gas, and logistics. The initiative focuses on creating localized AI technologies, with an emphasis on integrating Arabic language capabilities and enabling widespread cloud adoption. In March 2025, Google agreed to acquire
Wiz, a New York-based
cybersecurity startup focusing on cloud computing, for US$32 billion. This cash deal would be Google's biggest ever, as well as it currently being the most expensive deal of 2025. Alphabet reportedly tried to close a deal for only $23 billion in 2024, but this fell apart after concerns about regulatory hurdles, among other issues. Wiz, a company located in the U.S. and Israel, was cofounded in 2020 by
Assaf Rappaport. The company is backed by a number of Silicon Valley venture capitalists, as well as notably being partnered with Amazon and Microsoft, as listed in their website. Google reportedly said "the deal would help artificial-intelligence companies get better security and use more than one cloud service." In July 2025, the U.S. Department of Defense announced that Google had received a $200 million
contract for AI in the military, along with
Anthropic,
OpenAI, and
xAI. In September 2025, federal judge Amit Mehta in the United States ruled that Google will not be required to divest Chrome or the Android operating system; however, the ruling barred Google from having exclusive contracts for Google Search, Chrome, Google Assistant and Gemini app products, and ruled Google must share search data with competitors. In March 2026, Google signed an energy pledge at the White House which required them to bear the cost of new electricity generation to power their data centers. == Products and services ==