It used to be that Google was constantly in the news; now Google constantly is the news.
A huge portion of the stories we generally hear about concern the search giant; and we also increasingly hear about those stories because the algorithms of Google News, the company's news service, have selected them for us.
Most of the traffic that goes to, say, news websites comes via Google searches. And if you've followed the news recently, you'll have noticed both that this very young American company is dominating the news, and that the coverage is mostly very critical.
There was the tale, for instance, of a bust-up between Google and Sweden over the meaning of the word "ungoogleable". The Swedes wanted to include it in their annual list of new words, but defined it as a term that cannot be found by any search engine. Google quite reasonably said that was unfair, and the term should refer only to Google searches. It all came to nought and the Swedes dropped the idea.
In recent weeks, we've had horror stories, too, about Google Glasses, which apparently turn the material world into a virtual soup, Google Shoes, which send people mad when they find their feet talking to them, and Google's smart watch, which will cause time to fold in on itself and the universe to collapse under pressure from the fourth dimension.