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Google Pays $1 Billion For Creepy Track App 'Waze'

by Jenny Hollander

As everyone freaks out about the administration's secret surveillance programs, Google quietly acquired a brand-new company that tracks where you go, and updates everyone else about it.

We'll explain. Acquiring organizations is nothing new for Google–they absorb at least one company into the Google-universe every week–but now, they've paid just over a billion dollars for Waze, an Israeli-based mapping application. Sure, Google's probably the only place in the world that can spend a billion dollars like chump change, but why would they buy a mapping technology when Google Maps works so damn well? (As Apple will, grumpily, remember.)

The answer may be that Waze doesn't focus on improved GPS technology–Google corners the market on that one–but on real-time contributions from its 50 million users. It's like Wikipedia for traffic: anyone can contribute, and everyone benefits. People driving around with Waza can inform the app about current road closures, deadlocked traffic, and even where speed cameras are hanging out—and in turn, Waze draws a map for your route based on this staggeringly up-to-date information. Waze's most dedicated users can even edit and add mapping information–the "top 500" editor-slash-users are in direct contact with Waze's engineers–and are rewarded with "points" and "badges."

Google will probably absorb Waze's technology into Google Maps, creating an improved one-stop-shop for people who, you know, have places to be. The company HQ will remain in Israel: "for now," according to Google's official announcement. Good to meet you, Waze.

Images: Getty Images, Waze