Google's coronavirus site launches amid Trump confusion

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightGetty ImagesA coronavirus testing project by Google has been thrown into confusion over comments made by US President Donald
Trump.He said the company was developing a website for all Americans to check whether they should get tested.However, Google's sister
company Verily had actually been working on a pilot limited to California's Bay Area.Two sites launch on Monday - but only the localised one
contains screening features for tests.Image copyrightProject BaselineImage caption Verily's website, Project Baseline,
is now live The Verily site was "in the early stages of development and planning to roll testing out in the Bay Area, with
the hope of expanding more broadly over time", the company said in a statement."We will take the time to assess operations at pilot sites in
the Bay Area before rolling out to additional sites."The website, Project Baseline, launched today but appears to already have run out of
appointments for testing.The other site is being built by Google itself.On Friday, the President Trump promised a nationwide website that
would be at the core of the government's screening process and claimed 1,700 Google engineers had made "tremendous progress"."Google is
helping to develop a website," he said."It's going to be very quickly done - unlike websites of the past - to determine whether a test is
warranted and to facilitate testing at a nearby convenient location." On Sunday, Google chief executive Sundar Pichai confirmed a website
dedicated to "education, prevention, and local resources nationwide" would be rolled out on Monday, in partnership with the US government
But the separate Verily website remained in the early stages of its pilot, limited to California's Bay Area, although the plan was to expand
to other locations over time."In this unprecedented moment, we feel a great responsibility to help," Mr Pichai said
"We'll keep doing everything we can to deliver on our mission and help people take care of themselves and their communities."As well as
these two websites, Google has been promoting health information on its homepage and YouTube, as well as updating Google Search and Maps
regularly with any business or school closures.Last week executives from Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Apple and Facebook met officials at
Downing Street to discuss their role in the coronavirus crisis.Google has also launched a feature for UK users searching for different
health conditions and symptoms that prioritises NHS information above other search results in an effort to combat misinformation.