That's almost a mythically BIG "if" when dealing with a huge data-sucking machine like Google, so probably 'NO' due to being bitten several times by various revenue-loving streams like big tech. Let's face it, many tiny if not most (bigger) tech outfits exist to build a bigger subscription database or advertising-based business. Since the birthing of the commercial (.com) internet back in the 90s most online concerns from Bloggers to online shopping malls have these holier-than-thou ULAs and so-called mission statements that try to define their internet existence meaning, However, they almost all end up selling user information when they go under (cash out?) or morph into some other information highway business, right, almost all on the internet do this practice. (That is, the legacy economy many times no longer exists, that too got morphed by internet progress?? Also, many times science advancements too. E.G. GPS among other technical information advancements. Chips anyone?)
Considering all the advantages of worldwide communications in this modern era, it's also an information minefield out there, we have to be careful where we step. :-)
Kudos though to Wikipedia's info empire, the Archive.org with its "WayBack" machine, and even the concept of internet search in microseconds, even if Google's search machine is a tool for the billionaire class to engage in an online auction selling our info (profiles) in way less than 1 second on the clock of time, every time we click on anything. It's the big 👁 in the sky. :-)