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Google image search does not allow you to search for specific usage rights. Neither does Google Blog search.
Google Video search does not allow you to find Creative Commons content (the best you can do is select the video price to be “free”).
Google Book Search allows you to search “full view books” only. This covers material that’s in the public domain, among other types of books. There is however no specific Creative Commons license, nor does Google always seem to understand such a license when it’s attached to the book (my own CC-licensed book made a good test case, as it’s not available in full view on Google Books).
The Google News advanced search page doesn’t have a usage rights option (even though some of the Google News sources are Creative Commons licensed, e.g. Brain Blogger).
Google has lots of oneboxes, handing out instant maps, answers, news bits. However, they don’t suggest Creative Commons (or GNU/GPL/BSD/public domain licensed) content when you search for, say, free pictures of dogs. In similar vein, a suggestion like “Are you looking for images to share only?” blurb might make sense for certain Google Image search queries.
The Google Toolbar could have an icon that changes its appearance when you’re on a Creative Commons enabled page (these pages usually carry CC-license metadata to identify themselves to bots).
The Google 3D Warehouse for SketchUp-created models doesn’t have an advanced search page, and models do not show licensing terms (the site is generally intended to share, though).
The Google SOAP API is unsupported nowadays anyway, so it’s too late to ponder API support for the “usage rights” option of Google web search.
When you upload a video to Google Video, you can only select it to be public or unlisted. Other than that, you’ll agree that you don’t upload “copyrighted or obscene material.” There’s no Creative Commons option.
When you edit Picasa Web Album properties, or upload photos, you can’t choose from a Creative Commons license.
You can publish documents using Google Docs & Spreadsheets, but there is no Creative Commons checkbox.
Google Page Creator allows you to create web pages, but there’s apparently no support for adding CC-licensing.
Google Reader doesn’t seem to make anything special out of Creative Commons licensed blog posts; though there is a “share” button below each post, there’s no indicator of the post’s sharing license.
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