In this case when I go to https://www.google.com I expect that any traffic can only be seen by Google, the entire reason I typed "https" was specifically so that it was only a conversation between me and the site that I'm connecting to and no other middle men. It is of no consequence what company it is; it would be inappropriate for Google to be seeing my encrypted traffic to hotmail and it would be inappropriate for Microsoft to see my encrypted traffic to gmail.
Google continuing to serve traffic under those conditions is misleading and Google (or any other site that supports https) shouldn't allow it.
In this case when I go to https://www.google.com I expect that any traffic can only be seen by Google, the entire reason I typed "https" was specifically so that it was only a conversation between me and the site that I'm connecting to and no other middle men. It is of no consequence what company it is; it would be inappropriate for Google to be seeing my encrypted traffic to hotmail and it would be inappropriate for Microsoft to see my encrypted traffic to gmail.
Google continuing to serve traffic under those conditions is misleading and Google (or any other site that supports https) shouldn't allow it.