define:whitelist
Maybe google should start using their own services more?
Meanwhile "don't do evil" has been re-phrased as "reduce the unapplication of good".
Google has admitted that it uses whitelists to manually override its search algorithms, more than a year after its European corporate counsel denied the existence of whitelists when defending the company against antitrust complaints in the EU. According to Search Engine Land, Matt Cutts – the head of Google's webspam team – …
....To think that a multi-billion dollar corporation does no evil. People bashed MS for so much less in the past. Apple, MS and Google are all doing what they always did: lie, cheat, deceit, fool and offer you what THEY believe is good for you, not necessarily what you need.
You buy the products, the services and the lies if you want.
Google has been blocking or at least divirting traffic for sometime now.
They have been targetting news-farms (like the grudge report (though not the grudge report itself)) that have been critical or exposing the corruption of the US government (and others) at the request of the US government.
I flicked over to one of the US news (propaganda) channels a while back to see Mrs Clinton say that they were loosing the "info war", and was asking for more money to fight it.
Funny really, if you just told the truth you wouldnt need lies apon lies and maybe the population may believe what their would-be masters were telling them.
Then you wouldnt need a war (yet another one, how many are they loosing now?) on information.
Is there anything they wont have a 'war' with?
Nobody is forcing the use of google. Its not a public server!
So what right do the EU have to tell google how to run their business? From an end user point of view if I don't like the results google give me, I will use something else. (not bing though because that really is sh*t) . There is plenty of alternative search engines. And one result I hate is FSM damned link farms like this sh*tty UK company undoubtedly is.
So for FSM's sake tell the EU to f*ck off.
Where do you people crawl out from? Really? Anti-trust, abusing dominant positions, etc.; these are laws. You break them, you pay. That's it. (Well, unless you have connections to people in the right places, and so on, but we'll gloss over that fact.) You personally might not like these laws, but then I don't particularly like the law that says that I can't stab people I think are complete idiots in the eyes, but for your sake just because we don't like the law doesn't mean it isn't there.
"So what right do the EU have to tell google how to run their business?"
They are the government, they made a law, Google (allegedly) broke it. That's enough right, I would think.
Corporate fines are pointless. The costs are simply passed on to the customer, as they always are.
When things go badly wrong, those in charge must be made to pay the price personally. It doesn't matter whether it was their fault or not, if they were in charge then they were responsible, and if things were doing well they'd take the credit, so if things go badly they must carry the can.
Why so? Users don't care about the price of advertising, so the ones on bing/etc will still be a small quantity closer to 0.
Advertising on TV is way more expensive than on my local's toilet wall, but still doesn't make the toilet one more attractive. Unless Google really prices themselves out of the market there will still be people paying for them, because that's where the eyeballs are.
"Now imagine that you're a customer of Google in that you pay them to provide advertisements for you or your company. Still happy paying 3 times as much?"
1) No, I wouldn't be.
2) It was a joke. I thought the fact there was a sign saying "Joke Alert!" next to it would help, but apparently not. Next time I will wave a large green flag as I tell a joke.
The problem might just be linguistic ambiguity. The terms "whitelist" and "blacklist" probably have no useful meaning in the context of search, where all sites that don't break Google's ToS are permitted.
Google might sometimes manually select which algorithms are used to rank certain sites, but they can do that and still truthfully claim to not "whitelist", if the question is put to them in a naive way.
It seems pretty obvious to me
Whitelist - If it's on the whitelist it's bubbled to the top
Blacklist - If it's on the blacklist it's dragged down to the bottom (or excluded altogether)
There does seem to be an argument about the lexicology coming from Google, but as the article says, Google have used the terms themselves in the context of search. Any semantic argument is just a fallacy. Simply calling it by another name doesn't make it something else. You can't really choose to ignore a simple term such as blacklist or whitelist.
If you were to call a horse a dog, it would still be a horse.
Bing isn't there at all, presumably because you are already on it:
1) Wikipedia
2) Altavista
3) Dogpile
4) Yahoo
down to...
10) Google
Search for "search" and Google is No 4, again Bing not present.
Search for "search" on Google and it puts itself No 1. Searching for "search engine" on Google gets itself as no 6, with no 1 being Dogpile and Wikipedia all the way down at 3, for once.
Gotta agree with you there. I've never understood why Google aren't allowed to 'sell' their services by way of the search engine results
As mentioned above this is a free but private service. You know you're searching Google and shouldn't be surprised if Google stuff comes up at the top
You're not surprised when you go to Tesco's supermarket and see Tesco's Insurance, Tesco's Mobile phones for sale etc etc (sorry don't know if there's an American comparison)
I know that Google get slated on here because of some of their privacy issues, but at the end of the day they've made a damn big success of supplying a free service which they don't force you to use
I know I'm going to get flamed, please be gentle!
You're right... not the top on Bing, but then again since Bing copies Google, that's just a scrape of Google itself not putting itself at the top of the pile!
I think the big problem we have here is that Google is a sanctimonious twat that constantly preaches about how it doesn't do evil, etc. etc. and sells itself as being goody and trustworthy, above those dastards at MS and Apple, Facebook, AOL, etc. but in truth, is just as bad. Everyone knows this, but their constant harping on about their inherent lawful good alignment makes them fair game for extra enragement. Similarly, the Church has always preached about being good and holy and whatnot, so when they are shown to be choirboifiddlers, people are slightly more enraged than about normal fiddlers. It's a insinuation of trust that is then broken.
Any intervention that means different results get onto the first search page displayed could be represented as discriminating against somebody. Pushing a particular type of site further down the search because they are unlikely to be what people are looking for is just trying to give people what they want. After all, 'vertical search engine' all too often means 'one more sh*tty price comparison site that wouldn't be missed'.
Since individual searches aren't carried out manually, 'manually overriding' an algorithm by using a whitelist is just *changing* the algorithm that is used to automatically carry out searches. To get people to look at ads on its pages Google presumably has an interest in finding what they actually want so that they come back another time. That would explain, for example, promoting Wikipedia pages onto the first page that appears because people often *will* be looking for an overview of a subject.