[LINK] google fixes 'some' link bombs
Jan Whitaker
jwhit at janwhitaker.com
Fri Feb 2 12:00:05 AEDT 2007
http://www.rawstory.com/printstory.php?story=4597
Bush no longer 'miserable failure;' Google defuses 'link bombs'
02/01/2007 @ 12:21 am
Filed by RAW STORY
US President George W. Bush is no longer Google's top response to
Internet searches for "miserable failure."
Queries for French military victories no longer take one to "defeats."
Links to web pages about Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da
Silva no longer pop up in searches in Portuguese for "drunken despot."
And Russian Internet users that type "enemy of the people" into
Google are not directed to a biography of that nation's leader, Vladimir Putin.
The Mountain View, California-based search colossus says it has
finally defused such "Googlebombs," search term results rigged by
clever outsiders to make comic or critical commentary.
"By improving our analysis of the link structure of the Web, Google
has begun minimizing the impact of many Googlebombs," Ryan Moulton
and Kendra Carattini of Google write in a company weblog.
"Now, we will typically return commentary, discussions, and articles
about the Googlebombs instead."
Google described the programming change as "pretty small," saying
there were fewer than 100 well-known Googlebombs, also referred to as
"link bombs" because they provide links to unrelated websites under
the guise of answering the query.
For example, a Google search for French military victories had
prompted a replica of a search engine page and the question "Did you
mean military defeats?" as though the searcher's original quest was in vain.
Searches for "failure," "fiasco," and "miserable" in various
languages resulted in links to various countries' current or former leaders.
A search in Danish for "primitive troll" provided a link to an
official page for that nation's prime minister, while the query
"mouton insignificant" (unimportant sheep) led searchers to a
biography for the premier of Quebec, Canada.
"Because these pranks are normally for phrases that are well off the
beaten path, they haven't been a very high priority for us," Moulton
and Carattini explained in their blog.
"But over time, we've seen more people assume that they are Google's
opinion, or that Google has hand-coded the results for these
Googlebombed queries. That's not true."
Rather than deactivating Googlebombs by hand, Google engineers
developed a search algorithm to neutralize them.
"Computers can process lots of data very fast, and robust algorithms
often work well in many different languages," Moulton and Carattini wrote.
"That's what we did in this case, and the extra effort to find a good
algorithm helps detect Googlebombs in many different languages."
Google ranks search results based on a mathematical model that
factors in key words and popularity of websites.
While Google has known about link bombs for years, it had previously
expressed reluctance to defuse them individually because it didn't
want to tinker with the objectivity of its Internet search model.
Google cautioned that some link bombs will slip past the algorithm
net, which will be tightened based on feedback from searchers.
Jan Whitaker
JLWhitaker Associates, Melbourne Victoria
jwhit at janwhitaker.com
business: http://www.janwhitaker.com
personal: http://www.janwhitaker.com/personal/
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'Seed planting is often the most important step. Without the seed,
there is no plant.' - JW, April 2005
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