Labels

Adjustable-rate mortgage (1) Advanced Camera for Surveys (1) Africa (1) Ahmed Ghailani (1) American (2) AOL (1) Apple (1) Arizona (1) Ashkelon (1) Australia (1) Barack Obama (4) Beef (1) BenJarvus Green-Ellis (1) Bing (1) Blogger (1) bookmark (1) Brett Favre (1) Bruce Bochy (1) Business and Economy (1) Capital punishment (1) Central League (1) Chandra X-ray Observatory (1) Chesapeake Bay (1) Chicago (1) Chicago Bears (2) Chicago Police Department (1) Christmas Island (1) CNN (2) Colby Lewis (1) Commissioner's Trophy (MLB) (1) Darren McFadden (1) Democratic Party (United States) (1) Detroit Lions (1) Diigo (1) Diphtheria (1) DPT vaccine (1) Dwarf galaxy (1) East Coast of the United States (1) Environmental movement (1) Facebook (1) Federal Housing Administration (1) Financial Services (1) Financial Times (1) Fixed rate mortgage (1) Football (4) Foxborough Massachusetts (1) Foxconn (1) Gabrielle Giffords (1) Gillette Stadium (1) Gmail (1) Google (4) Google Buzz (1) Google Maps (1) Greylock Partners (1) Groupon (1) Guantánamo Bay (1) Guantanamo Bay detention camp (1) Harry Shum (1) Hexane (1) Hubble Space Telescope (2) Huffington Post (1) HuffPost (1) Indianapolis Colts (3) Interest rate (1) Iran (1) Israel (2) Israel Antiquities Authority (1) Jason Campbell (1) John Rooke (1) Jon Burge (1) Juba Sudan (1) Jumbo mortgage (1) Large Magellanic Cloud (1) Lawsuit (1) Lewis Kaplan (1) Loan (1) Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (1) Massachusetts (1) Matt Cain (1) Matt Cutts (1) McDonalds (1) Mediterranean Sea (1) Mexico (1) Miami Dolphins (1) Microsoft (1) Middle East (1) Milky Way (1) Minnesota Vikings (1) Monday Night Football (1) Mortgage loan (1) Mortgages (1) MSNBC (1) National Basketball Association (1) National Football League (6) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (1) NBA (1) Neanderthal (1) Neftali Feliz (1) New England (2) New England Patriots (6) news (1) News Media (1) Newspaper (1) NFL (8) North Atlantic Oscillation (1) Oakland Raiders (1) Obama administration (1) Old Man Winter (1) Percentage (1) Pertussis (1) Peyton Manning (3) Pfizer (1) Philadelphia Eagles (1) Philanthropy (1) Plant (1) Poker (1) Police misconduct (1) President (1) Pricing (1) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (1) Profile (1) Randy Moss (1) Real estate (1) Refugee (1) Republican (1) Research (1) Ronald McDonald (1) San Francisco (2) San Francisco Giants (2) Sarah Parsons (1) Seahawks (1) Search (1) search engine (1) Search Engines (1) Seattle Seahawks (1) Secession (1) Social network (1) Soldier Field (1) Southern Sudan (1) Sports (7) Statue (1) Sudan (1) Supermassive black hole (1) Taco Bell (1) Tetanus (1) Texas (1) Texas Rangers (1) Thanksgiving (1) Tim Armstrong (1) Tim Lincecum (1) Tom Brady (6) Tom Cable (1) Twitter (1) Tyler Thigpen (1) United States (5) United States Chamber of Commerce (1) United States Department of Agriculture (1) United States federal judge (2) University of Virginia (1) US House of Representatives (1) Vaccination (1) Virginia Institute of Marine Science (1) Voting (1) Washington Redskins (1) Web search engine (1) White House (1) Willie Mays (1) World Series (1) World Wide Web (1) YouTube (1)
Live for Headbanger's Ball.

Fear Factory

Mortgage Matters

Sports Blog

Science Playground

Health & Nutrition

Green Planet

Space Odessy

U.S. and the Middle East Conflict

Inside the Mind

Total Pageviews

Diigo

Search This Blog

Powered By Blogger

Feb 3, 2011

Microsoft: Google Worried About Bing - Search Engines - News & Reviews - eWeek.com

Bing_Brand_Logo,MicrosoftImage via Wikipedia


Microsoft: Google Worried About Bing



Microsoft keeps firing back at Google accusations that Bing copies its Web-search results, with an executive claiming Google is worried about Bing's progress.

Rate This Article:

Google accusing Bing of copying its Web-search results, blogged a Microsoft executive Feb. 2, is possibly motivated by the search-engine giant’s fears of losing ground to its upstart rival.
“We do not copy results from any of our competitors. Period. Full stop,” Yusuf Mehdi, senior vice president of Microsoft’s onlineservices division, wrote on the Bing Community blog. “We have some of the best minds in the world at work on search quality and relevance, and for a competitor to accuse any of these people of such activity is just insulting.”
In a widely circulated Feb. 1 posting, the blog Search Engine Land detailed what it called the “sting operation” against Bing, which apparently began after Google executives grew suspicious of how closely some of Bing’s search results mirrored their own. After finding terms with no matches on either search engine, the company apparently created “honey pot” pages that appeared on top of search results for those terms. When a small portion of Bing search results seemed to mirror Google’s forced pages, the latter began leveling accusations.
“Our testing has concluded that Bing is copying Google Web-search results, and Microsoft doesn’t deny this,” Amit Singhal, a Google Fellow, wrote in a Feb. 1 e-mail to eWEEK. “At Google, we strongly believe in innovation and are proud of our search quality. We look forward to competing with genuinely new search algorithms out there, from Bing and others—algorithms built on core innovation, and not on recycled search results copied from a competitor.”
The sniping continued into the Feb. 1 roundtable discussion at the Farsight Summit, where Microsoft Corporate Vice President Harry Shum and Google Principal Engineer Matt Cutts seemed determined to verbally shred one another into bite-sized pieces.
“It’s almost like a map maker who constructs a fake street and sees if that street gets copied,” is how Cutts described Google’s operation to the audience.
But Shum seemed unwilling to accept the accusations. “It’s not like we actually copy anything; it’s more that we learn from the customers who willingly share data with us,” he shot back, “where we actually learn from the customers from what kind of queries they type.” Bing Bar and similar features are capable of feeding that sort of data to Microsoft.
In his blog posting, Mehdi reiterated Shum’s argument.
“In simple terms, Google’s ‘experiment’ was rigged to manipulate Bing search results through a type of attack also known as ‘click fraud,’” he wrote. “As we have said before and again in this post, we use clickstream optionally provided by consumers in an anonymous fashion as one of 1,000 signals to try and determine whether a site might make sense to be in our index.”
But why would Google go to such lengths? Mehdi has the answer—or at least some deliberately leading questions.
“In October 2010, we released a series of big, noticeable improvements to Bing’s relevance. So big and noticeable that we are told Google took notice and began to worry,” he wrote. “Then, a short time later, here come the honey-pot attacks. Is the timing purely coincidence? Are industry discussions about search quality to be ignored? Is this simply a response to the fact that some people in the industry are beginning to ask whether Bing is as good or in some cases better than Google on core Web relevance?”
According to research firm comScore, Bing’s share of the U.S. search market stood at 12 percent in December 2010, well behind Google’s 66.6 percent. Yahoo stood at 16 percent, although Bing powers its back-end search. Even with Yahoo’s share combined into Microsoft’s, though, Bing’s audience remains half that of Google. But Microsoft seems willing to lose millions of dollars per quarter backing its online efforts, and Bing continues to make slight but steady gains in quarterly market share.Microsoft: Google Worried About Bing - Search Engines - News & Reviews - eWeek.com
Enhanced by Zemanta

No comments:

Post a Comment

Discovery News - Top Stories

CNN iReport - Vetted

Discovery News (Video)

Discovery News - Tech News

CNN.com - Video

Latest financial news - CNNMoney.com

CNN.com

CNN.com - Most Popular

CNN.com - Crime

CNN.com - Entertainment