Optimizing News Sites For Google News 422
malibucreek writes "More trouble for Google News? Yesterday, it was Google News censoring stories for China. Today, the Online Journalism Review details a potential conservative bias in the site's algorithm for news search results. The story also includes some details about how Google ranks stories on its news page. Turns out that on Google News, backlinks do *not* improve search positioning."
Re:It's google's job to give balanced news (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:It's google's job to give balanced news (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't see Google as the place to go when I want to find out what is happening today. I find it the place to go when I read a blurb on one news site and want to get more details or an alternate view from another site.
It would be like using a stock exchange ticker to decide what company is making news
Crosshairs (Score:4, Interesting)
Pre-IPO couple of college kids that worked hard and are smart and made the world better.
Post-IPO, this company is the new MS, look at all the sinister, conspiring things they do, always knew they were no good.
Whats next Google supports terrorism? I guess whatever sells papers or click throughs.
True. (Score:3, Interesting)
Optimizing is Evil. (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway, in the briefing for the product, I found out that the name they had given to the product was very generic, stright out of the english dictionary (for sake of the story, lets call the product "Apple").
So I asked the marketing guy and one of the directors who was there why they had chosen "Apple" when if soembody were to google Apple, they would get 1001 links about the computer company, then about the fruit, before people would get to their company.
The answer? They said they paid a company who promised that for their fee, they could get the company's page on their product called "Apple" within the top 4 search results on EVERY search engine. (Fat chance)
My point is, optimizing is an evil business every step of the way. If you ask me, it's downright fraud.
Re:Article text has excellent theory. (Score:3, Interesting)
See, that's why there's a conservative bias. Liberal media labels Bush as the "antichrist", "devil", "shrub", "@sshole"... any number of derogatory terms; and each time some term is used is one less time the name is mentioned, and thus you get a very low ranking.
I've seen anti-bush articles where his name is not even mentioned because anyone reading the article *knows* who it's talking about... I'd guess such wouldn't score high enough to appear on Google News.
Re:In other news... (Score:4, Interesting)
People are damned cynical. I think that Google will be recieving a lot of flak in the future for doing what it should do as a company: make a profit. If leaning towards the right makes them a buck, then I find it hard to believe they'd do otherwise. It may not be right, but it is their right.
Re:Our polarized society is the problem (Score:1, Interesting)
Yup. I'm an Evangelical pastor and frankly I have no place for this kind of crap. And if I catch anyone in the congregation spreading this insanity, we will have words.
I'm freaking sick of politicans co-opting the good news for their political gain; and watching Christians eat it up without thinking.
And the Republican party is, by far, the most guilty of this type of religious manipulation.
Re:So.... (Score:5, Interesting)
"I think what you're seeing is an odd little linguistic artifact," said Zuckerman, former vice president of Tripod.com and now a fellow at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet and Society who studies search engines. The chief culprit, he theorized, is that mainstream news publications refer to the senator on second reference as Kerry, while alternative news sites often use the phrase "John Kerry" multiple times, for effect or derision. To Google News' eye, that's a more exact search result.
Basically, google is doing exactly what we told it too: looking for the most links with 'john kerry' in it.
"Computers are out to destroy us. This can be proven by the fact that they do exactly what we tell them."
Re:The bias is in american culture (Score:3, Interesting)
I went to school in Pennsylvania, which is fairly middle of the road overall, where my public school principal informed my senior class, a month after the Supreme Court ruled clearly that it was completely illegal to even have a baccalaureate ceremony in a public school, that anyone not attending the one that we were having wouldn't be graduating. Real liberal there.
As for the 67% liberal population, can you please explain George Bush's greater-than-33% approval rating? Are you suggesting that about a third of all liberals love Bush?
Re:It's google's job to give balanced news (Score:4, Interesting)
Obviously the content is current events, however, Google doesn't write any of the content. Where does their responsibility lie?
It's really simple; hell, it's even in the subject you're responding to. As a news aggregate, just as with a search engine, bias is a bad thing for Google. I run an aggregate of my own (plug, plug [subsume.com] :-), and the very idea that I should favor one site over another (aside from the stated goal of who gives a more timely announcement) is completely bankrupt of any ethical responsibility my site has to it's users.
The old standard of "appearance of impropriety" holds at least as well for Google, too. Same is true for Slashdot article selection. If anyone is getting kickbacks or has some other unstated criteria for selection, that is irresponsible and should not be tolerated. If it's just a bug in their code, a fix will keep their reputation intact. If it's intended at any level, it just gets added to the scorecard that people have started due to questionable action as of late on Google's part.
Re:It's google's job to give balanced news (Score:3, Interesting)
It's a tough call to say what's "balanced". A rather crude method is to say "50-50". But that doesn't take into account the "fringe" parties, independants, etc. Should all candidates be given equal airtime? Personally, I don't think that would be ideal - I really could care less about hearing about most of the other candidates.
Suppose, then, we come up with some sort of hand-waving idea of balanced being relative to the vote that each candidate will receive. Ignoring for a minute the obvious time-continuity issues, this would definitely be keeping the fringe to the fringe, but with the obvious downside of forcing a two-party system. No one else will get enough airtime to warrant voting, keeping them perpetually on the outside of the electoral process.
Maybe what we really want is "unbiased"? Report all the news, all sides, and let the populace decide. Sounds reasonable - even though some^Wmost voters will ignore the information, it's their choice to be uninformed, rather than the news outets' choice. There would be two ways about this: first, you can just take all the press releases and release that as news (the easy way), or you can research and look for all sides (the hard way). Which one do you think most people would do? Yeah. And if you do research, inevitably, you'll find some sides utterly unbelievable, and fail to report them in an unbiased manner, if you report them at all.
Short version: easier said than done, I think.
Re:The bias is in american culture (Score:4, Interesting)
Not to mention--but I couldn't find the source--that I think over 50% of newspapers endorsed Bush in 2000.
Re:So.... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:It's google's job to give balanced news (Score:2, Interesting)
If only more people would watch a larger variety of news stations (like parent's example CBS & Fox), they'd actually get more balanced information. But most people watch the news that appeals to their predetermined political prejudices.
Re:It's google's job to give balanced news (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So.... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm curious as to how "liberal" slashdot is. I have never seen a link to The Nation or Common Dreams, but have seen links to WSJ, Fox, etc. I never see articles about socializing healthcare, the legal system, etc. If anything slashdot reflects the opinions of educated city dwellers/tech workers/gen x/y'ers.
To some people the lack of "The Bible is the inerrant word of the one true God" and "We must privatize everything!" equals a liberal bias, when in reality those positions are extremist. I mean, I hate to be the one to break it to you, but the Republicans went from a conservative party to something different altogether after Goldwater. The current party is now in bed with fundamentalists, has the biggest deficit ever with the VP claiming "deficits don't matter," tries hard to expand government to get into your bedroom and your religion (gay marriage), etc. I wont even go into how the Neocon movement is clearly anti-conservitive as it involves something akin to empire building, big spending, and anti-isolationism.
Re:It's google's job to give balanced news (Score:5, Interesting)
All of us geeks have just learned how to search on google news to get a ballanced index, search for "kerry" + "john kerry" that's all