A Peek Into the Google 182
A number of people sent in the most recent story from the NYTimes (reg yada yada) from a reporter
who visited the Google-land. Interesting story, no real information though, but the ability to see what people are thinking about and interested in is pretty cool.
alike? (Score:5, Funny)
Its amazing that most people of the world search for similar things, irrespective of language! Good they put filters.... otherwise a normal visitor would be shocked that most of the world wants naked ladies.
Hey Taco (Score:5, Interesting)
How about an E2 [everything2.com] zeitgeist [google.com]? Cream of the cool is close, but it would be interesting to see what people are searching for as well as what they are contributing. I sometimes even check E2 before Google, because at least there is some active quality control on E2 nodes, unlike the web at large.
Re:Hey Taco (Score:2)
Re:Hey Taco (Score:3, Funny)
I remember once being a little..... erm.. drunk, and amusing myself in a uni computer lab having altavista , hotbot, yahoo and excite all simultaneously searching for "sausage politics". It struck me as rather bizare having the finest computer dataminers inthe world all simultaneously searching for left-wing sausages. self abuse hey? *hICK!*
Re:Hey Taco (Score:2)
Who can guess what the top query from canada is?
Jepp... you got it... "britney spears".
There should be a section on zeitgeist called: Top site to cause a Denial-Of-Service on other sites... I'm sure
We wouldnt want to shock anyone now would we? (Score:4, Interesting)
Wouldnt it be better to let people know the true extent of peoples e-desires rather than filtering them out for fear of suprising some prudes?
Jan.
Re:alike? (Score:2)
Good for sharpening your search skills, but I spose it also just makes me a geeky loser in the end.
-------
tickedy boo my son, tickedy boo. [wallpaperscoverings.com]
Re:alike? (Score:2)
One tried (Score:1, Interesting)
Didn't work though. They ran out of time before they could get an answer.
Re:One tried (Score:3, Interesting)
I was on the .us version of the show (back when it was still cool) but didn't make it into the "hot seat." I think some of the other contestants had a "Google buddy" at home but I said to hell with it, they either know the answer or they don't. Just get five people--at least here they let you have five--who are quick, have good hearing, and whose areas of knowledge don't overlap too much.
Seriously, have you ever seen the "Google buddy" tactic actually work? It takes way more than 30 seconds to find the data and communicate both ways. Wetware is still faster than that.
Re:alike? (Score:3, Funny)
Why? Isn't that kind of, you know, evolutionarily genetic?
Re:alike? (Score:2)
Re:alike? (Score:1)
Re:alike? (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, you have to look at it encoded, but I just see brunet, red-head, wet teen.....
Ability to see (Score:2)
this together with the link to a registered users only article is pretty funny.
Re:Ability to see (Score:1)
How hard is it to just type in "(free registration required to view link)" or something like that? If the registration stuff is so annoying that you can't just deal with it, then stop linking to sites that require it.
Google: /. Yes, NYT, No (Score:4, Interesting)
Privacy issues with google (Score:5, Interesting)
"Google does not comment on the details of legal matters involving Google," Mr. Brin responded.
This is most interesting, and one can only assume that since they're US based, at some point they will/can be forced to give out data for crossreferencing Gov't databases. Imagine [insert gov't agency here] gets hold of the IP-address of [insert (suspected unamerican/criminal/terrorist) person here] they can easily extract profiling information on the individual.
Scary
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:2)
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:2, Interesting)
There is also a 'Unhappy with your result?' link that appears every now and then through which you can sent a message to an operator or sth.
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:1)
They will not get all the sites you visited, but they will get most of them.
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:2)
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:1)
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:2)
~Philly
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:2)
As such it could be of tremendous value to entertainment companies or retailers. Google is quiet about what if any plans it has for commercializing its vast store of query information. "There is tremendous opportunity with this data," Mr. Silverstein said. "The challenge is defining what we want to do."
I guess we'll see more tailored spam in the future, wether it's email, mail or by phone... it's going to be more of "what you want".
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:2)
Personally I don't mind the one or two tailored messages a week I get advertising a product there's a good chance I might actually want to buy. Part of my job is procurement so it actually makes my job a bit easier.
What I object to is the 3 hundred messages a day advertising Viagra, breast enlargement, penis enhancement, MMF schemes and Nigerian money laundering.
YMMV
Stephen
how to make yourself private? (Score:1)
Re:how to make yourself private? (Score:1)
Re:how to make yourself private? (Score:1, Informative)
Probably not, since any network guru would still know which ISP leases that block of addresses, and The Government could go to the ISP and say, "who leased this IP address at such-and-such time?".
Re:Privacy issues with google (Score:1)
Yeah, just look at this data:
Pinned up next to the GeoDisplay are two charts depicting Google usage in the United States throughout the day. For searches as a whole, there is a single peak at 5 p.m. For sex-related searches, there is a second peak at 11 p.m.
I mean 5pm - Schools out, 11pm - 'Hunny' is off to bed
Imagine if the Terrorist got hold of this!
I mean, the children will have won!
No wait, what about the Terrorist?
Article body (Score:4, Informative)
The projected display, called Live Query, shows updated samples of what people around the world are typing into Google's search engine. The terms scroll by in English, Chinese, Spanish, Swedish, Japanese, Korean, French, Dutch, Italian - any of the 86 languages that Google tracks.
people who shouldn't marry "she smoked a cigar" mr. potatoheads in long island pickup lines to get women auto theft fraud how to.
Stare at Live Query long enough, and you feel that you are watching the collective consciousness of the world stream by.
Each line represents a thought from someone, somewhere with an Internet connection. Google collects these queries - 150 million a day from more than 100 countries - in its databases, updating and storing the computer logs millisecond by millisecond.
Google is taking snapshots of its users' minds and aggregating them. Like a flipbook that emerges when successive images are strung together, the logged data tell a story.
So what is the world thinking about?
Sex, for one thing.
"You can learn to say 'sex' in a lot of different languages by looking at the logs," said Craig Silverstein, director of technology at Google. (To keep Live Query G-rated, Google filters out sex-related searches, though less successfully with foreign languages.)
Despite its geographic and ethnic diversity, the world is spending much of its time thinking about the same things. Country to country, region to region, day to day and even minute to minute, the same topic areas bubble to the top: celebrities, current events, products and computer downloads.
"It's amazing how similar people are all over the world based on what they are searching for," said Greg Rae, one of three members of Google's logs team, which is responsible for building, storing and protecting the data record.
Google's following - it is the most widely used search engine -- has given Mr. Rae a worldview from his cubicle. Since October 2001, he has been able to reel off "anthrax" in several languages: milzbrand (German), carbonchio (Italian), miltvuur (Dutch), antrax (Spanish). He says he can also tell which countries took their recent elections seriously (Brazil and Germany), because of the frenzy of searches. He notes that the globalization of consumer culture means that the most popular brands are far-flung in origin: Nokia, Sony, BMW, Ferrari, Ikea and Microsoft.
Judging from Google's data, some sports events stir interest almost everywhere: the Tour de France, Wimbledon, the Melbourne Cup horse race and the World Series were all among the top 10 sports-related searches last year. It also becomes obvious just how familiar American movies, music and celebrities are to searchers across the globe. Two years ago, a Google engineer named Lucas Pereira noticed that searches for Britney Spears had declined, indicating what he thought must be a decline in her popularity. From that observation grew Google Zeitgeist, a listing of the top gaining and declining queries of each week and month.
Glancing over Google Zeitgeist is like taking a trivia test in cultural literacy: Ulrika Jonsson (a Swedish-born British television host), made the list recently, as did Irish Travelers (a nomadic ethnic group, one of whose members was videotaped beating her young daughter in Indiana) and fentanyl (the narcotic gas used in the Moscow raid to rescue hostages taken by Chechen rebels in late October).
The long-lasting volume of searches involving her name has made Ms. Spears something of a benchmark for the logs team. It has helped them understand how news can cause spikes in searches, as it did when she broke up with Justin Timberlake.
Google can feel the reverberations of such events, and others of a more serious nature, immediately.
On Feb. 28, 2001, for example, an earthquake began near Seattle at 10:54 a.m. local time. Within two minutes, earthquake-related searches jumped to 250 a minute from almost none, with a concentration in the Pacific Northwest. On Sept. 11, searches for the World Trade Center, Pentagon and CNN shot up immediately after the attacks. Over the next few days, Nostradamus became the top search query, fueled by a rumor that Nostradamus had predicted the trade center's destruction.
But the most trivial events may also register on Google's sensitive cultural seismic meter.
The logs team came to work one morning to find that "carol brady maiden name" had surged to the top of the charts.
Curious, they mapped the searches by time of day and found that they were neatly grouped in five spikes: biggest, small, small, big and finally, after a long wait, another small blip. Each spike started at 48 minutes after the hour.
As the logs were passed through the office, employees were perplexed. Why would there be a surge in interest in a character from the 1970's sitcom "The Brady Bunch"? But the data could only reflect patterns, not explain them.
That is a paradox of a Google log: it does not capture social phenomena per se, but merely the shadows they cast across the Internet.
"The most interesting part is why," said Amit Patel, who has been a member of the logs team. "You can't interpret it unless you know what else is going on in the world."
So what had gone on on April 22, 2001?
That night the million-dollar question on the game show "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" had been, "What was Carol Brady's maiden name?" Seconds after the show's host, Regis Philbin, posed the question, thousands flocked to Google to search for the answer (Tyler), producing four spikes as the show was broadcast successively in each time zone.
And that last little blip?
"Hawaii," Mr. Patel said.
The precision of the Carol Brady data was eye-opening for some.
"It was like trying an electron microscope for the first time," said Sergey Brin, who as a graduate student in computer science at Stanford helped found Google in 1998 and is now its president for technology. "It was like a moment-by-moment barometer."
Predictably, Google's query data respond to television, movies and radio. But the mass media also feed off the demands of their audiences. One of Google's strengths is its predictive power, flagging trends before they hit the radar of other media.
As such it could be of tremendous value to entertainment companies or retailers. Google is quiet about what if any plans it has for commercializing its vast store of query information. "There is tremendous opportunity with this data," Mr. Silverstein said. "The challenge is defining what we want to do."
The search engine Lycos, which produces a top 50 list of its most popular searches, is already exploring potential commercial opportunities. "There is a lot of interest from marketing people," said Aaron Schatz, who writes a daily column on trends for Lycos. "They want to see if their product is appearing. What is the next big thing?"
Google currently does not allow outsiders to gain access to raw data because of privacy concerns. Searches are logged by time of day, originating I.P. address (information that can be used to link searches to a specific computer), and the sites on which the user clicked. People tell things to search engines that they would never talk about publicly - Viagra, pregnancy scares, fraud, face lifts. What is interesting in the aggregate can be seem an invasiion of privacy if narrowed to an individual.
So, does Google ever get subpoenas for its information?
"Google does not comment on the details of legal matters involving Google," Mr. Brin responded.
In aggregate form, Google's data can make a stunning presentation. Next to Mr. Rae's cubicle is the GeoDisplay, a 40-inch screen that gives a three-dimensional geographical representation of where Google is being used around the globe. The searches are represented by colored dots shooting into the atmosphere. The colors - red, yellow, orange - convey the impression of a globe whose major cities are on fire. The tallest flames are in New York, Tokyo and the San Francisco Bay Area.
Pinned up next to the GeoDisplay are two charts depicting Google usage in the United States throughout the day. For searches as a whole, there is a single peak at 5 p.m. For sex-related searches, there is a second peak at 11 p.m.
Each country has a distinctive usage pattern. Spain, France and Italy have a midday lull in Google searches, presumably reflecting leisurely lunches and relaxation. In Japan, the peak usage is after midnight - an indication that phone rates for dial-up modems drop at that time.
Google's worldwide scope means that the company can track ideas and phenomena as they hop from country to country.
Take Las Ketchup, a trio of singing sisters who became a sensation in Spain last spring with a gibberish song and accompanying knee-knocking dance similar to the Macarena.
Like a series of waves, Google searches for Las Ketchup undulated through Europe over the summer and fall, first peaking in Spain, then Italy, then Germany and France.
"The Ketchup Song (Hey Hah)" has already topped the charts in 18 countries. A ring tone is available for mobile phones. A parody of the song that mocks Chancellor Gerhard Schröder for raising taxes has raced to the top of the charts in Germany.
In late summer, Google's logs show, Las Ketchup searches began a strong upward climb in the United States, Britain and the Netherlands.
Haven't heard of Las Ketchup?
If you haven't, Google predicts you soon will.
Re:Article body (Score:1)
How can they tell that? It looks to me as if the links point straight at the real site, instead of using some kind of redirect. Of course they can tell it for the ones that hit their own cache, but what about the others?
Re:Article body (Score:1)
Google occasionally have links that go through a redirector. I'm not sure how it chooses who to give these links to, but I have seen them fairly rarely.
I assume it's a way of just taking a sample of what links were clicked, and using that to guage usefulness of search algorithms. They could use it to tell how often people click the first link, or a link on the first page, or end up many pages into the search, and use that to improve the search algorithms.
Jennifer "8." Lee (Score:2)
Re:Jennifer "8." Lee (Score:2, Informative)
It appears her parents gave her the middle name "8" for originality and good luck. 8 being lucky in China.
Re:Jennifer "8." Lee (Score:2)
Re:Jennifer "8." Lee (Score:2)
So what is the world thinking about? (Score:2)
Sex, for one thing."
It is amusing when people looking for sex find this link:
Data Mining the Zeitgeist (Score:4, Informative)
Which is why the Internet Police in China have set-up a proxy server running an adaptive filtering matrix between the mainland Googler and the oracle in Mountainview.
http://go.openflows.org [openflows.org]
Amazing (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess that you can really find out what is going on in the world by looking at the logs of Google.
Re:Amazing (Score:1)
Re:Amazing (Score:1)
Good luck to the people at Google trying to figure out why the wildebeest suddenly soars in popularity. =)
Re:Amazing (Score:2)
It's amazing how few of the searches that are described in the articel I have executed myself.
I guess that means I am strange.
Query performance (Score:1, Interesting)
How many query do they get per hour?
It looks like it's a pretty interesting job at any rate: tap into the conciousness of the global brain...
Read an interview from Google's... (Score:5, Interesting)
When asked how they can get better support for Linux, he answered, "We're Google, if we need to know something about the Linux we are running, we can usually find the guy who wrote the code and ask him."
Must be nice...
Re:Read an interview from Google's... (Score:2, Interesting)
One of the main troubles of Google, imo, is that it archives blindly stuff. So you end up with 4+ results pointing to for instance the same message in a mailing list, because the archives are duplicated.
And not to mention pages totally unrelated to what you seeking.
Maybe some 'smart' (a word quite popular lately) merging of results would be cool... Been in the talks for maaany years, still waiting for the search engine that can reply to 'who is the President / Prime Minister / chief-dictator / and so on
And when searching for someone, they hafta be lucky to find the latest updated page
Re:Read an interview from Google's... (Score:1)
Re:Read an interview from Google's... (Score:3, Insightful)
Why is this so spectacular? I have regularly chatted with the developers of OSS apps I use. Go to Sourceforge and get used to it! If you're thinking about the applications custom-written for Google, well, then its really scary if you (and 3 or 4 others) think its amazing that they get to ask questions to the developers they *hired* to write this stuff!
Re:Read an interview from Google's... (Score:1)
Live queries (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Live queries (Score:1)
It was Excite [searchenginewatch.com], but they stopped in 2001.
Re:Live queries (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Live queries (Score:1)
There are two types of "spying". The first is filtered, and the second is naked!
This reminds me of (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This reminds me of (Score:2)
Re:This reminds me of (Score:2)
Re:This reminds me of (Score:1)
Re:This reminds me of (Score:1)
display hack (Score:3, Interesting)
Women have no taste!!!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Top women searches:
Britney Spears, Pamela Anderson, Jennifer Lopez, Madonna & Aaliyah.
And top men searches:
Nostradamus, Bin Laden, Enimen, Michael Jackson & Howard Stern.
Is beard in?
Great Google Searches (Score:5, Funny)
OK so this is a bit off topic but I found the following searches on google rather interesting:
gfasd: 36 matches
fgasd: 24 matches
adfsfds: 10 matches
sdfassdf: 6 matches
fsdaasdf: 4 matches
So what are these searches? Well, just jam your fingers on the keyboard and do a search on that. Most people jam their fingers in the same place (left hand, middle row) and if enough people fill in web pages with garbage then matches are bound to be found. The surprise is the number of times this works.
Google Searches #2
Try using Google with the following links:
Swedish Chef [google.com]
Elmer Fudd [google.com]
Pig Latin [google.com]
Klingon [google.com]
H4xor (the
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:5, Funny)
I tried
"sdggfsdf"
And got:
Your original search: sdggfsdf returned zero results.
The alternate spelling: sdfgsdf returned the results below.
With 634 matches! Some of them in Russian!
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:5, Interesting)
It's an interesting unbasied "who's who" list with a few surprises.
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:2)
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:1)
(#45)
http://www.google.com/search?q=http&hl=en&lr=lang_ en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&start=40&sa=N [google.com]
This is High Treason! Mod him down! ;-)
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:2)
Ebay
That's a suprise to me.
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:1)
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:2)
weblog (Score:4, Informative)
Great job, Aaron Swartz!
Fh
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:3, Informative)
i forget who, but an engineer from google discredited this claim. a search for "http" isn't an objective view of the page rank of all the sites in google's database. it only considers sites that are linked to with the "http://" protocol specifier. so if a link to slashot is written "www.slashdot.org", it won't show up in the list, but if its written "http://www.slashdot.org" then it will.
this introduces a bias because most links with the "http://" qualifier are high traffic sites like yahoo and cnn.
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:2)
You can't have a link to slashdot written without the http:// - it is not a valid URL. Most if not all web browsers will refuse to follow it.
The only sites you will miss by entering http are those served with ftp or gopher, which should be roughly nothing in this day and age.
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:1)
Japanese [slashdot.jp]
Re:Great Google Searches (Score:1)
You'd be surprised at how many letter a's in a row there are in some pages...
I couldn't help myself.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I couldn't help myself.. (Score:1)
New Poll: On NY Times Articles I (Score:5, Funny)
- karma whore and post the article.
- wait for the unregister link.
- wait for the karma whore to post the article.
- don't both to read and just post whats on my mind.
- wait for cowboyneal to read it to me.
Re:New Poll: On NY Times Articles I (Score:2)
Re:New Poll: On NY Times Articles I (Score:2)
Re:New Poll: On NY Times Articles I (Score:2)
GeoDisplay (Score:3, Interesting)
No real information? (Score:5, Insightful)
Philosophy and Technology (Score:5, Insightful)
Wow. Google has implemented Plato's Cave.
http://www.vrc.iastate.edu/why.html
But after all, people like to be peeping toms... (Score:1)
Real Insight from "Google Guy" (Score:4, Interesting)
Offtopic, but... (Score:1)
Re:Offtopic, but... (Score:1)
http://legalminds.lp.findlaw.com/list/cyberia-l
Nice way to say hello (Score:1)
Universal Slashdot login (Score:2)
I propose that there should be one common slashdot login at the NYTimes.
- Martin
Re:Universal Slashdot login (Score:1)
Japanese google zeitgeist (Score:5, Informative)
1. Ragnarok (e.g. Ragnarok Online, an MMORPG)
2. Gundam
3. ADSL
4. Tanaka Kouichi (A pioneer in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy who recently won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry)
5. Nobel Prize
6. JA Net banking (online banking at JA bank)
7. Harry Potter
8. Shimadzu Factory (FYI, Tanaka Kouichi works at Shimadzu)
9. Ring tones
10. North Korea
LiveQuery is the Terminal Screen of the Matrix (Score:1)
If you string together several Live Query columns, you something very similar to Matrix terminal screen.
Big Broother under a cute logo? (Score:3, Interesting)
"Google currently does not allow outsiders to gain access to raw data because of privacy concerns. Searches are logged by time of day, originating I.P. address (information that can be used to link searches to a specific computer), and the sites on which the user clicked. People tell things to search engines that they would never talk about publicly -- Viagra, pregnancy scares, fraud, face lifts. What is interesting in the aggregate can seem an invasion of privacy if narrowed to an individual.
"So, does Google ever get subpoenas for its information? 'Google does not comment on the details of legal matters involving Google,' Mr. Brin responded." -- New York Times, 28 November 2002
Question: What would be the fastest, most efficient, and most revealing approach to data mining the Internet?
Answer: Pay Google for a back-door feed on who's searching for what.
Question: Has Google ever, in their entire existence, issued any sort of statement suggesting that their sense of public responsibility would preclude being used in this way, or that the information they collect would never be sold for a price?
Answer: No.
Question: If Google decided to sell out, could they be held liable for privacy violations? Would we even find out about it?
Answer: No. The Homeland Security Act exempts companies from lawsuits or government prosecution after they turn over information to the new agency. Such information is exempt from the Freedom of Information Act. Officials who release this information can get up to six months in prison and a $5,000 fine.
Google Profit! (Score:2)
1) Pipe livequeries through fancy perl script.
2) Figure out what stocks/commodities/stuff to buy/sell before everyone else does.
3) Profit!
Didn't put ??? for 2), coz people may mistake it for the perl script
Re:damn registration (Score:2)
J.
Re:damn registration (Score:2)
So by your logic:
If I am not forced to register, I will.
If I am forced to register, I will not!
Google and "First Post" (Score:2, Funny)
Manchester (Score:2)