Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google Security Spam Technology

Google Fires Back About Search Engine Spam 270

coondoggie writes "The folks at Google are taking issue over spam and the quality of Google searches, which some claim has gone down in recent months. Today on Google's official blog, Principal Engineer Matt Cutts said, 'January brought a spate of stories about Google’s search quality. Reading through some of these recent articles, you might ask whether our search quality has gotten worse. The short answer is that according to the evaluation metrics that we’ve refined over more than a decade, Google’s search quality is better than it has ever been in terms of relevance, freshness and comprehensiveness. Today, English-language spam in Google’s results is less than half what it was five years ago, and spam in most other languages is even lower than in English.' Cutts also explained that the company has made a few significant changes to their method of indexing."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google Fires Back About Search Engine Spam

Comments Filter:
  • Pshaw (Score:4, Funny)

    by biryokumaru ( 822262 ) <biryokumaru@gmail.com> on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:28PM (#34958342)
    My anecdotal evidence trumps your empirical evidence any day!
    • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

      More like, bullshit agregators that link you to a search for your google search on their site could be considered "fresh", "comprehensive", and maybe even "relevant", or could be considered SPAM.

    • Re:Pshaw (Score:5, Interesting)

      by mwvdlee ( 775178 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:40PM (#34958512) Homepage

      It would, if Google include an option to filter out entire domains from search results. Google could then simply monitor these domains and try and figure out why people take the trouble of filtering them out.

      • Re:Pshaw (Score:4, Informative)

        by Zerth ( 26112 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:53PM (#34958686)

        if you add -site:example.com it removes all hits from that site. I have noticed recently that I no longer have to exclude sites that I used to, such as those that just copy excerpts from other message boards.

        Perhaps they are watching.

        • Would be nice if you could set something in http://www.google.ca/preferences?hl=en [google.ca] once, and then you would never see these sites though. If someone knows a setting that I'm missing that will let you do this, please let me know here.
        • Not enough, damned expert's exchange! I had to download a grease monkey script and everything, seriously screw those guys. And have you tried searching for a name of an executable? "HURRR CLICK HERE TO FIX XYZ.EXE RELATED ERRORS"
          NO! I just want relevant information on the damn executable not traps for computer illiterate people and the shovel ware the sites are peddling.
        • Re:Pshaw (Score:4, Funny)

          by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @04:33PM (#34959260) Homepage Journal

          Perhaps they are watching.

          Oh please, you make it sound as if google had vans full of surveillance equipment roaming the streets, spying on everyone! Just more of the usual tin foil haberdashery from the conspiracy theory crowd.

          • Yeah really - and next some paranoid crackpot will be saying that Google is *scanning the air* recording electromagnetic signals from inside of people's houses. We need to get this population on better meds.

        • Re:Pshaw (Score:4, Interesting)

          by dremel ( 304553 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @05:22PM (#34960046) Homepage
          I use a Google Customized Search Engine (CSE) configured to promote StackOverflow and block ExpertSexchange. Here, you can try it out: www.google.com/cse/home?cx=007350804174195462206:7etfz1pyl-s . I've set it as my default search engine in Chrome and never have to think about it again.
      • They used to but they took it out in favor of only allowing people to star items. Why they did this is beyond me. Maybe it gave too much of a chance to game the system. But honestly, it was the only thing that made my searches relevant again. It was the only truly useful feature they've added since, well ever.

        When I search for a few coding terms I dont want 10 different sites that have scraped their contant from stackoverflow, I dont want 10 representations of the same unanswered email, or 10 experts-
        • Would love to see this come back - I too was happy with the feature they introduced to downvote results.

          There should be some way for users to down-vote these scammer parasites like efreedom.com which just serve content from other sites with adverts. Just as we collectively downvote spam, which ensures most people never see it, we should be able to do the same with search results.

        • You've got me thinking of what an "adblock" for google searches would look like. Hmm. If every google search POST is intercepted in the browser by this adblock tool and then stuffs a bunch of additional commands onto it:

          So the search "maytag washing machine broken" would get turned into:

          "maytag washing machine broken -site:junkadvice.com -site:bottomfeeder.com -site:priceaggregator.com"

          I wonder how many of those you can ship to google and still have it pay attention to them?

          I guess alternatively you could s

    • Re:Pshaw (Score:5, Insightful)

      by martin-boundary ( 547041 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:50PM (#34958626)
      There's no way to know what kind of empirical tests they do. So your anecdotal evidence may well measure a different aspect that is being ignored in their tests.

      Empiricism is all about saying "Here's what I did, and those are the results.". It's not empirical to say "Trust me, I did something I can't tell you about, and the results are really good".

    • Whew! (Score:2, Insightful)

      by bonch ( 38532 )

      "Our tests say we're better than what our customers are saying!"

    • That's what I tell the missus. Her anecdotes can't be true, according to my metrics, my sexual performance is not just great, it improved by an order of two in the last 5 years.

      Of course, I can't tell you or her what my numbers are, or what I measured, or how, because it's proprietary and a trade secret.

    • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) *

      Speaking of anecdotal evidence, just now I was going to google something about the Nyquist Limit, but I couldn't remember the "Nyquist" part. CD limit, CD 22kHz limit, digital sound limit... I finally gave up. Without the word "Nyquist" or knowledge of the Nyquist Limit, you just can't google to find out why you can't record a frequency higher than 22kHz on a CD.

      So Google, get working on it.

    • In this case, it does. I don't care how well Google does by some relevance metric. I don't even care how good it is at returning useful results to you, let alone their virtual search user. I care about how good Google is at returning relevant results to the things that I search for. If it returns 100% accurate and useful results to the 100,000 most common search queries, but useless results to things I search for, I won't use it.

      As it stands, Google's results for my searches are:

      • Noticeably worse than
    • My anecdotal evidence trumps your empirical evidence any day!

      They are not necessarily reaching their goal of better searches, they are simply meeting their design specification. Their metrics are a model, a guess, at what better search results *may* be. If the metrics are off, then their results will probably also be off.

  • We rock!! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:28PM (#34958348)

    According to our own tests we are 100% awesome. We have tested you and you are not :( --Elgoog

    • According to our own tests we are 100% awesome.

      Oh Come on Google, with all your money you couldn't eve pay a disinterested third party to... oh... nevermind.

    • Yep Google's search results are totally fine and relevant, fresh, yadda yadda. In fact they are even better than they were years ago!

      Oh Btw,
      ".. we’re evaluating multiple changes that should help drive spam levels even lower, including one change that primarily affects sites that copy others’ content and sites with low levels of original content."

      Like Jon Stewart says "Whabba wha?"

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:35PM (#34958424)

    A typical problem companies have is measuring the quality of their products: By their metric, it's great! But per the user experience it's not. The users must be wrong.

    The metric doesn't always capture the things that the users care about. Also, expectations can change. Better than five years ago may not be good enough

    Based on my experience, Google's search quality is insufficient to make it useful for most purposes. It's plan B now. No search engine is much better, but plan A is to use better resources: Wikipedia, knowledge written or compiled by an expert, etc.

    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      The whole 'user experience says one thing but we say another' is a pretty good way to kill your business. I mean it worked for AMC...very well infact.

    • The metric doesn't always capture the things that the users care about.

      Google’s search quality is better than it has ever been in terms of relevance, freshness and comprehensiveness.

      I hate how searches with a word that has recently been in the news get flooded with crap from the newscycle. I wish I knew a way to tell google's filters that stale results are fine and/or better than fresh ones.

      • by adolf ( 21054 )

        I hate how searches with a word that has recently been in the news get flooded with crap from the newscycle. I wish I knew a way to tell google's filters that stale results are fine and/or better than fresh ones.

        There is, sort of:

        Compare this current news-ish search [google.com] to this other search [google.com] with the same terms. The former is very much crapfested with redundant articles from today's news, while the latter is not.

        It only works for recent news, of course. And I agree: A method to avoid searching news sources and

    • by DragonWriter ( 970822 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @06:34PM (#34960986)

      Actually, if you read the blog post from Google linked in TFS, they aren't saying that "there is no problem" (as parent post's title suggested) or that "it's great" (as parent post's text suggested.)

      They did say that their own metrics don't show the trend that various, mostly anecdotal, critics have claimed. But they also said that they view the spam that does exist as a problem, and they announced several steps to address it:

      As we’ve increased both our size and freshness in recent months, we’ve naturally indexed a lot of good content and some spam as well. To respond to that challenge, we recently launched a redesigned document-level classifier that makes it harder for spammy on-page content to rank highly. The new classifier is better at detecting spam on individual web pages, e.g., repeated spammy words—the sort of phrases you tend to see in junky, automated, self-promoting blog comments. We’ve also radically improved our ability to detect hacked sites, which were a major source of spam in 2010. And we’re evaluating multiple changes that should help drive spam levels even lower, including one change that primarily affects sites that copy others’ content and sites with low levels of original content. We’ll continue to explore ways to reduce spam, including new ways for users to give more explicit feedback about spammy and low-quality sites.

      As “pure webspam” has decreased over time, attention has shifted instead to “content farms,” which are sites with shallow or low-quality content. In 2010, we launched two major algorithmic changes focused on low-quality sites. Nonetheless, we hear the feedback from the web loud and clear: people are asking for even stronger action on content farms and sites that consist primarily of spammy or low-quality content. We take pride in Google search and strive to make each and every search perfect. The fact is that we’re not perfect, and combined with users’ skyrocketing expectations of Google, these imperfections get magnified in perception. However, we can and should do better.

      This is not a company denying that there is a problem because their internal metrics don't match the problems being reported. It is a company acknowledging that there is a problem and committing to take action on it, even though their own internal metrics don't agree with their critics on the size of or trend in the problem.

  • hmm (Score:4, Insightful)

    by edxwelch ( 600979 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:37PM (#34958458)

    "spam in most other languages is even lower than in English."

    this is definately not true for Spanish. There has always been a higher level of spam results for Spanish

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Bottom line is that their 'metrics' are faulty. Who gives a damn about freshness when the content is irrelevant. Bottom line is that in recent memory its actually more difficult to find good results using google.

    PS. No one cares about forum postings that barely scratch the surface of a subject, contain incomprehensible grammar, or just contain questions about your topic rather than relevant information. But if google doesn't even want to recognize that it is doing things that customers don't like they will

  • by Zeek40 ( 1017978 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:37PM (#34958462)

    the evaluation metrics we've refined over the past decade

    In other words, as long as they keep changing the evaluation criteria, they always pass them!

    I've seen more parked domains in google results than I have actually content recenty.

    • Exactly. Who gives a rat's ass if your spam is 1/2 what it was 5 years ago.
      Does anyone really remember results from 5 years ago?
      It's certainly much more than it was 1 year ago.

  • Sorry Google (Score:4, Informative)

    by stox ( 131684 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:39PM (#34958498) Homepage

    But it is becoming increasingly difficult to find the information I really want/need in my searchs.Maybe it is time to change your metrics.

    • Have you TRIED any other search engine? These guys have been working hard to claw a 0.1% from Google. And along the way they have actually managed to produce some pretty nifty search algorithms. I have stopped using Google for 2 years now and have seldom been let down by my new search engine.
      • Have you TRIED any other search engine? These guys have been working hard to claw a 0.1% from Google. And along the way they have actually managed to produce some pretty nifty search algorithms. I have stopped using Google for 2 years now and have seldom been let down by my new search engine.

        Naming your new one would have been useful, especially if its so great. By not naming it I just assume you are a an anti-google troll. Sorry if that is wrong but we all know there is an anti google campaign paid for by AT&T and MS.

        http://www.publicknowledge.org/node/2741 [publicknowledge.org]
        http://techrights.org/2009/06/15/microsofts-whisper-campaign-goog/ [techrights.org]
        http://www.businessinsider.com/what-an-anti-google-whisper-campaign-looks-like-2009-6 [businessinsider.com]

    • Re:Sorry Google (Score:5, Insightful)

      by bonch ( 38532 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:55PM (#34958702)

      My favorite part is how searching for something that happens to appear in a Stackoverflow question returns dozens of sites that copy and paste the Stackoverflow content surrounded by ads.

      • Re:Sorry Google (Score:4, Informative)

        by nametaken ( 610866 ) * on Saturday January 22, 2011 @01:35AM (#34963216)

        Consider yourself lucky if Experts Exchange isn't showing up like a plague in your search results.

        That crap where they show the googlebot one thing and regular visitors something very different (and awful), makes me wish Stackoverflow, etc. will end up putting the final nail in their coffin. In a pinch I've used the google cache to get at the information, but what they're doing is a shitty google cheat and they should've gotten the ban hammer a long time ago.

    • by nashv ( 1479253 )

      That is simply because search algorithm and related technology progresses slower than technologies allowing morons to put crap onto a machine and connect it to the internet.

  • by FrankSchwab ( 675585 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:40PM (#34958510) Journal

    " according to the evaluation metrics that we’ve refined over more than a decade, Google’s search quality is better than it has ever been in terms of relevance, freshness and comprehensiveness. "

    And thus begins the downfall of Google. Once you start drinking your own lemonade and stop listening to the people who use your product, you're on a greased downhill slope.

    • by brunes69 ( 86786 )

      Google's product is not searching, it is advertising. The people who "use their product" are advertisers, not searchers.

    • by Facegarden ( 967477 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @04:30PM (#34959208)

      " according to the evaluation metrics that we’ve refined over more than a decade, Google’s search quality is better than it has ever been in terms of relevance, freshness and comprehensiveness. "

      And thus begins the downfall of Google. Once you start drinking your own lemonade and stop listening to the people who use your product, you're on a greased downhill slope.

      That's not lemonade.

    • The phrase is "drinking the kool-aid".
      • Perhaps, but the lemon tree in my backyard is just about to break from the weight of fruit on it.

        Drinking Lemonade is much closer to my heart at the moment than drinking kool-aid.

    • And thus begins the downfall of Google. Once you start drinking your own lemonade and stop listening to the people who use your product, you're on a greased downhill slope.

      Discounting claims in the press is not the same as stopping listening to the people who use your product. I've seen no evidence presented that google has stopped listening to the people who use their product. AFAICT, your argument proceeds from an unjustified assumption.

  • Dear Google (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Charliemopps ( 1157495 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:42PM (#34958532)
    Perception is reality.

    Anyway, I think the argument is: The spammers are gaming your Metrics. It's not that there's 50% less spam in your search results, it's that you're detecting 50% less spam in the first place.
  • See, this is where Google goes off the rails and starts to believe its own press. Cutts said, in effect, "Our search engine tells us that our search engine is doing just fine." Yeah, well, ultimately Google's search engine isn't the center of the universe and the ultimate authority on everything. The users are. If the users say that the quality of search results are going down, then they're going down. Period. Google better figure out how to change their evaluation metrics to reflect what users are se

  • I call no-way (Score:5, Informative)

    by synthesizerpatel ( 1210598 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:44PM (#34958552)

    Every time I search for something these days I get some ridiculous set of non-results due to the fuzzy matching. I search for "TIPC layer3" google nicely finds me results about TCP Layer3 because google thinks I must have typo'd something. This happens constantly with one or two letter off searches where the search results I get are adjusted because the alternative ranks higher.

    Google's search is not getting better, it's getting more and more 'Clippy' every year.

    • Re:I call no-way (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:55PM (#34958704)

      And I'm out of moderator points. Between the "oh, you're looking for something obscure... here's something that's spelled similarly" mentalality, and constantly returning pages from 2003 about technical subjects, it's pretty hard to find anything on Google that I care about. Except for using them to find large corporate sites.

      Add the fact that spam copies are constantly higher than the original, and I see no solution.

      • There is a classic story told to students of statistics about drunk man who is looking for his car keys under the street lights. When a passer by asks him if he dropped his keys by the street lights, the drunk answers ‘no, but the light is better here’.

      • Re:I call no-way (Score:4, Insightful)

        by synthesizerpatel ( 1210598 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @04:11PM (#34958928)

        You bring up other great points.. Spam copies are maddening.

        There needs to be a 'never show me results from this domain' button to blacklist this garbage and keep people from gaming the system.

      • Seems to me that you need to refine your queries. I think people have come to expect Google to find relevant stuff with an almost magical and eerie accuracy. Now that Spammers have caught on, it's time to understand how Google can help you refine queries. Use +, -, ", site:, intitle:, etc.

        The other thing is that while Google does have some issues with spam (specifically around rebroadcast content), I'm not sure the other search engines are better. Bing has its own set of issues, Yahoo is Bing, and none of t

    • by jeek ( 37349 ) <jeek.jeek@net> on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:56PM (#34958718) Homepage

      Yeah, I had the same issue searching for scrotwm, a window manager I was checking the man page for.

      • I search for "TIPC Layer 3" and get your post as result 1, something about tips on a 3 layer cake second, and the wikipedia entry for TIPC third.

        I search for "scrotwm" and the home page is result 1 and the man page result 2.

        If I search for "TPC Layer 3" I get stuff about "closed loop transmit power control" with a "Did you mean: TCP Layer 3" at the top acting as a link to that search. So no changes in the actual search done, but a hint that I might have spelled something wrong.

        We are talking about entering

      • I was trying to find the screenshot for the same scrotwm using Image Search, imagine my surprise!
      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Did you try including the word "man" in the search? Also try using image search. That will make it easier to filter through the results you don't want.

    • by Damek ( 515688 )

      I search for "TIPC layer3" and I get a bunch of links about tips for things like layer 3 switches, layer 3 audio, etc. No TCP correction, but a tips one. What were you actually looking for?

      • If TIPC can be routed. I figured out my answer, it's more of a general example of the dumbification of search..

        I know you can do +TIPC to force it not to look for TIPS or TCP.. It's more of a general criticism that google more and more is catering to sheeple without making it easy to not be a sheeple.

    • by chad_r ( 79875 )
      Sometimes it's necessary to add the plus sign to force an exact match. "+TIPC layer3" may give you better results.
      • Yep. I know. I wrote some javascript that automatically puts a plus sign in front of every word in non-quoted searches I do.

        Too bad they don't have a real API.

    • Here's a data point.

      Try the simple word "Advanced".
      Purpose is to find the engine's Advanced Search, without cheating from hardlocked results.

      Advance Auto Parts is #1 on both Google and Yahoo, proudly claimed as an Ad/Sponsored. Then they get a bonus listing about #2 as well. Is it "fresh" or "spam" if it's a paid result?

      But here's TehAwesum:
      AltaVista Advanced Search is #6 and Yahoo Advanced Search is #10 on Google.
      (Google advanced search is #9 on Yahoo.)

      Your Move, Matt Cutts!

    • by Alrescha ( 50745 )

      "Every time I search for something these days I get some ridiculous set of non-results due to the fuzzy matching."

      This. The one unforgivable sin that Google has been guilty of since day one was taking something given in quotes and screwing with it. Unforgivable.

      A.

  • What is considered spam anyway?

    I mean, I'm sure I'd like to have an "expert" perform my "sexchange" if I want one, but I was just looking for help solving a programming bug.

    I also appreciate that some sites try to help me with my searching, but I'd rather have them provide answers instead of giving yet more search results.

    • by mbone ( 558574 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:53PM (#34958694)

      In this context, spam means web sites that don't actually contain any real content, just junk text, lists of keywords, etc., together with paid links or banner ads and the like. They won't answer any question you may have, unless you are asking to see more spam. There is more and more of this crap, and it dominates some web search queries.

      • In this context, spam means web sites that don't actually contain any real content, just junk text, lists of keywords, etc., together with paid links or banner ads and the like. They won't answer any question you may have, unless you are asking to see more spam. There is more and more of this crap, and it dominates some web search queries.

        I think that according to google, these days, Spam is defined as advertising not profiting google itself :(

    • expertsexchange results are actually pretty good (or well they used to be...have not used them in a while).

      The key is realizing that if you scroll to the very bottom of the page...all of the answers they are asking you to sign up and pay for are already there. Maybe they have changed it but you used to be able to get the full text of the answers by just scrolling down or using google cache (or a user agent switcher to pretend you are google)

    • What is considered spam anyway?

      I mean, I'm sure I'd like to have an "expert" perform my "sexchange" if I want one, but I was just looking for help solving a programming bug.

      I also appreciate that some sites try to help me with my searching, but I'd rather have them provide answers instead of giving yet more search results.

      Yeah, when you could customize searches, I always removed "experts exchange" results from my searches, but I don't think google got the hint. They still come up all the f'ing time, and I don't think you can customize searches anymore. Never mattered anyway.
      -Taylor

  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:48PM (#34958594) Homepage

    Google has a dilemma. If their search engine takes you directly to the place you want to go, they don't make any money. For a good analysis of this, see "Google Sucks All the Way to the Bank" [isedb.com], by Jill Whalen She is, unfortunately, right. It's essential for Google's success that some of their own ads be more relevant than their search results. Part of their revenue comes from sending users on a side-trip to AdWords-heavy pages. We've measured this [sitetruth.net], using a browser plug-in which reports AdWords appearances to us. About 36% of domains with AdWords (counting domain names, not traffic) are what we consider "bottom feeders", junk sites with a commercial purpose but no identifiable business behind them.

    On the local search front, spam in Google Places is even worse than in their main search results. This, though, appears to be due to ineptitude, not malice. Google added a business search system to Google Maps a year or two ago; that's what Google Places really is. You've been able to go to a Google Maps page and search for businesses for some time now. Few people knew this.

    Then, in October 2010, Google merged the map search results into their main search results. "Places" results suddenly got top billing in Google. The "search engine optimization" (SEO) industry swung into action, and began spamming Google Places on a massive scale. (We have a paper on this [sitetruth.com], which has been mentioned by Techdirt, the New York Observer, etc. It's an amusing read.) Recommendation spamming, which had been going on for a while at a low level, grew substantially once recommendations started affecting Google search results.

    This, incidentally, is why Blekko won't work. If they get enough market share to matter, techniques will be developed to spam them into meaninglessness.

    Stopping web spam is technically quite possible. We do it by finding the business behind the web site, and doing some automated due diligence. We check business records, SEC filings, BBB ratings, and Dun and Bradstreet to verify business legitimacy. We down-rate most of the junk. We try to err in the down-rating direction, taking the position that it's the job of a company to demonstrate their legitimacy by using their real name and address on their web site, which has to match real-world business records. Our demo site demo site [sitetruth.com] for this shows what search is like if you take a hard line on spam.

    Our approach requires more of a hard-ass attitude than Google's business model can perhaps afford. With Bleekko making Google look foolish, though, and Bing slowly improving, Google may have to actually do something that works, even if it cuts into revenue from the spam.

    • Blekko is more about indexing non-spam sites: the slashtag feature is set by users. A site becomes relevant to a slashtag by feedback and a bit of automation hybrid. That said there is still a lot of work to be done on Blekko on their current model and how it will scale efficiently and without Facebook.

    • by snookums ( 48954 )

      Three backlinks to your domain from a PR 8 site. Nice going.

      That said, your site seems to work as promised. Getting any kind of decent product reviews out of Google is next to impossible these days, and sitetruth actually found some for me.

    • by Hatta ( 162192 )

      Stopping web spam is technically quite possible. We do it by finding the business behind the web site, and doing some automated due diligence. We check business records, SEC filings, BBB ratings, and Dun and Bradstreet to verify business legitimacy

      And what if the non-spam result I'm looking for is not a business?

  • by ChaoticCoyote ( 195677 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:49PM (#34958620) Homepage

    I've switched to other search engines; from my experience, Google provides too many tangential and corporate references when I do research.

    Also, how does Google "know" that their search results were valid? I'll often do a Google search, click a couple of links, and after being disappointed, I'll go to another search engine where I get more useful results.

    What bugs me the most are searches on technical or medical topics, where Google give me a dozen "harvester" results -- e.g., I get sites that have stolen conversations from other message boards, and reported them along with tons of ads. Yuck! There must be dozens of hundreds of sites, all with broken answers to questions about JavaScript and/or medicines.

    Just because evidence is anecdotal doesn't mean it should be blithely discounted. If I say "Ouch" at being cut, that means the injury hurt me; the pain is quite real even if no one else has felt it.

    • I'm kind of like you, only I "know" beforehand which engine I want to use.

      • Bing is pretty concise, but obviously limits a lot of choices.
      • Blekko is pretty interesting, and I use it so far as a novelty.
      • I use Google when I want a metric assload of results that I know I'll have to sort through myself.
      • I use Indeed for job hunting.
      • I mainly use Pricewatch for shopping.
      • And Wolfram Alpha is kind of fun for niche stuff and automatic answers.

      The reality of it all is Google is not the optimal search engine.... nobody's

    • I've switched to other search engines;

      Which, and why? Seriously, aside from Bing (the greater evil), what's our options?

  • by mbone ( 558574 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:50PM (#34958636)

    I think that the solid consensus among the people I know that track such things is that the spammers are winning and the quality of search is going down. I know that this is my own experience. That may or may not mean that Google is slacking off, but I don't think that perception comes from thin air.

  • FUD (Score:2, Insightful)

    by wiredlogic ( 135348 )

    I'm seeing less spam than a few years ago when link farms and Wikipedia clones were showing up everywhere on the top results pages. This smells like Microsoft funded FUD.

    • Re:FUD (Score:4, Insightful)

      by I8TheWorm ( 645702 ) * on Friday January 21, 2011 @04:08PM (#34958872) Journal

      I don't think it is. I (and apparently quite a few responders here) am seeing worse results now than ever before. Anything remotely close to what I search for tends to start around the third or fourth result (not including sponsored results).

      • by micheas ( 231635 )

        Out of curiosity, what do you typically search for that you see worse results?

        I ask because I have noticed a noticeable improvement in the last year, after about two years of the spammers consistently causing me to alter my search patterns, but I mostly search error messages.

        • It really varies. IT and development, portal implementation, musical gear, something interesting my kids brought up, etc...

          I did have a conversation here on /. recently about how I search. I refuse to do full text questions, and rather search using keywords I know will get me the results I want. Maybe that's the way google has been improving lately?

          FWIW, when I search something very specific (error messages with quotes around it) google is spot on for me.

      • I (and your mom) have typically found what I am looking for in the first page of results. I've posted two such recent searches here. I am not a guru of search terms, although I have some small skill in this area. Perhaps you could post some example searches?

        • A quick example is googling the following
          "fender 5 string american jazz bass"
          The first link is one for sale on musiciansfriend, the second is a link to fender's site. This one doesn't shine as me having to sort through several responses, but is the first I tried.

          "sharepoint implementation" gets a little more interesting. The first link to synergyonline is for consulting services. The second is a blog post with top 10 pitfalls. The third is a best practices article from techtarget. The fourth, a pdf fro

          • Try "implement sharepoint". you need to use root words when talking to google unless you specifically only want variants. You're getting too tricky.

            • That makes sense, but the results are similar. It's not that big a deal though, like most /.ers I can weed through the crap pretty quickly.

              All in all it's still leaps and bounds better than the days of altavista and the like.

  • by linebackn ( 131821 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @03:59PM (#34958756)

    I've certainly noticed the quality of searches going down recently, at least for less common searches. I regularly search for oddball system files, software, drivers, etc, the first few pages of results are often very scammy looking sites devoid of actual content and what I am looking for is a dozen pages in. Often these results trump even official big company web sites. Heck while half asleep I used Google to search for OpenOffice, clicked the first link, clicked a big download button, and when trying to install it later I realized whatever I downloaded was certainly *NOT* OpenOffice. (Don't know what it was, I deleted it quickly)

  • by jambarama ( 784670 ) <<moc.liamg> <ta> <amarabmaj>> on Friday January 21, 2011 @04:06PM (#34958844) Homepage Journal
    In the last few years, I've found search results have been dominated more and more by content mills like associated content, ehow, hubpages, about, and others; or some low quality Q&A page, like yahoo answers. The pages are hastily written and edited, and low content. The articles are also typically written by someone without any relevant knowledge or experience - so the information is common knowledge or wrong.

    If google's metrics say quality is up, but their users think quality is down, then google's metrics need to be revised to match user experience more closely. I've started using duck duck go [duckduckgo.com] because they block content mills, and thus I think their results are as good or better than google, even without the complicated algorithms and all the data google has accumulated.
  • In my own experience spam on google is constantly getting worse and more fustrating to deal with ... I expect it for searches where there is not likely to be any hits but it is also starting to creep into top spots in situations where there is more dense information available.

    I remember back in the day people working logistics used to run algorithms to maximize profits for store supply chains but their efforts actually lost a great deal of revenue as algorithms did not understand human factors and how peop

  • They should also take a look at the Google groups interface to Usenet. It's nothing but spam.

  • Remember the olden days when you could [x] kill a domain that didn't ever want to see again?

    Why did they ever get rid of that?

    I've taken to using this instead, works great. http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/33156 [userscripts.org]

  • by harl ( 84412 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @04:53PM (#34959654)

    Here's a great example of returning pages that don't contain what you're searching for.

    Search for +open +cat +mug +frame [google.com]

    The first link [flippinsweetgear.com] only contains 2 of the 4 terms.

    Returning a page that does not contain a required search term is a failure state.

    • by creativeHavoc ( 1052138 ) on Friday January 21, 2011 @06:27PM (#34960880) Homepage
      Actually it does, the description text is hidden until some user actions are taken. A ctrl-f on the page may not return results for the terms, but viewing source and ctrl-f does.
  • Mutt Cutts [blogspot.com]?

The goal of Computer Science is to build something that will last at least until we've finished building it.

Working...