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Google Letting Users Rank Search Results

Myriad writes "C|Net News is running an article about Google testing out a new system which would let users rank pages. From the article, 'Two weeks ago, Google began quietly testing a Web page voting system that, for the first time on a large scale, could eventually let Web surfers help determine the popularity of sites ranked by the company's search engine.'" As someone who has a lot of experience with systems where users self rate content, let me just wish Google the best of luck. Especially since for many unscrupulous businesses, ratings in search engines directly translate to dollars.

332 comments

  1. The difference being... by rwg · · Score: 1, Troll

    ...that Google won't have "f1rst postz!!!!11" and trolls.

    1. Re:The difference being... by rwg · · Score: 0, Troll

      Make a half sarcastic, half joking comment and get moderated down to "-1, Troll" within 90 seconds. Gotta love slashdot's crack team of moderators...

    2. Re:The difference being... by Scott+Lockwood · · Score: 1

      s/crack/on crack/gi

      --
      But this is slashdot. A slashdoter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber!
    3. Re:The difference being... by flikx · · Score: 1

      while (MODERATOR_CRACK)
      {
      moderate(comment);
      }

      --
      One future, two choices. Oppose them or let them destroy us.
  2. Just disqualify the money element... by forkspoon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Perhaps they could disqualify corporate business websites from being ranked.

    Thanks,

    Travis
    forkspoon@hotmail.com

    1. Re:Just disqualify the money element... by yoink! · · Score: 2

      Or perhaps have users check off that they are searching for commercial products. Thus two ranking systems would be in place. It would be a small operation, but one that would provide us with junk-free results. If it were possible, I'd be willing to give up an extra keystroke or two.

      Users who perenially search outside of corporate sites could be able to customize their setting so that they'd have to select when they want to include corporate sites. Could it work? I don't know.
      br>

    2. Re:Just disqualify the money element... by Bonker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Users who perenially search outside of corporate sites could be able to customize their setting so that they'd have to select when they want to include corporate sites. Could it work? I don't know.

      Google already has a 'customized' interface that allows users to do things like change language, etc...

      I think the sugestion of separating corporate and non-corporate searches has its merits. I hate searching for an anime fanfiction and being directed to Best Buy's website because they happen to carry the anime title I mentioned in the search query.

      It has its problems too, however. Tagging each of the pages in Google's truly massive search database with a corporate or non-corporate tag is a non-trivial problem. For obvious reasons, website owners cannot be trusted to tag their own pages.

      You're also opening a can of worms here, since many website owners will protest either a commercial or a non-commercial tagging.

      Even if you tagged sites by domain, you'd still have hundreds of thousands... possibly millions of domains, not to mention sites that carry both corporate and private content like Geocities, Tripod, or other free webhosts.

      Then you have to consider what to do with semi-for-profit pages? Many pages have 'tipping jars' now. Many open-source software development pages have information about for-profit works, or are developed by for-profit organizations. Should companies like Redhat be excluded from non-profit searches? Probably. How about Vorbis Ogg? That's not nearly so clear. How about web-comics, almost all of which give away their content freely, but sell merchandise, dead-tree books, or other premiums.

      In the end, I think that I'd rather put up with having to sort through twenty or so highly relevant results to get the search result I wanted rather than having to search twice to make sure that I get all the possible relevant results.

      --
      The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
    3. Re:Just disqualify the money element... by BeenaBerry · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be easier to just be able to say "don't show me any results from this site in future" ? And then at the bottom of your searches, you could be given an option to include your previously excluded sites in the same way as google lets you include previously excluded "similar matches". There can't be that many commercial sites that match your queries on a regular basis.

    4. Re:Just disqualify the money element... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's what kinda ticked me off when they opened the .org top level domain to the for-profit world. I used to be able to add .org to the search criteria and filter out the commercial junk.

    5. Re:Just disqualify the money element... by HuangHuang · · Score: 1
      I think that this is a good idea to customize search engines. As for my experience in search engine, I usually waste a lot of time to find some information in the Internet. There are hundreds or thousands of Web pages shown up. Only few of those web pages match with what I needed. So, i would like to recommend search engines to provide more specific questions, if it is possible, for example

      Find corporate or non-corporate web sites?
      what is the purpose? (Buy things, get info, find user groups related to this topic, etc.)

      To implement this system, the field in data mining should be applied to content in Web pages.

  3. Good idea but... by t_allardyce · · Score: 0, Redundant

    "Especially since for many unscrupulous businesses, ratings in search engines directly translate to dollars."

    And how will the new system stop this?

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    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    1. Re:Good idea but... by Ledge · · Score: 1

      The point is that I think the belief is that the new system will provide for this.

      --
      If it ain't a Model M, it's a piece of crap.
    2. Re:Good idea but... by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      No, that's the point. The new system encourages it. The previous metric used by Google was weighted links-to to determine the value of the look-up. I think the rating system is far more vulnerable to abuse.

    3. Re:Good idea but... by fishebulb · · Score: 1

      Google doesnt accept bribes to rate a certain website the first on the list. It doesnt matter if a company starts rating itself up. there will be restrictions on that I'm sure. but other people will be able to rate that site as not useful for a particular search. It will be the masses helping to determine what results are useful in addition with googles excellent back end

    4. Re:Good idea but... by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      Oh.. you mean like politicians don't accept bribes...

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      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    5. Re:Good idea but... by fishebulb · · Score: 2

      i trust google , they say something i believe it. i have no reason not to. they have always had a consistent history of being honest. politicions though, probably not the most honest indviduals out there.

    6. Re:Good idea but... by ichimunki · · Score: 3

      Actually they do. The sponsored links show up first and are clearly indicated to be paid for.

      Personally I think their system ain't broke, though, so why fix it?

      --
      I do not have a signature
    7. Re:Good idea but... by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      are you saying you don't trust your own presedent? i hope so, cause if he was mine, i would go hijack a plane and blow up the... oops offtopic.

      They say every man has his price. And if i owned a large search engine and someone like microsoft for example offered me a large sum of money, i would want to take if off their hands.

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    8. Re:Good idea but... by KupekKupoppo · · Score: 1

      Anybody that can't spell President has no right to criticize the one we have. It's dumbasses like you that get people like GWB in office. It's good to know that you have weak morals and shouldn't be trusted by anyone.

    9. Re:Good idea but... by Antipop · · Score: 1

      Hey, they've got to make money somehow. The 'sponsored links' are far from annoying compared to banner ads or popups. They clearly label and set off with different colors the sponsored links and after using google a 100 times a day you learn to tune them out.

      I'm with you on the rating system, if it ain't broke don't fix it.

    10. Re:Good idea but... by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      I had no intention of appearing to disparage the sponsored links. I think they are appropriately and tastefully done.

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      I do not have a signature
    11. Re:Good idea but... by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 2

      I tend to trust Google too, but I think you under-rate the devious abilities of bored corporate minions to work around rating system restrictions that are supposed to keep them from artificially boosting their site's rating. I give it a week or two before someone comes up with a script that relatively quickly and easily will artificially elevate a rating. This sort of thing is too easy to abuse, especially for a necessarily open system like a public search engine.

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    12. Re:Good idea but... by fishebulb · · Score: 1

      very good point, but there is a different between co's and individuals. If a company does it and its against the policies of google, they can be more accountable and all it'd take is one person to get nailed for it, unfortunately it'd through the courts so thats another story

    13. Re:Good idea but... by aka-ed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The article clearly states that Google will use the results to supplement, not replace, current methods. So, if someone wishes to manipulate the results, they will have to combine several forms of cheating to succeed.

      The article also states that methods will be used to prevent this sort of abuse, though Google doesn't say (for obvious reasons -- why do spammers work for them?) what they are.

      But there are obvious ways to defeat abuse. One way is to do IP matching, and cull results originating from a single domain. Another would to use only a random representative sampling of votes, rather than every vote, in counting results. Another is simple human oversite (or good AI), looking for unusual ranking changes.

      Google's been great so far in avoiding the crapfloods. I doubt if they'd cut their own throats. The fact that they are testing this technology rather than just rolling it out is a good sign. When's the last time you heard of a search engine testing before implementation?

      Barely-relevant anecdote:
      The year that Excite debuted, I found my own credit card number, expiration date and phone number in their database. By pattern matching I found the same for a couple of dozen other people who had all patronized the same online bookstore (idiots momentarily had their customer database on the webserving machine, excite's spider found it).

      It took about a week to find someone at Visa who knew what the Internet was (a security VP). He informed me that Excite had been designed with no means to edit the database. I found that hard to believe -- still do -- but my personal info remained findable for several weeks thereafter.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    14. Re:Good idea but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a one man operation peddling software and services, I can say that for scrupulous businesses, search engine ratings matter too...

    15. Re:Good idea but... by t_allardyce · · Score: 0

      from a country that can't spell colour? I didn't vote for Bush, or Blair.

      presedent is.. um.. the british spelling

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    16. Re:Good idea but... by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 2

      Well, their system doesn't have binary failure. It's really good right now, but it could definitely be better. There are (admittedly rare) times when I feel like my searches aren't handled as well as they could be. This is just one possible way they could improve their relevance.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    17. Re:Good idea but... by BahRamU · · Score: 1

      In the original message two weeks ago when Google announced the new beta reporting system over at Webmasterworld the Google tech in charge of the system said:

      "Let me repeat that this is a test. I would not recommend trying to write a votebot. Remember the line from Indiana Jones--"choose wisely"? We have several interesting tricks to prevent vote stuffing, so I would choose not to try abusing it. Looks like this is also going to be a fun psychological experiment."

    18. Re:Good idea but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, of course, that British spelling of yours is the one that most logically follows from the derivation of president-one who presides.

    19. Re:Good idea but... by BahRamU · · Score: 1

      If it is so easy to abuse, why hasn't anyone been able to abuse it yet? It's been three weeks and no one has succeeded yet. (theres more to that of course)

      Google is the only entity on the net not to have their encoded/encrypted urls cracked open. AOL, Goto, and Altavista's various encoding schemes have all been laid wide open.

      Only Googles encoding scheme in the ie toolbar has not been hacked. If you'll look at the voting system, you'll find a similar system.

      >but I think you under-rate the devious
      >abilities of bored corporate minions

      I think you underate the devious abilities of the corporate monster that Google has become. The vulture crowd did not bestow $20mil (that we know of) on Google for being nice guys.

      Take a long look at this scheme of Googles. Many don't think it has anything to do with rating websites Upware, it's about weeding out the small ones that they can't profit from.

      >I tend to trust Google too

      Why?

      - They use 1.6 billion pages of other people content from their site to do a branding job on themselves without prior consent.
      - They use everyones graphics with out prior consent.
      - They run carefuly crafted "grass roots" marketing campaigns that has even sucked in the likes of even /. in to supporting them (just a major corporation). So what - they use Linux.
      - The effect of their algo is to promote corporate sites that will have money for advertising.
      - They've never once acknowledged, justified, or admitted that the "cache" is may be legally dubious.

      So what's to trust? As far as I can see, they are just another corporation out to make a buck on the internet at the small guys expense.

  4. Unscrupulous Businesses? by jaredcat · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well as the marketing director for an unscrupulous business, let me be the first to say how much I am looking foward to being able to rate my competitors' websites on one of the most popular search engines.

    1. Re:Unscrupulous Businesses? by cloudmaster · · Score: 5, Funny

      As someone who writes perl sripts for your competitors, let me be the first to say how much I'm looking forward to automating the task of rating our competitors (and ourselves). :)

    2. Re:Unscrupulous Businesses? by Chundra · · Score: 4, Funny

      Dear sirs,

      As a social misfit, disgruntled programmer, and militant loather of all things e-business, let me assure everyone that I will personally make your businesses appear on fuckedcompany in one (1) month.

      Thank you.

    3. Re:Unscrupulous Businesses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shenoy?

    4. Re:Unscrupulous Businesses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear gentlemen and gentleladies

      As a memeber of the foundation for consumer benefits, let me say how much I look forward to rate fuckedcompany up in one month.
      On the other hand, as I see the abuse of the rating system in google by companys soon to be on fuckedcompany, I consider the benefit for the consumers as very bad. Can I therefore down-rate google on google?

      Kindest ratings

    5. Re:Unscrupulous Businesses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Annoy.

    6. Re:Unscrupulous Businesses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Tsk, tsk. Google coders are smart cookies. They aren't gonna want 5,000,000 positive rankings from three IPs.

      Now, if one were to write Code Red III which forms a distributed network and ranks up websites that are injected into the network...

    7. Re:Unscrupulous Businesses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Someone who does IT at a university or business which controls a class A address group is under no such constraint, though.

    8. Re:Unscrupulous Businesses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who has no idea what you're all talking about, I'm looking forwared to seeing more relevant web searches.

    9. Re:Unscrupulous Businesses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad for those people whose ISP masquerades all of the normal dial-up connections, I guess. "Google already received a vote from that IP".

  5. Cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Well that directly addresses the Ask Slashdot submission I made yesterday as to whether or not there was such a thing as a user moderated search engine. I'll have to check it out.

  6. a problem worth solving... by downerad · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    this is certainly a valid problem to try and solve. for example, i just searched for "clueless phony" and jon katz's name was nowhere to be found.

    1. Re:a problem worth solving... by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 1

      Thanx to that post, it will be now! :-)

      --
      I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
      I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
  7. The demise of a good search engine? by RobPiano · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Google knows just as well as we do that this is going to lead to the small minority influencing the outcome of search results. It also makes some big companies very happy.

    Looks like a big old sell out.

    Anyone know of a good secondary search engine?
    Rob

    1. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by fishebulb · · Score: 1

      What? because you are too lazy to rate something? i know i will be rating sites for many of my searches. I should hope you would. so the only minority is it takes effort to do it. Im sure they will make it easy, possibly with that toolbar? How is this a big sellout. because they are giving you the power to rate a site. This also isnt a replacement to the current system. The current system works well, but it something like this could make a very cool addition.

    2. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by NineNine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's gonna keep happening... A "new" search engine comes out with little bias... First it was Altavista, then Google. But after spending millions on hardware, software, and personnel, these companies realize "hey, this is cool, but I think our owners want us to make some money." There'll be a new bias-less marketing-free SE after Google, and after a while, their owners will ask them for some profit. It'll keep happening for as long as I can tell. But, all that said, I'm happy with Google right now ;)

    3. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by kawlyn · · Score: 1

      I still use HotBot a lot.

      --

      When someone yells "Stop" or goes limp, or taps out, the fight is over.
    4. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think the bias comes from the web site owners, not the search engine owner. After a "new" search engine becomes popular, all the spammers target it until they figure out how to manipulate that search engine's ranking. And then that opens up the field for a search engine using a completely different type of ranking. Parasite adaptation.

    5. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by suso · · Score: 1

      At least this will keep the internet interesting. Activity and change keep things from dying out.

    6. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by silicon_synapse · · Score: 1

      I'm all for the ability to rate a search result as long as I have the option of ignoring ratings when I search. Sometimes I want to find the less popular pages. Some little-known sites have very usefull information, and they become very hard to find when they don't get ranked as often larger sites. I'm very impressed with Google thus far, and I'm sure they'll do this well. Their advanced search keywords are just wonderfull.

    7. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For file links, hotbot is good. However, its interface went to shit after Wired bought them.

    8. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      try this for a better hotbot interface:

      www.hotbot.com/text

    9. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      I don't agree, but Teoma is good.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    10. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      How does crapping up the search engine results produce profits? It doesn't, and the article pretty clearly indicates that Google is implementing this to abate the effects of corporate cheaters. Particularly note that Google is looking at this as a supplement to their established methods, not as a replacement.

      There are plenty of ways to prevent corporate concerns crapping up the voting results, as I pointed out previously.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    11. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by NineNine · · Score: 1

      It produces profits by allowing companies to pay for higher listings.

    12. Re:The demise of a good search engine? by aka-ed · · Score: 1
      It produces profits by allowing companies to pay for higher listings.

      That is how selling positions in search results gives profits. But that is not what we are discussing. The fear is that a voter-rating system will allow spammers to crap up results. Google would not collect revenue from the spammers, and would lose audience (hence lose revenue) if it allowed such abuse.

      At least, that is what the article indicates. Read it?

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      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
  8. search results by apathy21 · · Score: 0

    Is this going to change the results of a search query at all? Or just merely show the rating next to each link within the results?

    1. Re:search results by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try actually reading the article before asking inane questions:

      "He added that the voting system takes into account abuses such as repeat clicks that attempt to "noodle" the system. Rather than using the votes to tinker with the specific rankings of particular pages or sites, he said, the feature would most likely be used to bolster the relevance of overall results. "

    2. Re:search results by apathy21 · · Score: 0

      How about you shut the fuck up.

  9. The problem is.. by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 2, Interesting

    an IP address doesn't neccessarily equate to a person. Companies can have thousands of IPs and google can't tell if its just one entity or 3000. I would predict that if this goes into effect the gator advertising thing thats bundled with just about any free download these days will be modified to rank up pages of those who pay them the most.

    --

    --

    WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    1. Re:The problem is.. by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      wasn't the riaa going to get a massive load of ip's so they could use them to slowdown filesharing systems? now they can pay for them by renting them out to companies who need a whole load of ip's to spoof vote search engines.

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    2. Re:The problem is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but all those IP's come from the same network, so Google could just block certain networks from useing the rating system.

    3. Re:The problem is.. by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      People who control multiple IP's generally have a very specific range. It would be trivial to group results by IP families. Another technique to diminish corporate manipulation might be to use a representative sampling, rather than a full count of all votes. Since Google stated that this would be only a supplement to their current ranking methods, sampling vote results should work just fine and prevent corporate manipulation. Don't expect Google to say exactly how they are going to prevent this sort of thing, as keeping their exact methods a secret is one of the best ways to prevent manipulation.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    4. Re:The problem is.. by ImaLamer · · Score: 2, Informative

      So google can't do an ARIN lookup now?

  10. Printable.. by Nevrar · · Score: 0, Redundant

    For those who care, Here is the printable story...

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    Nevrar
  11. Nothing but abuse... by night_flyer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    that is all that will happen, how are they going to stop multiple "votes"? by a cookie (that the voter can erase)? By tracking IPs (they wont put the resources into that large and complex of a system?

    I wish it would work, but it will be an abismal failure... in fact it wouldnt suprise me if some corperations hire people just to "vote" for their sites...

    just look at ANY top 50/100 voting sites and you know what I am talking about

    --


    Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
    Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    1. Re:Nothing but abuse... by TGK · · Score: 2

      So we're going to see "vote here before entering this site" screens on major websites now :-). Great... will it come with infinately looping pop-up XXX ads too?

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    2. Re:Nothing but abuse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      here is a good example why something like this wont work, abuse... this post was listed as redundant, how is it redudndant? will there be any kind of forum for pleading your case against unfair "votes"?

    3. Re:Nothing but abuse... by closedpegasus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's assuming their voting interface will be a simple web page...I'm guessing they would write their own client-side application, similar to the google toolbar. With a google-written client communicating with their server, they should be able to come close (or at least make it very difficult to vote twice). There are lots of techniques that could work...dynamically generated keys, encryption, etc.

    4. Re:Nothing but abuse... by autopr0n · · Score: 1

      they wont put the resources into that large and complex of a system

      Are you sure? Remember these guys are sitting on a cache of almost the entire web right now. I think if google wanted to do this right they would have the resources they needed.

      --
      autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    5. Re:Nothing but abuse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure? Remember these guys are sitting on a cache of almost the entire web right now. I think if google wanted to do this right they would have the resources they needed.


      ...and if they ever run out of resources, they can just pay for stuff out of their cache of credit card numbers.

    6. Re:Nothing but abuse... by slamb · · Score: 2

      With a google-written client communicating with their server, they should be able to come close (or at least make it very difficult to vote twice). There are lots of techniques that could work...dynamically generated keys, encryption, etc.

      "If you think encryption will solve your problem, you don't understand encryption and you don't understand your problem." Bruce Schneier

      Anything that could be done by your hypothetical client could also be done by a person who has used a debugger on it. It's just not theoretically possible to prevent something like that with an authentication key embedded in the software. Or per-client keys...remember, they have to get the key somehow. How do you restrict it to one key per person? That's back to the original problem.

    7. Re:Nothing but abuse... by closedpegasus · · Score: 1

      Alright, each user has an embedded key, and they use that key to place votes. Yes, it's possible for a user to figure out his key...but that doesn't matter. If the server which is tallying the votes sees two votes for the same page with the same key, it just doesn't count the second one. I can do all the debugging I want to figure out my key, but since the server has a log of my previous votes as well, it won't allow me to vote for the same page twice.

    8. Re:Nothing but abuse... by slamb · · Score: 1

      Alright, each user has an embedded key, and they use that key to place votes.

      How do you make sure each user gets exactly one key? As I said in my first post, a per-user key doesn't really help unless you have a method of ensuring that. And if you can ensure that, why can't you directly ensure each person only votes once? It just adds complexity without solving the problem.

  12. Ugh, ugh, ugh. by Mr_Matt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    People who specialize in pushing sites into the top rankings--a technique known as search engine optimization--say the company's success has made Google a new frontier to conquer. And they assert that its system, like any other, can be outsmarted.

    This is particularly repugnant, especially given the goals set in the article (Google wants to make the search engine process more of a democracy, etc.) Is anybody else tired of soulless marketdroids essentially destroying all the good things that are the Net(C)(TM)(R)?

    On the bright side, maybe there's room to add Slashdot-styled moderation and meta-moderation to Google rankings - imagine a "+1 Funny" rank for the Onion or a "-1, Offtopic" page rank for every time you go surfing for something honest and end up at Yet Another pr0n Site. :)

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    But what does my opinion matter, I just vote here. It's not like I have any money or anything.
    1. Re:Ugh, ugh, ugh. by sulli · · Score: 2
      imagine a "+1 Funny" rank for the Onion or a "-1, Offtopic" page rank for every time you go surfing for something honest and end up at Yet Another pr0n Site. :)

      And imagine a "-1, Offtopic" page rank for every time you go surfing for pr0n and end up at Yet Another Honest Site!

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    2. Re:Ugh, ugh, ugh. by talesout · · Score: 1
      Yeah. That'd be great. We really need to take the broken piece of garbage moderation system that is in place here and use it to rank google results. Should we start it out with a bunch of clueless fuckwits that will determine what is "proper" and what is "improper" too?

      Unless we lose the mind-numbing "you must agree with me" bullshit that this moderation system employs and allows everyone a voice in the "ranking" system, it will be a useless tool. Maybe the K5 moderation system would be a better place to start.

      Of course, since you're a karma whoring piece of shit just out for a quick "+5 funny" rating I suppose I shouldn't have gotten so worked up. But heh, what else am I gonna do this afternoon?

      --


      Bite my yammer.
    3. Re:Ugh, ugh, ugh. by Mr_Matt · · Score: 1

      Of course, since you're a karma whoring piece of shit just out for a quick "+5 funny" rating I suppose I shouldn't have gotten so worked up. But heh, what else am I gonna do this afternoon?

      Yeah, I'm just a karma-whore...except for the first part of my post, where I expressed my very real dismay at the commercialization and subsequent destruction of everything that is bias-free and useful on the Web. I tack on one funny bit to keep my mood light, and some lamer kuro5hin monkey with an axe to grind with /. moderators decides I'm a "piece of shit."

      You know what - whatever. Maybe the reason k5 died is because of clueless wonks like you poisoned it with your inane, OT drivel. Don't like the moderation scheme? Go play in traffic, kid, it's not your site. Leave us "karma whores" with opinions to our "bullshit" /. and we'll be happy to see you go. Don't let the door smack you on the ass on the way out. :)

      --


      But what does my opinion matter, I just vote here. It's not like I have any money or anything.
    4. Re:Ugh, ugh, ugh. by talesout · · Score: 1
      That's so fucking hilarious. If you could just look at yourself from the outside. Oh god.

      So, your reasoning goes, "I'll say the same thing every other lamer piece of garbage on this site says, and throw in a joke to boot, and that won't make me look like a karma whore."

      Right. Tell it someone that hasn't watched the slashdot daytime soap opera unfold countless hundreds of times over and over again. Fucking trash like you are the reason this site started sucking in the first place. K5 died because some fuckwad in a worthless hosting facility couldn't pull his peter out of his hand long enough to remember to inform the K5 crew that they were moving the servers.

      I'm not as clueless as you think. Kind of funny how someone with a lower slashdot UID than you is just some K5 lamer because he disagrees with you, isn't it?

      --


      Bite my yammer.
    5. Re:Ugh, ugh, ugh. by Mr_Matt · · Score: 1

      Right. Tell it someone that hasn't watched the slashdot daytime soap opera unfold countless hundreds of times over and over again. Fucking trash like you are the reason this site started sucking in the first place. K5 died because some fuckwad in a worthless hosting facility couldn't pull his peter out of his hand long enough to remember to inform the K5 crew that they were moving the servers.

      Damn, you're right. I forgot that being funny, or having the same opinion as someone else makes me "fucking trash." Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa. And forgive me for having a higher slashdot UID than you, your eminence. And maybe you could try looking up "sarcasm" in the dictionary some time, you clueless wonk - if you'd tried that with the original post, you'd have saved yourself a lot of effort pounding on the keys. :) But I'll let your profane, troll-like actions speak for themselves - and they do, you know. Personally, I could care about karma. Look at my posts if you don't believe me - a sea of regular old "score 1" posts with nothing but my opinion and willingness to participate in an active 'net community contained therein. I don't bitch about moderators, 'cause I could care less. You on the other hand...well, like I said, actions speak louder than words, although it's hard to believe from a blowhard like you. TTFN, lamer.

      --


      But what does my opinion matter, I just vote here. It's not like I have any money or anything.
    6. Re:Ugh, ugh, ugh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the part of your post where you toss in a htmlized quote, "soulless marketdroids" and "(C)(TM)(R)" and regurgitate a standard lament from 1993? The predictable joke just added to the effect. It's mod-bait, not a whole lot of content there, not that is out of the ordinary here. Personally, I like reading slashdot, but reading around pandering junk that got 10 seconds of effort put into it gets a little old.

  13. Google Attack Engine by Caball · · Score: 5, Informative

    While on the subject of Google, there is an interesting article at The Register detailing how search terms are used to exploit servers, switches, routers, etc.

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/23069.htm l

    1. Re:Google Attack Engine by mentaldent · · Score: 1

      Phrack Volume 57 article 0x0a was all about this.

      This was released back in August. I can see the marketing now:

      Phrack - it only comes out once a year, but it's still ahead of the times :)


      Apparently the next issue is to be released in time for Christmas. Read it now and you'll have read the 'sploit headlines for the next year.

  14. Plenty of room for abuse by oldave · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Though Google claims the voting system won't directly, and more importantly, immediately, have any effect on results of a search, I think they're going to have to spend a lot of money on abuse detection.

  15. Options by felipeal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Even if the system works fine (i.e., without abuse), it would be nice if the user still have the option to use it or the not (as the current system works very well).

    Better yet, they could have a slashdot-like user customization mechanism (i.e., where the user can set the threshold and moderate/vote a search result in many ways).

    Anyway, I wish them luck too (Google rules :)

  16. Vote early and often. by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Scenario: You just put up a new webpage and want to be sure it gets top hits on google.

    How you do it: After putting the page up, write a tool to hit google's voting engine over and over and over... giving yourself good ratings.

    Question: How would the system prevent this type of abuse from happening - especially the opposite approach - rating competitors' sites poorly to drop them in the list?

    Devil's Advocate Question: If you don't allow this abuse to occur, doesn't that then unfairly give extra ranking to sites based on age? A new site won't have accumulated as many votes as an old one yet, and so the ranking would always favor old (and likely to be out of date) sites over new ones.

    --

    Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    1. Re:Vote early and often. by jailbreakist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As one who got his entire university cut off from Google in a shell-scripting nightmare (they turned it back on after they learned all the hits were for an AI project), let me say that Google knows when you hit them too hard. Read their terms of service.

      Also, I think they would know a thing or two about normalizing the data to correct for the age of a site.

    2. Re:Vote early and often. by Jeremi · · Score: 2
      After putting the page up, write a tool to hit google's voting engine over and over and over


      If I were Google, I would just keep a table mapping IP addresses to voting records. So your second vote for a page merely replaces your first vote, instead of counting as another vote. Would that be enough?

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    3. Re:Vote early and often. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      most of the stuff you say is redundant.
      just the last question: how about a 1-10 rating system?

    4. Re:Vote early and often. by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      how about all pages start with a maximum rateing and can only be marked down.

      then only pages that have been marked down can be marked back up.

      not perfect but a start

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    5. Re:Vote early and often. by talesout · · Score: 1

      That wouldn't matter if it was a negative or positive voting system that just figured up a number based on votes. A good older site would have a higher rating than a good newer site, but they would both be positive. A bad new site would hit negative very quickly, and drop out of site.

      --


      Bite my yammer.
    6. Re:Vote early and often. by Antipop · · Score: 1

      What about companys that have a few hundred or a few thousand IPs laying around?

    7. Re:Vote early and often. by Brigadier · · Score: 1



      This is true, but wouldn't it be possible to:

      A) Insert a unique coded cookie to mark voters
      B) Prevent multiple votes from the same IP address or NIC address ( allowing NAT server)
      C) Instead of Counting every vote, select random votes from differetn internet demographics simular to TV rating methods.

      any of these three should make voting feasable no ?

    8. Re:Vote early and often. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I were Google, I would just keep a table mapping IP addresses to voting records.

      Think of the size of that acculated data. Say they keep logs for an entire month of all the ip address data for each site.. the number of bits in those IP logs would easily outnumber the number of atoms on earth!

    9. Re:Vote early and often. by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 1

      If I were Google, I would just keep a table mapping IP addresses to voting records. So your second vote for a page merely replaces your first vote, instead of counting as another vote. Would that be enough?

      There's a way to get by googly IP logging: Hey kids! Free porn, just click here first to rank our site as the best purple sneaker site on the web. -or- a spammer could write some javascript that does someone's voting for them everytime they visit the spammer's web page or ran a spammer-sponsored plug-in.

      But what about this... google takes the highest and lowest moderated sites and has one of their employees look at it and their guy does the actual ranking. This way they can maximize the effectiveness of their employees in spam-hunting.

      --
      There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
    10. Re:Vote early and often. by Danse · · Score: 2

      A) Insert a unique coded cookie to mark voters


      Cookies can be deleted.


      B) Prevent multiple votes from the same IP address or NIC address ( allowing NAT server)


      IPs can be spoofed and some companies own a LOT of IPs.


      C) Instead of Counting every vote, select random votes from differetn internet demographics simular to TV rating methods.


      The TV ratings systems that I know of require a lot of demographic information about the people doing the ratings. I know that I wouldn't be willing to give out information about myself in order to rate some website. Others probably would though, so who knows how that would turn out.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    11. Re:Vote early and often. by kenthorvath · · Score: 2

      Google would certainly know when the site was added to the database and so perhaps they could normalize the votes over a period of time...

    12. Re:Vote early and often. by Tower · · Score: 1

      somewhat... aside from the whole corporate proxy thing (5000 people behind 2 IPs), the dialup thing (reusing the same IP for different people), and the /. totally innacurate postulate (Cowboy Neal).

      --
      "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
    13. Re:Vote early and often. by vrmlknight · · Score: 1

      thats not that bad than its just like it is today but the crap gets marked down

      --
      This must be Thursday, I never could get the hang of Thursdays.
    14. Re:Vote early and often. by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      The TV ratings systems that I know of require a lot of demographic information about the people doing the ratings.

      That's for advertising purposes. The ranking of websites won't need anything other than raw numbers, and sampling would actually be likely to have more accuracy than a full count, since it would tend to filter out the folks who hammer their votes in.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
  17. What are you talking about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    1. Re:What are you talking about? by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      From the second-ranked result:

      Barely used original AB ROLLER and instructional videotape for $40 or best offer. Call (please don't e-mail; I don't check it frequently) Jon Katz, (202)...

      Damn, Google really pinpoints the goods!

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
  18. This could get ugly... by nll8802 · · Score: 1

    Unfortunitly people tend to rate on Personal reasons rather than by quality of a site. If people actually ranked it by quality it would be a very nice way of filtering all the Junk, and maybe dead links, out of search engines.

  19. How this new system might *reduce* abuse by dmoen · · Score: 5, Interesting
    A few weeks ago, I encountered "spam" on google. 8 of the top 10 links had been captured by a spammer using "cloaking" technology:
    One method, called "cloaking," sets up a dummy page including lots of relevant information for keywords hidden through a special link. The cloaked page is fed to the search engine to boost a site's search ranking for specific terms such as "games," "sports" or "books." When surfers go to that link, however, they see a page that is different from the one indexed by the crawler.
    I can't show you what it looks like, since Google has already fixed the problem.

    What I wanted then was a "moderate" button I could click beside the link to indicate that it was spam. With a voting system like this, Google could locate and remove spam a lot quicker. Maybe that's what this is all about.

    Doug Moen.

    --
    I have written a truly remarkable program which this sig is too small to contain.
    1. Re:How this new system might *reduce* abuse by 90XDoubleSide · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The new system is more geared toward lowereing the relevance of just plain low-quality sites; you can already report outright spamming, cloaking, and other abuse to search-quality@google.com.

      --
      "Reality is just a convenient measure of complexity" -Alvy Ray Smith
    2. Re:How this new system might *reduce* abuse by Cosmic+Cow · · Score: 1

      >What I wanted then was a "moderate" button I could click beside the link to indicate that it was spam

      Just look at here how the moderation (and metamoderation) works out sometimes, and you'll figure out why this isn't the greatest idea.

    3. Re:How this new system might *reduce* abuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bravo you said it. I would not want google to be some slashdot like borg collective with a uniformity of opinion. That would ruin goolge for me.

  20. Great, but .. by Eloquence · · Score: 5, Insightful
    .. this will only work when combined with trust metrics. There are certainly different views on what constitutes a quality site, and if you just let everyone vote, you get a fuzzy average (plus you have problems filtering false votes). So what you need is a system of identity where you can say "Show me all pages rated highly by people in my trusted user list".

    To establish such a system, Google needs to get users to create accounts. A more feasible solution may be cooperation with instant messaging providers, using their identity pool and friends lists as filter criteria. But if they want people to create accounts, they need to turn Google into a community. The first thing to do this would be to have an automatic discussion forum for every major website.

    That, again, would create a lot of traffic, so they might be better off using a peer-to-peer app residing on the users' systems instead, which would also allow you to add website-specific real time chat, file sharing, micropayments and other nifty things. It would also make it easier to create responsive user interfaces, which is always a problem with web UIs.

    1. Re:Great, but .. by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 2
      So what you need is a system of identity where you can say "Show me all pages rated highly by people in my trusted user list".

      Which would require user accounts, as you said, but I wouldn't have any problem at all with having a Google cookie on my browser. Once you've got that, then maybe something like Amazon.com's system would work without setting up explicit user groups: "The following pages were high-ranked by users whose page rankings were similar to yours: ..."

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    2. Re:Great, but .. by KarmaBlackballed · · Score: 2

      The Slashdot ranking process is a work in progress but seems to be working somewhat. Google could apply a similar "karma" system for registered users and perhaps have "metamoderation" too. Can it be abused? Sure. So what? As a small influence on ranking, it may be a good thing.

      Certainly the current Google ranking system (counts number of links) should always be of greater significance in any applied approach.

      --

      --- -- - -
      Give me LIBERTY, or give me a check.
    3. Re:Great, but .. by bellers · · Score: 1
      okay. so now instead of just going to google and searching for something, I now have to log in to my locally executed peer-to-peer app with IMs, chat, discussion boards, and all this other useless shit?


      Thanks, but no. I just wanted to search for a URL.

      --
      This space for rent.
    4. Re:Great, but .. by Eloquence · · Score: 1
      okay. so now instead of just going to google and searching for something

      This, of course, is the basic use that should always be possible. However, it is not the only nifty thing you can do with an index of webpages.

    5. Re:Great, but .. by talesout · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You call the Slashdot ranking process something that's "working"? Even somewhat? Are you mad?

      I wouldn't call this working. Not in a million years would I say that. It depends entirely on the mentality of the original moderators. Dissident opinions (or in Google's case, if they were fucking stupid enough to implement such a system, sites promoting different views) from the original moderators are not modded up, thus you never gain the ability to moderate. Meta-moderation is a hack job at best, a fucking beast of a problem at worst. And nothing fixes the original problem of Slashdot's moderation system. Groupthink is promoted, dissident views are demoted, no matter how well reasoned. You don't believe me? Check the score of this post after a few hours.

      --


      Bite my yammer.
    6. Re:Great, but .. by yesthatguy · · Score: 2

      The only problem is that, when I'm searching for a site on Google, I'm not interested in taking the time to see how other people rated other sites. Metamoderation works (somewhat) on Slashdot because (when/if) people are willing to take the time to care, and look at other comments. I don't think anybody would be interested in metamoderating or generating karma on a search engine.

      --
      Yes! That guy!
    7. Re:Great, but .. by KarmaBlackballed · · Score: 2

      You might be right. The score for your post is not negative yet.

      --

      --- -- - -
      Give me LIBERTY, or give me a check.
    8. Re:Great, but .. by KarmaBlackballed · · Score: 2

      There may be situations where moderation of sites makes sense. Slashdotters might be a good example. Folks that visit this site probably peruse technology pages frequently. (Sometimes links are provided on Slashdot messages.) The slashdot user opinion of tech pages might be worth something. If a site gets good scores from users that have "high" karma, maybe there is something better about those sites? Or maybe there is at least a curios thing about those sites that other users might like too?


      I'm not interested in taking the time to see how other people rated other sites


      If Google stored a cookie with your ID and the visited page was smart enough to include a special "Google Moderate" link, you could easily and quickly rate a site when you visit it. If it is easy, you might do it.

      I would welcome that ranking option as something that I could turn on or off on Google when I do a search.

      --

      --- -- - -
      Give me LIBERTY, or give me a check.
    9. Re:Great, but .. by talesout · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      I said a few hours shithead.

      And you are pretty much proving my point. Groupthink is in. Actual thought is out.

      God, I fucking hate slashdot.

      --


      Bite my yammer.
    10. Re:Great, but .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like the kind of person who would enjoy Adequacy more than K5, though.

    11. Re:Great, but .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another k5 refugee, eh?

      Hah!

    12. Re:Great, but .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually, my prediction is that you'll get modded to +2 Interesting. The groupthink enjoys reverse psychology.

    13. Re:Great, but .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      K5 is even worse. Not that they demote an opinion different from their own, but in the diversity of their opinions. I doubt more than 1-5% of their user base is anything to the right of Richard Stallman.

    14. Re:Great, but .. by closedpegasus · · Score: 1
      To establish such a system, Google needs to get users to create accounts

      Or better yet, have google use pattern matching algorithms to look for users whose voting patterns most closely match yours. For instance, I go to slashdot and rate it say 9 out of 10, and you go to slashdot and also rate it 9 out of 10 (and lets say you and I vote similarly on other web sites as well). When I do a search, the search results which you have rated high get a bonus. This is the same kind of "Emergent Property" logic that Amazon uses to suggest products you may like.

      So if you start rating sites so google knows what you like, it looks at other users who voted similarly, and gives you results based on what those other users (who are similar to you) liked.

      This way, there can't really be any abuse of the system. If you rate things fairly, then only the votes of people who rated the same as you (fairly) get factored in. It doesn't matter how many times a malicious user votes for his own site, as long as my votes differ from his (and if the pattern matching algorithms are written correctly, then my votes *will* be seen as different from a person who voted many times for a crappy site).

    15. Re:Great, but .. by KarmaBlackballed · · Score: 2

      God, I f*cking hate slashdot

      And who is driving your browser? I may be a sh*thead (people that know me well know that is a fact, you just got a lucky guess), but I drive my own browser and point it where I want to go.

      By the way, read my comment more carefully and think "math". (Perhaps you are a sh*thead too.)

      --

      --- -- - -
      Give me LIBERTY, or give me a check.
    16. Re:Great, but .. by Bodero · · Score: 1
      I completely agree. It's much worse when articles about the United States are posted and the liberal mantra arises demoting anything that the government does in protecting herself abroad. Attacking the 'innocent Afghans' is forbidden among these flaming liberals. Patriotism is unheard of in these corridors.


      Case in point, this comment I posted:
      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=24081&cid=2604 202


      25 replies (and more replies-to-replies), and I don't think more than a couple were in support of the war. Plus, it was moderated up to +5, but then taken down lower than it started. Oh well, I guess you won't find any critical thinking here, it's foolish to assume otherwise.

    17. Re:Great, but .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you could always go be a freeper (freerepublic.com), if you're after right-thinking folk.

      Assuming by 'right' we're talking politically, not as in 'correct'; and that we use a very liberal definition of 'thinking'.

      Maybe adequacy.org, eh? *snort*

    18. Re:Great, but .. by talesout · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      A) Yes, I am a shithead. I am, and have been for quite some time, well aware of that.

      B) I'm fucking bored since the only community actually worth participating in is down.

      C) Actually reading comments before replying to them is against the rules. Jesus, next thing you know you'll be telling me I need to follow links!

      D) Blah blah blah blah.

      --


      Bite my yammer.
    19. Re:Great, but .. by g1zmo · · Score: 2, Funny

      Maybe this could be incorporated into Microsoft's punishment !

      Judge: OK, Bill, in addition to spreading Windows more effectively than finely ground anthrax in a crop duster over Los Angeles, you are also going to have to allow Google to integrate their services with your .Net framework.

      Bill: Damn, I'm good.

      --
      I have found there are just two ways to go.
      It all comes down to livin' fast or dyin' slow.
      -REK, Jr.
    20. Re:Great, but .. by uchian · · Score: 2

      Perhaps if you set your threshold higher than 1 then you would solve the problem, no?

      i mean, if I had then I wouldn't have had to bother reading your post, would I? (unless it gets modded up in the future)

    21. Re:Great, but .. by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      I guess you won't find any critical thinking here...

      Interesting thing to say in a complaint about people not agreeing with you. That thread is a stupid semantic argument about whether we are technically engaged in a "war." Such an argument self-selects participants who wish to engage in something so useless; not likely to draw "critical thinkers," nor would I imagine that the instigator qualifies as such, either...

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    22. Re:Great, but .. by SEE · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hmm. Then how in hell did I ever get to a Karma of 98? Or are you telling me that the /. groupthink has the following opinions (all expressed in posts that got net positive moderation):

      1) The antitrust actions against Microsoft were gross abuses of government power.

      2) RMS is fundamentally mistaken on the nature of property. The case for intellectual property is in fact stronger than the case for physical property, since IP is entirely the product of the creator's labor, while physical property includes preexistent matter to which no one can claim a natural right.

      3) Money doesn't corrupt governments; governments corrupt money. "Unchecked corporate power" isn't a problem on its own. The problem is that whenever a government allows itself to move beyond lassiez-faire, it creates an incentive for the entrenched corporate powers to pay for regualtions and laws that protect them and squash competitors.

    23. Re:Great, but .. by Bodero · · Score: 2

      Actually, I am. I've been a registered FreeRepublic user since November, 2000. Nice, peaceful place it is.

    24. Re:Great, but .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lots of people on slashdot are "libertarians." Slashdot has is its own little cliche and does not reflect the views of society at large. There are not many "libertarians" in the world, the kind you are talking of exist only in the States, in Europe libertarian has a wholly different meaning, it is a synonym for anarachism. In Europe they have movements like that but they call it Federalism and other things there. The "libertarian" views you are talking of are dispropationally represented on slashdot, that is why the groupthink kicked in and those posts got modded up.

      Try posting openly anarchist (real libertarian) opinions and views and watch your karma die. The "libertarian" opinions you posted are hardly radical or revolutionary, they are better classified as reformists. The posts you citied as examples are hardly heretical, they are actually very mainstream views, especially on this site.

      Imagine this posted on slashdot, a truly iconoclastic view: "....justice or right is simply what is in the interest of the stronger party"

      This opinion is hardly new, in fact it is over 2000 years old yet on slashdot, it would not land on many kind ears. That quote is from the cynical Sophist, Thrasymachus, from Plato's "The Republic," for anyone interested.

    25. Re:Great, but .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That sounds great since it would encourage people to vote so that google would know more about them, but then you'd get automated programs that would vote in a certain way to gain trust, and then vote for a site that would appeal to that type of person. For instance my bot could vote for slashdot, arstechnica, osnews, and then joe's nifty gadget shop to get geeks to check out joe's nifty gadget shop.

  21. Deactivation? by HaloMan · · Score: 1

    I just pray that with this, Google will have a tickbox on whether or not you want to have a page ranked - Less Money for Google, better searches for me.

    Besides, doesn't Pagerank on Google's toolbar already do this in its own way?

    1. Re:Deactivation? by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      What in the article leads you to believe that the profit motive is involved?

      As I read the article, it seems apparent that Google wants to add another factor in its methodology to further diminish corporate influence, not inflate it.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
  22. Might work if... by BluePenguin · · Score: 5, Interesting
    You know, this might work if Google implemented it the right way. I'm just thinking there are a few simple things they could do right off...

    1. Don't put "rate this sight" next to every hit. Instead, use a system of random assignment. Every x(where x is a random number) hits, give the user a "rate this site" dialogue. This cuts down on the potential for direct abuse.
    2. Add an option to sort by user rating, or sort by the current standard. This way, if people don't want to see user rated results, they don't have to.
    I love google and all, but some of the things that make it to the top of the list from time to time are as useful to me as a 16 bit dos driver (for my RS/6000). It'd be good to see something resembling peer review on the web after all. Who knows, even if it fails, it might spark something that works! Best of luck google!

    --
    If I can't see it in Lynx I'm not interested.
    1. Re:Might work if... by great+throwdini · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It'd be good to see something resembling peer review on the web after all.

      Don't You Yahoo! ???

      Seriously, there is so much out there that lofty goals fall apart for any but the smallest of niches. The original efforts of Yahoo! just couldn't keep pace with 'Net growth, leading to gridlock on entries and deletions and deterioration of its organization and review process.

      A more recent attempt, dmoz.org seems to have stagnated under the weight of the Web. All of the specific sections I visit lack moderation, and are about as useful as a random web search ("Gee! I wonder where they get the initial link collections.")

      Peer review is a great idea, and does take place, but requires a lot of effort and cooperation to pull off on any scale above microscopic. Been there, done that, got tired.

  23. rate-a-skank by Redneck+Genius · · Score: 0

    This could make finding decent looking, naked women on images.google.com so much easier!

    Thanks google!

  24. Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by rnd() · · Score: 2


    Why not just monitor which links searchers choose?

    --

    Amazing magic tricks

    1. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? And rename themselves to DirectShit?

    2. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by night_flyer · · Score: 2

      JavaScript pop up windows have been used to increase a sites ranking in top 50/100 sites for a while now... (as well as to exagerate site hits)

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    3. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by Plutor · · Score: 3, Informative

      Because more likely than not, this would simply reinforce many pages' positions. When I search, I (almost every time) visit at least the first couple hits, unless they're obviously inapplicable.

      My only problem with the current implementation is that it's only supported in MSIE. It uses the google toolbar app. If only there were a google toolbar for Mozilla.

    4. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by realdpk · · Score: 5, Interesting

      They already monitor clickthroughs for 1% of the users hitting their site each day. Sometimes you'll notice it because the URLs you see when you hover over the links are different.

    5. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by handle · · Score: 1

      Because there are lots of bad sites that turn up in google search results but there's no way to know that they're bad until you click through to them.

    6. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by BillX · · Score: 1

      Because often, you don't find out the link is irrelevant until after you click on it. There's no way to "un-click" a bad result with a deceptive title.

      --
      Caveat Emptor is not a business model.
    7. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Geeks don't click the links anyway, they highlight the address and use "jump to selected text" to avoid sending referer information (their search temrs) to the linked site.

    8. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by LS · · Score: 2

      This doesn't make any sense. Higher rated results will automatically get more clickthroughs.

      LS

      --
      There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
    9. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by Alomex · · Score: 4, Interesting
      This doesn't make any sense. Higher rated results will automatically get more clickthroughs.

      Duh, you can adjust for that.

      Compute the standard distribution of click-throughs according to position in the result set and any page outdoing this number gets "moded" up, any one underperforming this number gets moded down...

    10. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by PhoenxHwk · · Score: 4, Insightful


      Becuase that doesn't tell if you clicked and didn't like the page. Just because one person clicks on a junk page doesn't mean that page should be higher rated for the next person.

    11. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by LS · · Score: 2

      Ok, Mr. Duh, how do you adjust for the fact that click-throughs that deviate from the standard distribution are based on the little snippet of text that google returns, instead of the the whole page?

      --
      There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
    12. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You stated that it couldn't be done because higher ranked items get more clickthroughs.

      I showed how it coudl be done and hence you were wrong. Now you are attempting a comeback by bringing up something totally unrelated to your original assertion.

      Just admit your mistake and take your sorry ass elsewhere.

    13. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by PatSmarty · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, I use Google 30 times a day, but I've never seen such a thing. Maybe your talking about Yahoo, who uses Google search-results as well?

    14. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by LS · · Score: 2

      I see that you are so sure of yourself as to comeback anonymously, Mr. Duh. If you thought things out, you would have never even replied initially: Since I showed that it cannot be done, because the decision to click through is arbitrarily based on a snipet of text, then all you will get is a clickthrough rate generally based on the order they are returned. In otherwords, useless. Asshole.

      --
      There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
    15. Re:Why not just monitor clickthroughs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You blundered with your asinine one liner of "impossible", yet keep coming back for more.

      As we say in chess: In a lost position good players resign, stupid players play on.

  25. I like this feature (already implemented) by night_flyer · · Score: 2

    Currently, Google's proprietary system ranks sites primarily by words listed on the page, terms used in a page's title or similar factors. It also ranks a page's popularity, determined by the number--and importance--of sites linking to a page. For example, a page that is linked to 100 times from a reputable newspaper's Web site would rank higher than a page linked to 500 times from a porn site.


    I do like this feature, it truly shows the worth of a web page in other peoples eyes, not just the eyes of the webmaster who created the thing...

    --


    Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
    Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
  26. Even just flagging bad links by _Chainsaw · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't know how many times I have searched for something and get a perfect looking search result only to find out it is a broken link. I have not used all of the search engines out there but I don't remember any of the ones that I have used having an obvious method to flag a link as broken.

    I know that their spiders go through the database and verify links but I'd be willing to bet that is takes months to go over it once. Why not flag links as broken and have the spider verify/remove those first?

    Just cleaning up the broken links could improve the search results.

    Help out Project Gutenberg!
    Distributed Proofreaders http://charlz.dns2go.com/gutenberg

    1. Re:Even just flagging bad links by thefogger · · Score: 1

      If it's just text you're looking for, you can always use the "Archive" option on Google.

      --


      Um... I didn't do it!
    2. Re:Even just flagging bad links by belthezar · · Score: 1

      Hmm, but one of the coolest things about google in my opinion is the fact that even for the dead links you just click the cached link to "resurrect" the info. :)

      If they removed all the dead links really quickly then we wouldn't even have it in their cache anymore. And I've gotten lots of info I was searching for from those links.

      (Wow, my first slashdot post! Finally found something 100 other people hadn't posted before me)

    3. Re:Even just flagging bad links by belthezar · · Score: 1

      Oops, I'm a liar. Before anyone calls me on it, I guess I had posted 2 other times before this. :)

  27. Quality of site versus quality of match by Spinality · · Score: 1

    I agree with your concern about how useful or fair this will prove to be. I think there's a good fundamental goal of improving the quality of hits; but without really strong metamoderation, I can't see how this could be made fair. (I suspect it's probably more important to weed out irrelevant/bad hits, which might perhaps be easier to police.)

    I wonder whether a bunch of volunteer moderators might be a better solution -- give them some freebie benefit for spending a few hours a day reviewing other people's searches and picking out the best and worst responses. But of course, those moderators won't know what original search was after, soo all they could do is weed out the pr0n sites etc.

    --
    -- We all have enough strength to endure the misfortunes of other people. La Rochefoucauld
  28. Win32 by jeriqo · · Score: 5, Informative

    This feature is only available from the 'Googlebar'.
    The problem is that this GoogleBar only plugs in Internet Explorer, so *nix geeks won't be able to rate sites..

    It consists on small faces on which you click. (happy or unhappy)

    -J

    --
    Alexis 'jeriqo' BRET
    1. Re:Win32 by Phrogz · · Score: 2
      This feature is only available from the 'Googlebar'.

      This is not true. Or rather, while it *is* true that the happy/sad face voting feature is only available on the toolbar, which is only available on Win32, I gotten search results recently from Google which included at the bottom a questionaire about the accuracy of the search results, allowing me to rank various items. I don't know if it was a temporary thing or a random selection, but it was on the page itself, and I was on a Mac. No toolbar, but still soliciting user feedback.

  29. Other neat (cough) features: by Xzzy · · Score: 2, Troll
    Google has taken to spamming you when they detect a robots.txt file.

    This is truly idiotic, since robots.txt has never been a default part of any web server installation I've ever done, so it's completely a voluntary thing to create the file, and every webmaster should be WELL AWARE what this file does (by virtue of the fact that they had to create it). I mean, duh guys.

    Yeah, so I'm off topic. But I just got the spam this morning, and I used to respect Google quite a bit, and witnessing them resorting to spam emails, begging us to let them spider our sites really tarnished their image, so let me rant a little. :p

    Oh, and let's not forget about google suggesting robots.txt as a method to protect sensitive data recently. Be nice if they could decide if they wanted us to create robots.txt, or not..

    1. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't spam unsolicited COMMERCIAL email? Was Google's email commercial?

    2. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by andkaha · · Score: 1
      Isn't spam unsolicited COMMERCIAL email? Was Google's email commercial?

      Sure. It's saying "please remove the robots.txt file from your site so that we may index the site and thereby increase the size of our search database". The number of pages in their database is clearly related to their economical gain.

      --
      It's 11pm, do you know what your deamons are up to?
    3. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      I think that you misunderstood the purpose of the email. They do acknowledge and recognize that you setup the robots.txt - but offer a suggestion to allow google to index your site and no other bots (Unless their bots lie and say they are google)

      I think it's perfectly clear in there, the line that states if it is your intention, ignore the rest of the email. I can understand your stance, but I hope you take into account that this was simply an informational email - and my guess is a lot of people don't know you can setup a robots.txt entry to allow one crawler but block others.

      They still advocate and encourage robots.txt, and I personally find their email handy, well-worded, and non-intrusive. If they change their policy and start emailing them to you on a regular basis, let us know because then it's violating your personal space and I back your stance 100%. Till then, one email doesn't hurt - and it does provide useful information as well as acknowledging (not begging at all) that you may be perfectly content blocking the crawler bots.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    4. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by gblues · · Score: 1

      At least they were considerate enough to ask, rather than just ignoring the file.

      Nathan

    5. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Yes, that is indeed what it said... sure.

      Go read the email before posting lies.

      Thank you, have a nice day.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    6. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by great+throwdini · · Score: 1

      I hope you take into account that this was simply an informational email - and my guess is a lot of people don't know you can setup a robots.txt entry to allow one crawler but block others.

      That may be, but I don't really think that's the intention guiding the email itself (see elsewhere in this thread for its possible commercial implications).

      Very few people running major sites instantiate a robots.txt file (go around and look for it, as I do on occasion -- it's surprisingly rare) and those who do generally know what they're doing, mainly because the vast majority of exclusion rules you see on the 'Net apply to all robots and not a few 'bots here and there.

      I doubt global exclusion, as commonly practiced, signals someone behind the scenes thinking "Gee, I don't want to exclude Google, but I simply don't know how!" (in the main). The standard is not that hard to read and follow, and as the OP -- and perhaps the relative rarity of robots.txt in the wild -- indicates one really has to want to create an exclusion file.

      Till then, one email doesn't hurt ...

      I'll remember that for each and every spammer out there who only sends me a single email before being shut down. :)

      Seriously, though, for unasked-for email, this example is relatively benign. Above all else, I find it odd and wonder whether I'll receive it soon enough. Why wouldn't Google just add more prominent notice of their own (existing) information regarding robots.txt to their site instead of undertaking an email campaign? Very odd and wasteful.

    7. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by andkaha · · Score: 1
      Go read the email before posting lies.

      I did read the email. The purpose of the email was exactly what I said it was, to get people to remove the robots.txt file from their sites. The intention of the message is to let Google expand their database.

      The question you should be asking is whether the email is fake or not.

      --
      It's 11pm, do you know what your deamons are up to?
    8. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Xzzy · · Score: 2

      > I think that you misunderstood the purpose of
      > the email.

      I think I understand it perfectly. They noticed a website has a robots.txt file, so they send an email to the webmaster making the webmaster aware the file existed (as if they weren't already), in effect asking us to remove it. It was veiled under the guise of being nice and polite and thoughtful, but they still requested it.

      > but I hope you take into account that this was
      > simply an informational email -

      informational schminformational. Spam is spam is spam, and for me to remove robots.txt would be directly to their benefit.. it makes their engine more accurate, which makes people happier, which makes more customers, which makes them more money.

      Just because they worded it nicely doesn't make it less of a spam email.

    9. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by _xeno_ · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I think what they were suggesting is that you had done something seemingly boneheaded like:

      User-Agent: *
      Disallow: /

      Think about it - how many people do you think are out there with a half-clue who decide that they want to prevent evil robots from indexing their site without realizing that they therefore won't wind up on search engines? Apparently Google seems to have run into this situation and now e-mails webmasters who have potentially accidently blocked all robots from indexing their pages.

      Now there may be a valid reason to completely block your site from all robots. But think about how pointless it really is - how many webmasters really want to drive away search engines? Most people want to show up on search engines, especially people whose site shows up as a domain (ie, http://slashdot.org/ as opposed to http://www.wherever.edu/~they/started/).

      Seriously, why did you block the entire domain from web crawlers? While there definately are good reasons, it seems sensible for Google to send a "are you really sure you want to do that" message, especially since the linked "spam" was sent to someone who apparently had four domains they had blocked off from search engines. This sounds like something that an amatuer webmaster may have accidently done without thinking about the consequences. In which case the e-mail makes sense: "Did you really mean to do that? If so, ignore this message - if not, here's a way to fix it."

      I really think you're overreacting to a fairly innocent e-mail.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    10. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Xerithane · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      ...to get people to remove the robots.txt file from their sites...

      Bullshit you read it. The purpose of the email is to add a User-Agent: Googlebot to the robots.txt. Course you knew that didnt you? Be specific, otherwise you lie.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    11. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      First point: it isn't bulk. Therefor, a count against it being spam.

      Second point: They never ask you to remove it, they suggest if you want to let google search, add User-Agent: Googlebot. Big difference.

      Third point: SPAM is SPAM. Google sending one email to a site is not. It isn't a commercial email, even though by getting more traffic to their site and happier customers generate email. It would be spam if they advertised anywhere in there that you can be listed as a sponsored link for the low low cost of $4.95 for the first hit $0.99 each additional. It wasn't.

      It was unsolicted email, yes. It is not bulk, nor commercial. There for it is only 33.3% spam.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    12. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by andkaha · · Score: 2

      Blah blah blah.

      The email, which I don't trust 100% to be from Google, says, and this is verbatim:

      [...] As a result, we have not been able to add your site to our index and cannot point our users to your pages.

      By pointing this out to the reader, they clearly show that the purpose of the message is to get people to allow the bot to crawl their site. Disguising it as an educational message about the format of the robots.txt file doesn't make it better. The intent, in the end, is to be able to index more pages.

      What's your problem? My belief is that you wouldn't think Google had commercial interest in indexing more pages even if the message had said "THIS IS A COMMERCIAL UNSOLICITED MESSAGE".

      --
      It's 11pm, do you know what your deamons are up to?
    13. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by andkaha · · Score: 1
      Third point: SPAM is SPAM. Google sending one email to a site is not.

      Spam doesn't need to be commercial (but I think that the message we're talking about is clearly commercial: the reader is supposed to think "of course I want my site indexed by Google", which will benefit Google commercially).

      I don't believe that it is one single handcrafted message. Rather, judging from the From: header, it was sent by the bot itself in an automatic fashion. This makes the message part of a targeted mass mailing.

      But we still don't know if it's really a genuine message from Google. I particularly want to see the other headers...

      --
      It's 11pm, do you know what your deamons are up to?
    14. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Seriously, though, for unasked-for email, this example is relatively benign. Above all else, I find it odd and wonder whether I'll receive it soon enough. Why wouldn't Google just add more prominent notice of their own (existing) information regarding robots.txt to their site instead of undertaking an email campaign? Very odd and wasteful.


      I dunno, I view these kind of emails like the DMV notices or USPS notices that get mailed out. Benign, pointful (usually) and 99.9% of the time wasteful. However, in the electronic frontier it is caused by marketing dorks. As is most the problems in the electronic space.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    15. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      My problem is you still lie.

      You are completly ommitting the "Add User-Agent: Googlebot" section, and claim they are tryin to get them "remove robots.txt" as you said they said.
      Yes, the intent is to be able to index more pages.

      Yes, Google has a commercial interest in indexing more pages.

      No, it is not a commercial unsolicited message because the commercial link is not a direct relation.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    16. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by andkaha · · Score: 1
      My problem is you still lie.

      I see you keep on using the words you know best.

      Will it make you happier if I said that yes, you're right, they don't acually have that phrase in the text, and that yes, I arrived at my conclusion about the removal of robots.txt a little bit too soon (after reading the text once)?

      Now, explain to me exactly why it's not spam if the commercial link is "not direct"? I think that the commercial link is as direct it can be without them actually saying "give us $$$". Try to explain it without calling me a lier if you please. It might help to know that the definition of spam contains the phrase

      Spam is flooding the Internet with many copies of the same message, in an attempt to force the message on people who would not otherwise choose to receive it.
      (taken from spam.abuse.net ).

      --
      It's 11pm, do you know what your deamons are up to?
    17. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Gladly, now that you have acknowledged that is what has happened.

      First off, lets relate directly to the spam definition you posted. First off, Google may (under the assumption it is Google) be sending these out, however it is far from a flood. Given that robots.txt are not a common place occurance on sites and from the email correlates emails to the different sites it blocks. Secondly, there is no counts or reports that this is a multiple-email therefor requiring no one any action to cease the receipt of the email.

      Following the guidelines from spam.abuse.net (What is Spam?) this email really doesn't satisfy any of the direct arguments. I would say it is an annoying notification, similar to if you install Windows (My girlfriend got a new laptop with XP, let me tell you it is irritating) and it prompts you for updates and such. This is prompting you with information once. It's not a deluge that will cost anyone any amount of money (unless you are on a metered line with a 300bps modem) If you read the full What is Spam article, I think you will see that sending one email per server-admin while it correlates the email addresses to prevent the same email address getting blasted by 20 emails (in which case I would say you have a much stronger argument it is spam).

      The commercial interest of it in no way ties to the recipient of the email, and in no way is their organization structured on the email. Yes, it may help get more sites indexed; but it is a far cry from email marketing. Calling any unsolicted email (which I back it is) spam is dangerous, because think of it this way: everytime you send a resume with an email to a company just to see if they have openings is the same course - yet not spam, right?

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    18. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      Your previous "quote" was:

      It's saying "please remove the robots.txt file from your site so that we may index the site and thereby increase the size of our search database".

      In the English language, quotemarks mean a verbatim quote. But now you give us a "verbatim" quote which is different. How does this make you not a liar?

      As to the actual content of the letter: They are just trying to do their job, and provide me with a more complete index. So, they make a profit by doing so, that does not make their letter to you an advertisemnet (commercial email).

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    19. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      Of course it was from Google; another poster here was familiar with the message and told you that it had the request to modify robots.txt when you claimed it asked you to remove robots.txt.

      By some stretch of the imagination, this could be considered spam; but if so, I would consider it benign spam, for several reasons. For one, it provides me with a more complete database to search. For another, the robots.txt file may not even have been placed on the server by the current webmaster; a hostile ex-employee, or a hacker, may have placed it there in a deliberate effort to reduce traffic. I suspect this happens more often than you may guess.

      A one-time notice to inform you that you won't be indexed for this reason may be an annoyance to you, but it is intended to the people that it addresses -- the ones who really don't know they will be excluded -- to whom it is a real service.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    20. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by andkaha · · Score: 2

      Thank you sir, that was the response I wanted, earlier in the thread.

      Yes, I did indeed read the full What Is Spam? page and I picked out the first line of if because it comes closes to how I define spam; something that wastes my time and annoys me, takes up space in my inbox, was not requested by me, and is sent out of greed (of any degree). I very seldom get two or more copies of any one spam, so I can't see how the "this is a one time mailing" excuse could be taken serious in any type of correspondance, spam or not.

      The commercial interest of it in no way ties to the recipient of the email [...]

      Many spams don't tie any commercial interest to the recipient. A letter saying "buy our product" does not tie any commercial interest to the reader. It only delivers the old "give us money" message.

      The text that we're talking about follows the same lines. It says that Google can't index the site, implying that it would be a good thing if they could. So, in effect, we have a spam, something that says "you might benefit from using our product". Note that you very possibly will benefit from having your site indexed by Google but, and that's the important part, don't you think that the webmaster would be capable of figuring that out herself?

      Calling any unsolicted email (which I back it is) spam is dangerous, because think of it this way: everytime you send a resume with an email to a company just to see if they have openings is the same course - yet not spam, right?

      I don't quite agree. I would argue that you shouldn't send them a CV if you didn't know they had vacancies (many (most) companies publish their job openings on the web).

      --
      It's 11pm, do you know what your deamons are up to?
    21. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by andkaha · · Score: 1

      You might have a point, but I don't think hackings by ex-employees etc. are as common as you think. Why? Well, simply because the negative impact of being found guilty of hacking a company computer cancels out the benefit from successfully blocking the company from a couple of search engines.

      Of course it was from Google; another poster here was familiar with the message and told you that it had the request to modify robots.txt when you claimed it asked you to remove robots.txt.

      So you're saying that the more people that read the message on tru7h.org the more true it becomes that it was Google who sent it?

      --
      It's 11pm, do you know what your deamons are up to?
    22. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that the more people that read the message on tru7h.org the more true it becomes that it was Google who sent it?

      uh, now that you mention it...yeah, I guess I was saying that, though I didn't realize it. Sorry, hadn't noticed your initial link to the public posting.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    23. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by andkaha · · Score: 1
      In the English language, quotemarks mean a verbatim quote.

      And they are also used to denote metaphorical text. I had no intention of quoting the letter, why would I? It available for everyone to read. I said what I thought the text meant.

      So, they make a profit by doing so, that does not make their letter to you an advertisemnet (commercial email).

      No, it makes it pointless spam. If my company had anything to gain from being indexed by any particular search engine, we would see to it ourselfs, without having to be asked to by the bot of the engine.

      --
      It's 11pm, do you know what your deamons are up to?
    24. Re:Other neat (cough) features: by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Many spams don't tie any commercial interest to the recipient. A letter saying "buy our product" does not tie any commercial interest to the reader. It only delivers the old "give us money" message.


      Delivering a direct "give us money" message is not a direct commercial interest? Strange understanding.

      but, and that's the important part, don't you think that the webmaster would be capable of figuring that out herself?

      Way too many people are just plain stupid, or don't know what they can or cannot do with any scope of technology. I view any correspondance that is purely information (as this was, 100% informational) to not be an unwelcome, time consuming, annoying piece of spam. I consider it to be an unwelcome reminder that most the population that has webservers don't understand a lot of the services available to them.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  30. A concern by zmokhtar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have seen all kinds of warez sites that force you to vote in order to get to parts of the site. Others could have frames that forge a vote each time a visitor comes to their site. While this is an intriguing idea, I don't see how it could work.

    The whole idea of Google's PageRank was to count each link from another indexed site as a vote. What was wrong with that scheme? Doesn't everyone currently think Google is the best engine out there? If so why "fix" it?

    I like the suggestion someone else made about showing the vote results but not having them acutally affect the search results.

    --
    Why aren't we told when editors moderate our posts?
    1. Re:A concern by dodald · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how that comment is related to the discussion. Google has used PageRank for a LONG time, the feature the article is about lets the USER's vote for web pages. PageRank is the system they use to allow other pages rank a site. "Google interprets a link from page A to page B as a vote, by page A, for page B."

      --
      101010b 2Ah 52o
  31. Taco fumbles again! by eAndroid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Especially since for many unscrupulous businesses, ratings in search engines directly translate to dollars. Taco you moron have a little faith. This is google we're talking about. Name one feature they've screwed up that badly. If it can't be done so that companies can't take advantage of it realise that it won't be done at all. And taco, you ignorant bastard, you'd think that after you created a user-ranked web site companies can't take advantage of you would realise that anyone can do it.

    --

    I can't spell or type, but that doesn't mean I'm unusually stupid.
  32. The Problem by zpengo · · Score: 2
    When "Timmy's 3r337 Perl Hax0ring Site!!!" gets ranked #1 for a search on "duck mating habits", we'll all get a good idea what would go wrong with a system like this.

    The existing Google ranking system is already exploited by users who set up hundreds of dummy sites that all link to a certain site using a variety of keywords, thus feeding the G! machine bogus "popularity" information.

    A ranking system will just make this easier to do. Your average skript kiddie could easily bombard Google with a heap of "Yeah this is great!" ratings for his site, thus bumping it up many notches.

    User-ranking systems work as long as there's no huge desire to do so. Slashdot doesn't have *too* many problems because nobody really cares that much if they get rated "+6 - Rad!"...however, there's a much greater motivation to have one's website come up tops in one of the most popular search engines....

    --


    Got Rhinos?
  33. Google is worthless! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google would be nice if I could actually use it.
    Unfortunately, they decided the University I go to
    shouldn't be allowed to use them so they have the
    University's IP block banned.

    1. Re:Google is worthless! by vsync64 · · Score: 1
      --
      TO BUY A NEW CAR WOULD MAKE YOU SEXUALLY ATTRACTIVE.
    2. Re:Google is worthless! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, my college isn't in .ca land. We've been
      banned for over a week now and doesn't look like
      things will change anytime soon.

  34. How long will it take? by why-is-it · · Score: 1

    Two weeks ago, Google began quietly testing a Web page voting system that, for the first time on a large scale, could eventually let Web surfers help determine the popularity of sites ranked by the company's search engine.

    How long will it take before someone automates a script to rate some site(s) artificially high or low? Any wagers?

    --
    *** Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket?
    1. Re:How long will it take? by vrmlknight · · Score: 1

      ummm show me the page you use to vote and 15 min

      --
      This must be Thursday, I never could get the hang of Thursdays.
  35. gee thanks /. by jeffy124 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    2001-11-27 23:08:39 Google experimenting with page ranking (articles,news) (rejected)

    always love seeing my rejections show up a day later

    --
    The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
    1. Re:gee thanks /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another fine example of why a "voting" system wont work

      "We'll vote you down because you exposed our faults"

  36. Give Google some credit by FTL · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Google aren't idiots. Don't be so quick to post about how this will be a huge failure and how easy it will be to defeat the system.

    Think about it. According to the article, the system is currently just collecting information, it isn't affecting rankings -- yet. So in a couple of weeks Google will look at this new data, look at the corresponding pages, then figure out what should be done. Why are we assuming that they will just do a linar mapping between the number of happy faces and relevance?

    I wouldn't put it past them to dynamically map relevance with a far more complicated function. User rankings are another non-random data stream. All information (even negative information) is useful. Just as long as one strips it from its labels, and looks at it blindly. Can you say neural networks?

    --
    Slashdot monitor for your Mozilla sidebar or Active Desktop.
    1. Re:Give Google some credit by Casca · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not only are they not idiots, they actually seem to care about how their engine works. I emailed them a while back about a page that turned up very high in a search result, that was obviously not relevant at all. Not only did they look into the problem, but they emailed me back to tell me it was fixed. Think you'll get that kind of service from yahoo?

      --
      Casca
    2. Re:Give Google some credit by zsmooth · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well, considering yahoo uses google... Yes?

    3. Re:Give Google some credit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not likely, considering four years ago Yahoo!'s policy was to index a page that you've submitted within two months.

      It's now been almost 52 months and the page I submitted has yet to ever show up.

    4. Re:Give Google some credit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yahoo also works the other way. When a URL does get added (by someone else, as it happened to me), they keep (well, kept, they may still) it around FOREVER.

      I went from "this page will go away soon" to 404 to 410 to 410 with a nasty message badmouthing Yahoo for never updating their index. The icing on the cake was putting a bunch of hits from their spiders in the 410 message showing that they had fetched it and STILL had it linked.

      To their credit, they finally did zap it over a year ago, but it shouldn't have taken that long. It's like these spammers and users who leave - when they're gone, they're gone! Get over it!

    5. Re:Give Google some credit by eibhear · · Score: 1

      ... and looks at it blindly.

      Indeed.

  37. LWP Baby! by AixGE · · Score: 1

    I wonder how long it will take me and LWP to get a search for "slashdot" to point to http://goatse.cx?

    --
    Get busy living or get busy dying. Carpe diem.
    1. Re:LWP Baby! by almightyjustin · · Score: 1

      You can't do that--goatse.cx uses robots.txt to exclude itself from search results. It won't even show up if you search for "goatse" (try it if you want).

      --

      Omnes arx vestrum sunt adiuncta nobis.

    2. Re:LWP Baby! by shogun · · Score: 1

      Hmm you're right:

      # robots.txt for goatse.cx
      # sorry, don't spider this

      User-agent: *
      Disallow: *

      There goes your plans to moderate goatse.cx up to +5 insightful...

  38. Useless. by Renraku · · Score: 1

    Businesses (read, spammers) will either simply pay people a lot of money to search a lot of words and rank their sites high, or write a script that does it for them. Mainly, its porn sites that do this. For instance, try searching for some innocent word, and you're likely to find a porn site somewhere. While this is definately a step forward in eliminating the problem of catch-pages (pages with many random words to catch search engines), it won't last for long.

    --
    Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
  39. This is not useful, but there are alteratives... by uslinux.net · · Score: 2

    The idea of rating based on user "votes" is one I see bound to failure. Google would need an enormous trusted user base, and logins would be required ('cause I could spoof any IP out there for votes). Talk about unnecessary complexity for a search engine.

    What is more interesting is what a few companies have been doing recently in the search engine world (there really still is business after the dot-com fallout, even if it isn't profitable). At my work, we recently looked into a product by a company called Recommind. Their search engine was able to find similar words in documents, and could give you related documents that didn't have key words. It could even distinguish between java (the coffee), java (the language), and Java (the island near Jakarta)! Pretty cool stuff. Combine that type of "concept matching" instead of "keyword matching" with Google's technology, and you've got the next generation search engine.

    All very cool stuff. I hope they don't kill it.

  40. Google ddosing themselves ? by Krapangor · · Score: 1

    It's just a question of time when spammers start scripted "voting" to push their pages on top.
    Google might block such "votes", but I suppose the traffic created by all the spammers worldwide will act like an ulta ddos attack on google.
    In AI this is called "learning by reinforcement".

    --
    Owner of a Mensa membership card.
  41. Speaking of unscrupulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Call me cynical. Call me jaded. But answer me this: Does anyone here think that Microsoft pays staff to accumulate moderator points on Slashdot, with which to promote their own self-serving agenda(s)? Microsoft is the obvious example, but I wonder if this happens at other corporations as well. I.E. - to what degree do the opinions on Slashdot represent the views of free-thinking individuals. What degree of control does the marketing machinery at MS have over Slashdot discussions?

    1. Re:Speaking of unscrupulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I'll call you stupid. You overrate your importance to think MS actually cares what is written on this board.

  42. They will likely have the same problem as mp3.com by suso · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Provided that they can keep users from voting multiple times through ip tracking (can you imagine the size of the database for that), they will probably run into the same symptoms that mp3.com's top 40 boards had, there were usually the same group of artists or songs on that board because few people ever explored the rest of the mp3.com archives. But maybe since google isn't the place housing the content, it will be different.

  43. Problems with moderation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    I like the moderation features on this site; for the most part, the moderators themselves are scrupulous. The problem occurs when large parts of the voting bloc are biased, which leads to valid ideas being moderated down. It's easy for prevailing public opinion to be wrong. This is, of course, one of the primary arguments against the democratic process. I.e., if you have a medical problem, do you ask a select few doctors or do you take a poll of co-workers and run with the most popular result?


    In the current times lots of folks are happy to throw away their liberties in the pursuit of the vague concept of terrorists. Sites that decry this would likely be modded down because their opinions would be contrary to the masses.We've seen it on Slashdot when dissenting opinions (pro-Microsoft, pro-DMCA, pro-RIAA) are modded down without really looking at the validity of the argument.


    Maybe there should be a new category -- something like "Worthy argument, but..." which would remove the emotional connotation and focus on the validity of the argument.

  44. Metamod? by aozilla · · Score: 2

    Especially since for many unscrupulous businesses, ratings in search engines directly translate to dollars.

    But we've all seen first hand how easy it is to stop unscrupulousness through meta-moderation!

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
    1. Re:Metamod? by 1D10T · · Score: 1

      Would you really take the time to meta-moderate on Google? Also Google probably has some more queries in a minute than slashdot has in the whole day, so this wont really work.

    2. Re:Metamod? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was being sarcastic, anyway

  45. ripe for abuse by minus_273 · · Score: 1

    there are more ways to abuse this than just businesses, if you remember the GW bush google trick from the election. I can just see how confusing it will be to get information like this. This could seriously undermine the usefulness of google. If we get trash for searches, it will begin to resemble the other search engines. Wt least we knew that when they ranked the pages, they new what was going on, opeing it up to the world basically means multiplying the GW bush trick.

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
  46. How to make automated votes expensive by Tom7 · · Score: 5, Interesting


    It's not that hard to make it really expensive to forge votes. For instance, check out the captcha project at CMU. (Basically, it generates images that are difficult for a computer to recognize, but easy for a human, and challenges the user to respond to them in some way to prove that they are human.) If they could find the right balance of convenience for humans and difficulty for perl scripts, I think they'd have a great thing going. I have always wanted this feature in a search engine ... I'm glad to see it happen.

    1. Re:How to make automated votes expensive by Reliant-1864 · · Score: 1

      I don't think that'll be very good. I tried bongo. I failed it 3 times before passing it. Sound wasn't working so I couldn't try the sound test. I also had some trouble on FBW. Gimpy was pretty easy to pass. If I have trouble on some of these tests, then people who have trouble using a mouse will certainly fail some of the types.

      --
      The universe is held together with duct tape and karma. What goes around, comes around, and gets stuck to your forehead.
    2. Re:How to make automated votes expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just went to the site, tried bongo. The thing presented me with a pair of four squares with symbols. The left ones were all on the top and right ones on the bottom. I ansered that, but the system is telling me that I failed.

      As those things are hard to do with a computer, the computer have hard time understanding that I have a good response.

    3. Re:How to make automated votes expensive by Tom7 · · Score: 1

      Some of them are better than others. Try the word recognition test...

  47. And i just found another google change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns999 91614 was just sent into the slush pile as an AC, telling of another new use for Google: virii and credit card numbers.

  48. The scientologits are going to *hate* that. by jcr · · Score: 2

    This is a great idea. Google already had an excellent idea in rating sites by counting the links to the site to defeat keyword clogging, and now they're adding one more layer to the quality control.

    Hats off to Google, yet again. Keep up the good work, guys.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  49. Hallelujiah! by yesman · · Score: 1

    Yes! Yes! Yes!

    Collaborative filtering for the masses! Reputation management! Can Annotea comment servers be far behind?(!)

    Build it in to Mozilla.

  50. Re:They will likely have the same problem as mp3.c by lucifuge31337 · · Score: 1

    IP tracking? That won't work.
    You have heard of NAT, right?

    --
    Do not fold, spindle or mutilate.
  51. They aren't stupid by 90XDoubleSide · · Score: 5, Informative
    If you read the article before you post, you will notice that Google doesn't plan to make the user opinions a large factor in their relevance equation, if it applies to individual sites at all:

    Rather than using the votes to tinker with the specific rankings of particular pages or sites, he said, the feature would most likely be used to bolster the relevance of overall results.

    "It will most likely have more of an aggregate impact," Krane said. "We have indexed more than 1.6 billion Web pages, so it is extremely inefficient to go after individual pages."

    Also remember that this is only one of many of Google's tools to improve relevance. You can already do your part to stop spammers by reporting them to search-quality@google.com.

    --
    "Reality is just a convenient measure of complexity" -Alvy Ray Smith
  52. Guess what by sllort · · Score: 0

    This system could work. If someone just sent the people at google one very simple link.

    Hell, the same thing goes for Slashdot.

  53. But relavance is subjective to the search... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know what all the "secret formulas" google uses are, but I wonder how this voting thing will help increase the relavance of a search. A given page may be very popular, but yet still not particularly relavant to a particular search. Just voting the page as a "great page" doesn't seem to me to add much. If its to be any use, it needs to take into account the actual search which returned it, so that it can rate its relavance to those particular keywords, rather then whether or not its a great page. However, since I can't find any of the voting stuff when I use google, I don't actualy know what it asks, or if it uses and more detailed criteria...

  54. Just verify e-mail addy of users' rating a site by klapton · · Score: 1

    In order for users to rate a site, they should have to provide a valid e-mail address that Google can perform a reverse lookup on.
    As stated by others, Google should provide the standard sort with a user rating next to the displayed sites. Then allow the user to click a button to sort by user rating. Or just provide a button to allow the user to select Google Sort or User Rating Sort on the main search page.

  55. Something similar by big_cat79 · · Score: 1

    There is a site that does something just like this called Coolhomepages.com. It's not a search engine, but it has sites broken down into different categories (DHTML, Flash, Typographic, Retro, etc.) and visitors can rate the sites from 1 to 10 stars, or submit sites they feel deserving. A lot of the web designers I work with go to the site and look around for "inspiration."

    --

    BigCat79

    "The dead have risen and are voting Republican!" --Bart Simpson
  56. what would be useful... by thraxil · · Score: 2, Interesting

    is if i had a way of decreasing the ranking of my own site for particular search terms.

    eg, my site used to be called '/dev/random' but i changed the name when i realized that it was in the search engines for that term and that most people who were searching for '/dev/random' probable weren't looking for my weblog. i'd love to have some kind of 'anti-keyword' meta tag that i could use to tell the googlebots that i'd rather not be associated with that search term anymore.

    i know... somewhat off topic and boring... sue me.

    --
    Smokey the Bear says, "Strip mining prevents forest fires!"
    1. Re:what would be useful... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      This was a story on /. like two weeks ago. Go look for it.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  57. Statistical analysis by jpm242 · · Score: 1

    Couldn't they use a statistical analysis to verify if voting is "honest". I bet you could pretty easily detect normal voting behaviour as well as biased voting behaviour.

    I'm pretty sure there's a branch of statistics that examines such problems.

    JPM

    --
    --- Worst tagline ever.
  58. Cloaking? by Mike+Schiraldi · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Can someone give a explanation of "cloaking" that's not dumbed down to the point of uselessness?

  59. Meta-Rating by jeriqo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As slashdot got Meta-Moderation, i think google should use Meta-Rating, so users could help detect spammers.

    Oh, by the way, if you're already a Slashdot moderator and want to know if you can Meta-Moderate, just check /metamod.pl.

    -J

    --
    Alexis 'jeriqo' BRET
    1. Re:Meta-Rating by Lars+T. · · Score: 2

      Actually, the system seems to be more like Meta-Moderation than Moderation. Google uses the number of links to a site as a qualifier of relevance, IOW as a positive moderation. The votes on the actual relevance by the users will then be used to identify sites whose links are not a good indicator of relevance, to then be (mostly) ignored in future searches, IOW similar to Meta-Moderation.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  60. Google Meta Mod? by rjamestaylor · · Score: 3, Funny

    Is there a provision for meta-modding at Google?

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  61. And it began.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Search for [ IIS 5.0 security update ]
    Search took 0.35 seconds results below:

    Welcome! - The Apache Software Foundation
    The Apache Software Foundation. ...
    Description: Main site of this top rated internet web server.
    Category: Computers > Software > ... > Linux > Projects > Internet > Web > Servers
    www.apache.org/ - 9k - Cached - Similar pages

  62. Statistical analysis by jpm242 · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure there's a way to detect "malicous voting patterns" pretty easily using basic statistical analysis. Just examine voting patern variations over time and look for suspicious variations.

    I'm pretty sure a branch of statistics is already solving similar problems

    JP

    --
    --- Worst tagline ever.
  63. positive ranking only could be good by horster · · Score: 1

    if google only allows positive marks to be given then I see no harm done really. consider microsoft wants some of its pages ranked highly, so it gets the vote out on some of them nice and high. same goes for a group of friends or so. so we might disagree with the actuall quality of the site, but at least we know it is an important one in the eyes of the author.

    the problem, is if negative ranking is allowed and you get into a Ximian - KDE kind of situation where one company deliberatly tries to mislead or undervalue a site (or in my case a search criteria). that would be bad - can you imagine some pro choice site - it would get slammed in a minute!

    if there are too many highly ranked sites it doesn't really bother me so much, I think the payoff is potentially good though - hopefully when I search for sqsh in the future, I'll get the home page near the first hit that is a little more current.

    h

  64. Another piece of the Global Brain by loosenut · · Score: 3, Informative

    There was an article on New Scientist about some technology similar to this. It would analyze what parts of a web page were hit the most, and bring those to the foreground (think bigger, bolder links), and shrink or kill off the unused links.

    It's all part of the process of creating a more "intellegent" web.

    1. Re:Another piece of the Global Brain by phossie · · Score: 1

      that sounds potentially dangerous. you don't necessarily want information sources to "evolve", you want them to stay complete. that's what makes them useful. knowing what everyone else is clicking on could arguably be a huge detriment to "natural selection" of links. the tech you're talking about is like information eugenics, and i think there's enough of that going around as it is. it's good for analysis, not so good for first-degree abstract presentation.

      --

      [|]
    2. Re:Another piece of the Global Brain by loosenut · · Score: 1

      you want them to stay complete

      I totally agree with you. This sort of technology could amount to censorship if not used properly. Just because some information is "fringe", doesn't mean someone won't find it useful. Hopefully they'll keep this in mind when implementing the software.

  65. Google TOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    From the google terms of service:

    "You may not use the Google Search Services to ... increase traffic to your Web site for commercial reasons"

    Doesn't this apply to most every company who lists their site on Google?

  66. here it goes. by sideshow · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ok you make a page that has all sorts of info on a subject like 1966 Mustangs. The page has everything you ever wanted to know about the car. But you secretly put something in the page, like a server-side redirect, that takes the user and sends them to a page about Cameros. So you submit the page and the search engines give a high ranking because the page has a lot of good info on Mustangs. But people that go to the page get sent to a different page that talks about something else.

    Whats funny about this is that the search engines already know this. The Marketing Director at the company I work for told me that this hasn't worked in a couple of years. Some engines send a second agent out to see if the page the page at that link is the same as one that got indexed. I think this a case of whoever wrote the artice isn't up to date on search engine technology.

    --

    Hollow words will burn and hollow men will burn.

    1. Re:here it goes. by kiddailey · · Score: 1


      Am I misunderstanding what you've stated?

      If Google was using user votes for individual pages, in this scenario the first few users to click on the link about Mustangs get redirected to Cameros.

      They will, in theory, then vote the page negatively on Google because they can't read the Mustang info or get !@#$ing annoyed :) (unless you've got a 10minute delay in the refresh tag, of course)

      Eventually, the link becomes filtered out of the mix because of this.

  67. I want this job by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Of course people are speculating how this will be used by bad companies to increase their visibility.

    All i can say is...

    I WANT THAT JOB!!!!

    To sit on the web all day increasing my company's rating. And if any of you programmers get a silly idea of writing a script to automate it, you'll put me out of a good job, and I will be very unhappy, and will have to return to browsing the web INSTEAD of working...

  68. Just rank by access count, durrh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They already have the technology to count how many times a link is accessed. Why not rank category results (you listening ODP?), if not search results, by number of times accessed?

  69. Exciting oppertunity to work at home! Now Hiring by t0qer · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Hi I am the hiring director here at Top 100 Porn sites and I am here to tell you about an exiting opertunity for all of you struggling in this tough economy. How would you like to kiss your unemlpoyment check goodbye and make, $500 to $1000 dollars a week on your computer at your own pace? We here at top 100 believe that EVERYONE needs porn. In order for us to reach our goals we strive to have every single search term, relevant or not, tied in with any of our 1000's of porn sites. Good examples would be. kitten beastiality sites rainbow interracial sites hard drive sites devoted to male genitalia bill gates : our top site goatze.dx and linux : lesbian love action. Now how we get ourselves into these search terms is where you come in. Search engines have spent millions of dollars on R&D and have come up with a "metamoderation"(tm) system for rating search terms based on relevancy. For every search term that YOU help to point to the correct site (Top 100 porn) you will get PAID $0.25. How many of these can you do in a hour? Don't belive us, just ask Jim Bob Jones from deliverance kentucky about his time in the program. Before top 100 I was living in a trailer eating spam. The closest thing I could get to a woman was the goatman out in the forest. Me an bubba made him squeal like a piggy. Bubba is my best friend. Now with top 100 paying me I could afford to buy a double wide trailer, and my cousin luanne is pregent with our first baby. Thanks top 100!! Time is limited so hurry now. Operators are standing by waiting for your call. Don't delay, call today.

  70. Typical results of a search using new system by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 1

    1-10 Unscrupulous companies taking advantage of new ranking system

    11-20 Unscrupulous companies taking advantage of older methods such as creating fake websites

    21 A humorous site that really has nothing to do with your search but has been modded up 'cause it's funny.

    22-30 Somewhat legit sites that are still abusing the system but not as much as the others.

    31-34 Somewhat relevent sites

    35 A site with no relevence but one that attracts a lot of clueless people

    36-40 Getting better

    40+ Results you were looking for.

    --
    -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.
  71. Name change! by AtomicBomb · · Score: 1

    I insist Google to be renamed as Slash/Google from now on. ;-)

  72. Slashdot style? by pardonne · · Score: 1

    Why not tie users with IP and
    allow them moderation privilidges
    (only from time to time) a la slashdot?
    You cannot create a gazillion bots
    unless you have a gazillion IPs
    (in which case you are easy to block
    assuming all are in the same domain).

    The downside could be spoofing (not to difficult to counter - I assume) and a somewhat long time before sites might get moderated.

    So am I missing something?
    Taco should have patented slashdot moderation and karma whoring...

    Pardonne

  73. OpenDirectory by Ratbert42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe OpenDirectory could add a rate-an-editor feature for their users. If you wanna talk about abuse, look there, not to Google.

    1. Re:OpenDirectory by malibucreek · · Score: 1
      Thank you!

      I'd love to have an opportunity to tell the higher-ups at Open Directory about a couple of editors there who seem to delight in creating sub-sub-sub-sub-categories to banish sites similar to their editor's personal pages. The conflicts of interest over there are incredible.

      Of course, as a web page publisher, you don't have that problem if the editors in the category you want never bother themselves to add new sites.

      Come on, other open source projects can get good work done with volunteers. Anybody have an insight into why Open Directory apparently cannot?

      --

      Why is it called COMMON sense when so few people have it?

    2. Re:OpenDirectory by Ratbert42 · · Score: 2

      Come on, other open source projects can get good work done with volunteers. Anybody have an insight into why Open Directory apparently cannot?

      Because Open Directory turns away volunteers. A lot of them. I've offered to edit four times now, all in neglected categories that were missing very obvious sites (that were nowhere else in Open Directory). I've been turned down every time with no explanation. I've submitted a dozen sites to perfectly appropriate categories and not one of them has appeared. Not one. Heck, the international company I work for, which is a fairly well-known partner of IBM, isn't in Open Directory at all, despite me submitting them twice. On the plus side, half of our competitors aren't there either, despite me submitting a few of them.

  74. Has this been patented? by KyleCordes · · Score: 2

    This is the kind of idea (put two known good ideas, mix in "internet", boom!) that seems like it would have a bogus patents on it.

  75. Why not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just have older points gradually count for less and less value. This way if a unscrupulous buisness wants to stack the vote in their favor, in a while it will fade away. Also newer sites will not have a disadvantage against because of the non-accumulation of points through time. This way the older (out of date) site will not always have the advantage of the new and improved site.

    -KHSP

  76. Best example of an imperfect google: by wholesomegrits · · Score: 1

    Try a search for "fuck me" and hit "I'm feeling lucky."

    I'll spoil the end: a website called Textism, which has nothing to do with fucking or me. It's rigged, a deliberate manipulation, and it worked fantastically well.

    He explains on his site how that worked, and how it worked so well.

    Excellent site on typography too....

    --
    No sig is worth reading.
    1. Re:Best example of an imperfect google: by cymandee · · Score: 1

      No it does not.

      Could someone be trying to draw traffic to his porn site?

    2. Re:Best example of an imperfect google: by wholesomegrits · · Score: 1

      You typed 'fuck me' in google? Dude, it works.

      --
      No sig is worth reading.
  77. Let the user decide what results to pull. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Simply let the user determine if they want to see results that are ranked according to the rating system, or rather using the standard method (how Google currently does things). Thus, if query results seem skewed, the user can simply execute the normal, non-ratings-based query.

    youforia60@hotmail.com

  78. Poor Choice of Words, Taco by asackett · · Score: 1

    Many scrupled businesses are also able to measure search engine ranking on their bottom lines.

    --

    Warning: This signature may offend some viewers.

  79. Bots! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the battle for rankings will be won by whomever builds the best rank-bots.

  80. Epinions Web of Trust by telebear · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As someone who used to use Epinions all the time (making over $1000 from them), I have to say that the epinions "Web of Trust" system seems to work rather well, at least on a small scale (100,000 users).

    Basically, you can see what users rated the article as useful. If you think that certain people have similar tastes to you, you put them in your Web of Trust. You'll get articles posted in a different order depending on who you trusted.

    It is actually more complicated than that, as there are epinions "Experts" who are judged by epinions to have good ratings. I think Amazon has a similar system (and has way more users, but the system still seems to work ok).

    The big problem is that the internet at large has so many bloody users and so many bloody pages... I think introducing groups of users or groups of groups that you trust might be a better way for the Web of Trust idea to work with the internet at large.

    1. Re:Epinions Web of Trust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Epinions fucking sucks. They encourage people to write reviews but the majority of them, even the highested rated reviews are complete and utter tripe. Book review upon book review of people saying that x is a bad book, because it has no 'character development' and it was dark and depressing.

  81. unpopular/marginal sites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it possible that unpopular sites with enemies could be attacked and practically removed from search results? Could China hire civil servants to search the web and work knocking sites down the index?

    I for one have no problem with the way Google is now. I'd rather wade a few pages deep to find what I'm looking for than risk not find it at all.

    ac023

  82. z-z-z-z-z-z-z-z (snooze) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least when you have a flamewar, make it funny, okay?

  83. proxy based recommender system by jameshowison · · Score: 1

    Ah trust ... an excellent idea.

    Eloquence - do you think it would be possible to build a 'proof-of-concept' of a collaboratively filtered (well recommender-system) Google through a proxy server that routes one's Google searches.

    My itch is, rather than send an email when I find a page a friend might like, to have a way to 'flag' that page so that the next time my friend is searching on Google (and the flagged page would have shown up in the results anyway) it is high-lighted as having been recommended by me.

    I think that this could be built on a proxy server - has anyone tried this yet?

    Cheers
    James
    ... who has been away from info-anarchy too long :)

    1. Re:proxy based recommender system by Eloquence · · Score: 2
      Hey James, nice to "see" you ;).

      The main problem with doing such things over a proxy is the lack of control you have over Google's database. While they can easily filter or sort their search results by any new criteria, you cannot. What you could do is have a central database of search phrases and related rated sites (which could have some semantic intelligence -- still I don't think you would get many hits on anything besides "sex" and "mp3").

      This database could then be accsesed by users using UI controls added to the search result pages of major search engines by the proxy, which could be remote or local. As you would do a search over one of the supported search engines, the proxy would also query the db and add the highly rated sites on top of the result list. Trust could be implemented in a similar fashion, but the more complex your system gets, the more awkward the proxy method becomes, especially when Google changes their output format.

      My preferred method would be making the rating controls and display independent from any particular site, having a small system-tray application instead that allows you to rate the currently viewed site (also filing it in a certain category -- fast UI is essential here). Then you could "browse recent ratings" and add users who share your tastes to your trusted user list manually, or let the server tell you about users who have rated things similarly to you, which would allow you to "browse recent ratings by friends" or "browse recent ratings by friends in category X". This concept could, of course, be extended to other document types.

  84. WAR IS OVER! by peaceniknumber9 · · Score: 0

    (if you want it)

  85. Ick. by foo+fighter · · Score: 1

    No thank you.

    I've spent all of 10 minutes thinking about it, granted, but I can't figure out how this won't be abused.

    And, you know, they do a great job of searching and ranking already. I think their text ads are fair and unobtrusive and a great way to get your page seen.

    I just don't see what the value add is here.

    --
    obviously no deficiencies vs. no obvious deficiencies
  86. Re:They will likely have the same problem as mp3.c by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did you know that 10% of the Internet (AOL) is behind one giant proxy farm?

  87. 1st Ranked on "web page cloaking" for money by new500 · · Score: 2

    . .

    Hmm, well, before you posted with a description of "cloaking" I ran a Google search on - web page cloaking - and got this result as the first hit :

    Website,web page cloaking and stealth technology

    Which is some company trying to make money from doing this. See the next page in their pitch : http://webprominence.co.uk/promotion/costs.htm

    No w, if cloaking is easily defeated by a second bot, and the Googlebot has this, shouldn't they at least put _their_ own_ link in top slot just saying, "by the way, this kind of stuff is dishonest, misleading and doesn't work" [and thus possibly a fraud?]

    Yeah, sure, no - one's going to do this for the n categories across 1.6bln indexed pages for every possible scam scam, but I'd have thought this kind of thing would be obvious "customer protection / advice" on Google's part. I'd _want_ people to know my search engine couldn't be scammed (at the very least by techniques I could defeat and I was indexing for a possible cheater)

    On second thoughts, I'd be just as happy to let the lame would - be tricksters / cloakers whatever waste their money.

    On the other hand, isn't it that kind of thought (as I just had) which has left the whole web / Internet up for grabs by the slickest over the dumbest and ultimately hurt the bright people who cared?

    Moderation and meta - mod on the scale of the *web*???!!! Man, that'd sounds crazy to me. Slashdot scaled n - fold . . . Can't bear to think about it . . gotta go . . .

    1. Re:1st Ranked on "web page cloaking" for money by sideshow · · Score: 1
      Which is some company trying to make money from doing this. See the next page in their pitch : http://webprominence.co.uk/promotion/costs.htm

      Now, if cloaking is easily defeated by a second bot, and the Googlebot has this, shouldn't they at least put _their_ own_ link in top slot just saying, "by the way, this kind of stuff is dishonest, misleading and doesn't work" [and thus possibly a fraud?]

      I took a look at these guys and their stuff probably won't help to much. Their deal is having the page the engines index if different then the page that shows up when someone go to the site. Google, among other people, does protect against this. The website in question would get blacklisted and removed from the search results.

      While a lot of work goes into making a site sow up ranked higher it shouldn't involve shady tricks like this. Here's a semi-good analogy. It's one thing to present yourself as best as you possibly can to someone to get them to go on a date with you. It's another thing entirely to lie and give false info.

      --

      Hollow words will burn and hollow men will burn.

  88. This bites by nick_burns · · Score: 1

    Much like my bland, meaningless slashdot posts, my webpages will now be subject to the same lack of positive moderation. Geez.

  89. How shortsighted... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This will simply mean that businesses will hire someone to write a bot that will go in and mod them up...or hire a bunch of wet-bots to do it manually.

    Or what about a bot that mods a competitor down?

    You can't be seriously thinking that this is a good thing.

    There is no such thing as reliable public feedback on the internet. This is like saying you believe those comments about your sister, someone wrote on the wall in the truckstop restroom.

    Get some sleep, you need it :)

  90. Google makes a subtle statement about drugs by HongPong · · Score: 2
    The choices in advertising accepted by any service, such as Google, reflect that organization's political beliefs. I have noticed that whenever you search for drug info on Google, say LSD, cocaine, heroin, etc., you always get an ad from freevibe.com , a government-sponsored anti-drug web site.

    However, recently the ad which appears for marijuana changed to NewScientist.com, a science journal which has been publishing much more balanced and thorough information on weed, some of which advocates that weed is less dangerous than alcohol. Also the top result is NORML, a legalization-advocacy group. (This is probably not due to tampering w/ the search engine, but is interesting)

    I believe that The Powers That Be within Google have taken the more moderate, academic drug stance, as opposed to gov't-sponsored propaganda. Google's pretty influential, Internet-culture-wise. Food for thought.

    (Offtopic, sort of, i know, but I saw a Google story and had to run with it!)

  91. I was wondering about that. by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    Right now Google is funded by VCs looking for a quick buck on the IPO bandwagon (eventually). They'll probably wait until the 'dot-bomb' hysteria dies down. But the plan was always to IPO.

    I wonder if it would be possible for individuals more interested in having a good search engine rather then reams of profit to buy a large enough chunk of the company in order to keep the company the same way it is now?

    That said, I'm sure google's people have thought this out a lot more then slashdot's On Crack(TM) moderation system (maybe something more like kuro5hin's, with averaged rather then additive scoring).

    On the other hand, you're always going to have a problem with majority tastes, which would class N'Sync as better then Radiohead...

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:I was wondering about that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then is not a comparitave word. Not trying to be rude, it just irks me to see people misuse it as frequently as they do. What you mean is that something is more than something else, etc.

      ac

  92. No by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    Well, given slashdot's rather... uh... interesting interface given comments that have been modded down I can only assume that you're responding to the post about Gator software, and not some other post I can't see.

    In which case, you'd be wrong. Gator is basically a combination Spyware/local add server that replaces advertising on the 'net with it's own. And it runs locally on people's PCs. Millions of PCs. And those PCs aren't all on the same network.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:No by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      my point, which you gladly partially made for me, is that gator is installed on millions of PCs. The thing about gator is it is automatically updated. I say that if google ever puts in a user rating system a company with a large installed base of people will likely take advantage.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
  93. Googlebar for non-ie by WPL510 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The problem is that this GoogleBar only plugs in Internet Explorer, so *nix geeks won't be able to rate sites..
    Well, yes and no. There is currently a project on Mozdev that aims to duplicate some if not all of the functionality of the toolbar for Mozilla, and while the current version 0.4 is still somewhat lacking, a new version that duplicates the look as well as the major search functionality (though not pagerank etc) is on the way soon, apparently. However, since this is an independent project and not affiliated with Google, I'm not sure if it would be able to access the rating system. Still, Mozilla users DO have the toolbar, and, since mozilla is cross-platform...

  94. Bring on the 'vote for me' popups! by sexykitty · · Score: 1

    Okay so the idea of letting people choose their own favorite sites is great and all, but I don't think it's going to work as more than just an idea if there isn't a lot of thought put into it. We'll end up getting a million popup 'vote for my site' windows when we visit CNN, a-la those stupid warez sites...
    I feel that as long a the net's being used as a competitive marketplace the results that search engines return will never be fully relevant.

    --
    echo $wittysigline;
  95. Haha by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    Maybe the reason k5 died is because of clueless wonks like you poisoned it with your inane, OT drivel.

    K5 died because, well, one of CPUs like fell out of the socket or somethen when some morons were moving the server.

    Kuro5hin has been down for a few days, and will probably continue to be down for a few more for the reasons I'll reveal here. First off, we've had some colo problems. VHosting is great, but VHosting can't control it when the people who actually have the rack/cage space decide to move (without telling anyone) a hundred or so of their customer's servers to another facility.

    Anyway, slashdot's moderation system is pretty lame, kuro5hin's just works better.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:Haha by Mr_Matt · · Score: 1

      K5 died because, well, one of CPUs like fell out of the socket or somethen when some morons were moving the server.

      Yeah, you're right, I forgot that. I just needed ammo for my silly flame-war. D'oh. My bad. :)

      /me hears "Repeat after me: I will not feed trolls"

      apologies all around :)

      --


      But what does my opinion matter, I just vote here. It's not like I have any money or anything.
    2. Re:Haha by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      Comparing Slash and K5's moderation system is pointless.

      Slashdot has moderation to allow the readership to make a rough selection of the discussion quality they would like to read. (And it pretty much fails at that, but oh well...)

      K5 has ratings to reward posters for good posts and maybe cut down on some of the AOL replies - the reader can't use it to filter the discussion (unless I'm totally up my ass here...). Meaning, it's feedback to the poster, not to the readship as a whole.

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  96. Yeh well.. by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    When I'm not pimping for autopr0n.com my regular account on slashdot is in the 20,000s! and my k5 account is in the 140s! I'm better then both of you! Bow down to my overwhelming l33tn3s! Hell, I'm not l337, I'm l336! It's a lower number, get it? Oh yeh.

    Anyway, I find it humorous that two people who's UID's are probably different by probably a month or two arguing over non-newbie ness.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  97. More info here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's more info about the beta test of the toolbar voting buttons here. It looks like it's open to the public to try out.

    You don't have to think too hard about the analogy between links and votes to see that Google could make good use of this info. People try to abuse links, but Google pulls lots of useful info out with PageRank. It's pretty easy to imagine a "VoteRank" that says how predictive of good pages a voter is. They could also do plenty of killer stuff to learn user preferences..

  98. Possible solutions to search-spam by borgquite · · Score: 2, Interesting

    1) Get anyone who wants to rate sites to make an account. Yes, it's a pain, but that way you can track people's rating activities, like on /.

    2) Use the Yahoo! style system of having an image that you have to type the word in from to create an account. Keep changing the way the image is formed. This should *help* to prevent account creation spam.

    3) Give people a certain number of points per day / week / month (ala /.)

    4) Make it so that everyone has to balance out +ves and -ves - that is, somehow make sure that they can't just do one or the other.

    5) Make it so that each account can only rate a particular site once. Now this requires quite a bit of storage, because you've got to store every rating ever individually instead of just a counter, but that way you can prevent multiple rating on some corporate site.

    Note that this prevents the idea of rating a site based on how appropriate it is for a particular search, which is admittedly one of the really exciting parts of this (that is, if I search for Transistors and get www.electronics.com then I rate it 'Good'. If I search for Open Source and get www.electronics.com then I rate it as 'Bad'.)

    With this system instead of this I just rate www.electronics.com according to how good the site is, not how relevant it is. Maybe that's what they're aiming for, maybe it's not.

    I think that would help stop it but it all depends on the security of the account creation process - if it's easy to spam then the whole system becomes a waste of time.

    It also doesn't prevent the problem of people being paid for ratings, which is possible, or for a company getting every single one of its employees to vote for the company. Thinking about that, one solution could be to just say that a company's rating can't go above a certain level and can only increase at a certain speed.

    Or you could have metamoderation. This sounds more and more like Slash based code all the time!

    --
    ' Ore stabit fortis a fine placet ore stat '
    - found on a park bench
  99. pink floyd and syd barrett by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cool idea although it would be ashame that they pick certain conpanies over money

  100. It won't be too hard by MagPulse · · Score: 2, Interesting

    No Slashdot poster has been able to reliably get their posts modded to +5 yet.

    1. Re:It won't be too hard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yeah right, keep telling yourself that enough and it may start to seem true, but it is not. Whenever John Carmack, Eric S. Raymond or Bruce Perens say something, anything it gets +4 or +5.

  101. "Unscrupulous" Businesses and search rankings by aclarke · · Score: 1

    Your comment about unscrupulous business relying on search rankings is about as cogent as saying that a lot of unscrupulous businesses rely on prime streetfront property to directly translate to dollars. Businesses in general rely on tactics like these to generate customers. This is why businesses pay real money to get listed for certain words. This is why businesses pay real money for a prime storefront location.

    Believe me, as an e-commerce consultant I can see the cost/benefit analysis of this tactic, and it works. Like any marketing plan, it can be used for great good or evil (make sure you say this with an Alec Guinness accent).

    Furthermore, I'm surprised that anybody who takes the time to read and post here at /. would get upset at the mere CONCEPT of a peer-review system for a search engine. I would think that any method that ranks link popularity (however defined) over corporate sponsorship would be a Good Thing.

    1. Re:"Unscrupulous" Businesses and search rankings by aclarke · · Score: 1

      Sorry, not "your comment", the original poster's comment.

    2. Re:"Unscrupulous" Businesses and search rankings by jaredcat · · Score: 1

      I figured that out.

  102. avoiding automated voting by john_uy · · Score: 1

    the rating should be randomized in getting the input:

    Request # 1:
    rate this site from 1-10 with 10 being the best
    Request # 2:
    rate the site from 1-10 with 1 being the best

    so an automated script cannot keep on voting for 10 or 1 for a site.

    --
    Live your life each day as if it was your last.
  103. easily? by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    Um, there are only four billion possible IP address, even if from each IP people voted on a thousand pages a month, you'd only have 1k*URLlength*4billion, or about 1 terabyte or so. Considering a mole is like 6.0*10^18(iirc) you'd have trillions times less bits then you would have atoms in a cup of water.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  104. You can sort by score on k5 by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    Actualy, the way k5 works is that after uses have gotten a certan amount of 'mojo' which is a 'temproaly weighted' average of the ratings done to them, they become 'trusted users', and they can vote posts to zero. If a post is at zero, then only other trusted users can see it. It actualy works extreemly well, because only people who are smart (or at least can write well) can remove things from view. k5 dosn't (or didn't) have any of the crapflood style problems of slashdot when it was running.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:You can sort by score on k5 by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      Well, other weblogs solve that problem by handing out delete rights to moderators manually. But being "trusted" still sounds more like a cookie for providing good posts than a real system to improve discussion (reading) quality.

      It solves the crapflood problem, but it really doesn't solve the crap comment problem (that slash is trying to solve by letting readers filter at different scores). All-in-all it's probably better to reward users for good posts than encourage them to k-whore to be seen, but as Taco points out, he's got an order of magintude more traffic.

      (I should note that I read /. at -1 and rarely ever rate comments on K5 - so it goes.)

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  105. Are you going to appeal? by thumbtack · · Score: 1

    With the decision of the judge to throw out your case today, are you planning an appeal?

  106. Another (Different) Rating Method by dasunt · · Score: 3, Interesting


    If Google (or another search engine) set up all links to visit an internal google page that quickly redirected the user to the target site, it could rate on how many people visited the site, instead of a potentially biased rating of users.


    Of course, shady websites could still influence it, either by hitting the pages themselves, or by crafting their page so that the google-selected text is tempting to search engine users, but the system still has the advantage of not requiring active participation of users.


    Just my $.02

  107. Disabilities interfere with these tests by yerricde · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For instance, check out the captcha project [captcha.net] at CMU.

    I looked at captcha and found that it may generate problems with disability legislation in some jurisdictions. For instance:

    • Blind people and people behind text terminals can't pass bongo because it requires GIF images.
    • Deaf people, people behind text terminals, people too poor to afford a sound card whose hardware interface is documented, and people not highly fluent in one of the six chosen languages can't pass byan.
    • The fbw test generates sentences that still make perfect sense. For instance, it often chooses a proper name as the word to substitute, and users who do not have knowledge of the geography ("Evansville, CA" instead of "Los Angeles, CA") or the personal names of a particular region will often fail. The long sentences common to pre-1923 English literature produce a "needle in the haystack" effect. (The developers acknowledge that the fbw test is still under development.)
    • Gimpy delivers broken images.

    The only accessible test (fbw) doesn't always work, and the other three are not accessible to those with disabilities. Watch somebody get sued under the ADA.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Disabilities interfere with these tests by Tom7 · · Score: 1


      Well, I think you are partially joking, but I'll bet they do take some of your issues seriously. I think they are working on more plaintext tests, since those are very convenient to deliver and should be accessible to anyone.

      Of course, it's highly unlikely that google would be sued because part of its website is not accessible to people with certain disabilities or with lack of certain information!

    2. Re:Disabilities interfere with these tests by Night+Goat · · Score: 1

      Since Google doesn't cost anything and nobody's required to use it, I don't think anyone'd get sued. Then again, I'm not disabled, so I know nothing about the ADA.

  108. 1 magnitude more traffic,many magnitudes more crap by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    While its true that slashdot gets a lot more traffic, it gets porportionaly way, way, more spam/crap. There are actualy less 'zeroed' comments on k5 then there are front page stories (most of the time), and those are almost always simply over-the-line insults and stuff. There is none of the 'penis-bird' type bullshit that slashdot seems to get at all

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  109. ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gosh, this sounds awesome. There is nothing
    like comments from the end user. :)

    -lile

    hacker artist
    lile.com

    ratmom!
    ratrights.org

  110. It will never work by Publicus · · Score: 1

    Any kind of user-moderated web service is inherantly flawed and can in no way be successful.

    --

    My Karma was at 49, then they switched to words. All that work for nothing!

  111. Problems by senfman · · Score: 1

    I think there is a problem with such ranking, which is, that Userus Usually get to rank the first results, but they don't rank the later. This might turn out unfair.

  112. Re:1 magnitude more traffic,many magnitudes more c by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

    Slashdot gets crapped on only because they don't delete posts and that has lead to a weird little culture that grows below most people thresholds.

    But, -1 Penis Birds I can handle, as with the good k-whores and trolls. What buggers me is the poorly written content-free posts that do nothing but reiterate politically-acceptable drivel and beaten-to-death-in-1998 jokes (such as the post one at the root of this thread).

    K5 doesn't have a real solution to that (other than to keep the story mix changing), and as the community grows and the bar gets lowered, the standard for what's considered a good post will fall with it. (I see it happening there already) I think slash, with 200 posts/hour, has accepted the fact that most people suck and just given us an essentially arbitrary and random system to cut the #s of posts down to a reasonable number.

    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  113. Google.com : The programming power is there. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To solve the problem of people 'spamming' sites to raise the hits, add 'user hits feature' to the google toolbar (or any program), have a google user/pass with a VALID e-mail address. People will not be able to spam since it'll be coming from the same user. Now for the people who decide to bulk register users for a work around, having the VALID e-mail will help that situation. For Further protection google could have a service compare what sites are getting hits and if they are from the same subnet then act accordingly. The server side program will have to be quite intelligent. Of course having cookies isn't going to help.

    1. Re:Google.com : The programming power is there. by BahRamU · · Score: 1

      Where are you people getting this 'spam the system' bs from?

      Don't you relize that Google is the ONLY search engine to put out a encryption system in their urls (ie toolbar) that has NEVER been cracked? Even Goto's expensive session tracker encrypted urls has has been hammered out.

      Don'tcha think that if Goggle can do that with their own toolbar, they can do that with something as simple as a generated on the fly form submission. Of course they can.

      Those that try to spam google will fastly find their sites and urls banned - for life.

  114. Meta-ranking? by asland · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the google ranking system could use the user submitted data to automatically tune itself. If people's rankings are deviating from the rankings the engine comes up with, it could run some simulations (or genetic algorithm or whatever) and try some slightly tweaked settings. Eventually, it should converge with the users.

    This might be an interested project for someone, a genetic algorithm based neural network page ranking search engine. Those buzzwords alone would have been enough to get a few $million a couple of years ago.

  115. such a waste of time by mozkill · · Score: 1

    why let users control the popularity of pages by vote when the traffic to the page speaks for itself???

    --

    -- Betting on the survival of the media industry is a serious risk. I advise investing elsewhere.
    1. Re:such a waste of time by BahRamU · · Score: 1

      Because descriptions rarely reflect the actual content on the page. No SERP is more useless than Googles "ransom note" results pages. Because the words I am searching for are located at paragraph 3 sentence 2 position 5, is no indication the page has whatever I am looking for at all.

      If click traffic statistics were worth anything at all, DirectHit, Hotbot, and AOL from their own proxy cache data would rule the search engine world. Obviously, those three engines suck.

  116. GOOGLES TOP100 LINKZ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No matter how i look at this, i can see TOP100 INTERNET SEARCH SITEZZ!!! NO POPUPZ!!!! ETC... bullshit starting.