XKCD Inadvertently Causes Googlebomb
MrCopilot writes "As I noted yesterday (and was joined by many others)... in an offhand observation xkcd has singlehandedly changed a small section of the Internet. Changing the results from a Google search for "Died in a Blogging Accident" from 2 to (at this writing) over 7,170 in a little more than 24 hours." If you aren't reading xkcd, you're missing out.
Not that I don't love XKCD, but is this really /.-worthy? Oh well. Still, awesome, and each post only serves to compound the results!
You probably change Google's result for "Died in a Blogging Accident" more than xkcd did.
So apparently he didn't make it, and I'm making this nth post on behalf of the would-be first poster.
I once had a signature.
Considering that many people around the world have been prosecuted for their blogs, imprisoned, tortured and maybe even killed, it is not just humor, its a terrifying fact.
I've never been a proponent of medical marijuana, but somebody needs to get this guy some weed, STAT.
You might want to look into the meaning of this "accident" word.
A Googlebomb is when a page becomes associated with an unfitting search term which doesn't appear on the page itself. This effect is caused when many website authors place misnamed links to that page, usually in an intentional and coordinated manner.
I've read every TFA link in the post, but I'm not sure I understand what is going on.
1. What is the true definition of a Google Bomb? Are we confusing this with Google Washing?
2. Why is this incident a Google Bomb?
3. What makes this particular incident Slashdot newsworthy?
I think this might be a funny scenario -- but I don't get it!? Thanks for the info.
to "inadvertently". You have no reason to assume that the author is not smart enough to have foreseen (and even counted on) this effect.
Actually, I take a separate exception to "inadvertantly".
I can assure you, the best way to get rid of dragons is to have one of your own.
Thus they tell me at webmasterworld.
Request your free CD of my piano music.
yes.
Google will actually let you search for Died in a * accident. If you do so you can see what words people put in there. Right now the fourth result is actually "Died in a blogging accident" (right after three car accidents). I have used that to find out what might be the missing word in other sentences like Grab your * and double click or Either you are with us or you are with the *. Even more interesting if combined with the - operator to filter out the obvious possibilities.
Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
No, I am afraid it is two now.
There is no sig.
In a off hand observation xkcd has single handedly changed a small section of the internet.
Oh my God, they changed the face of the Internet! (actually they mean the Web, not the Internet as a whole, sigh). Here, let me change a (smaller) "section of the Internet" :
Died in a trolling accident.
Right now, doesn't return any result. And now? OMG I did it! I has teh pawar ovar tah Intarwebs!
You just got troll'd!
Damn it, why hasn't anyone asked what the original two results were? Is it even possible to get that information anymore?