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The Demographics of Web Search

adaviel sends a link to work out of Yahoo Research indicating that demographics can help Web searches; e.g. a women searching for "wagner" probably wants the 18th-century German composer, while for men in the US "wagner" is a paint sprayer. The Yahoo researchers claim that by taking user demographics into account, "they managed to get the chosen link to appear as the top-ranked result 7 per cent more often than in the standard Yahoo search." New Scientist mentions this research and two other innovative adjuncts to current search practice: following the mouse cursor as a proxy for eye tracking, and taking back bearings on online criminals by studying the searches they make. (The latter raises disburbing privacy questions: would you want Google trolling through your search data? How about governments?)

4 of 131 comments (clear)

  1. Sauce for the goose. by Aaron+Denney · · Score: 5, Funny

    > would you want Google trolling through your search data? How about governments?

    Heck yes I want Google trolling through governments' search data.

  2. Sexist search engines by loufoque · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, that's really what we need...

    What next, a search result that depends on your religion? If you type "Origin of the Universe", you get articles about the Bible if the engine thinks you're Christian, and scientific material otherwise?

    They need to understand there is little value in subjective data. Their results are already biased enough, they should take steps to fix that, not make it worse.

  3. Re:Correction: by Yvan256 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Are you sure? I just searched and the first result is this Slashdot article which clearly says that he was an 18th century composer, right in the summary.

  4. highly dubious by Audax_23 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... this idea smacks of a tool that's trying to be *too* helpful, and ends up getting in the way. Kinda like the old microsoft paperclip. I went and turned off this function in google accounts when I realized that my search results were being shaped based on my history, since that partially defeats my expectations of how a search engine behaves, and degrades the utility, insofar as the utility (to me the user) is based on receiving an unbiased sampling of the matches. I'm also troubled by this trend in the way that google delivers their news offerings, it seems that the logical progression of this is that we will mostly only be exposed to material that fit our highly individualized pre-existing reality bubbles.