Google Censors "Piracy Terms" From Instant Search
Chaonici writes "A few weeks ago, Google promised that, on behalf of the entertainment industries, they would begin filtering 'piracy related' terms from their search system. Now, TorrentFreak reports that Google has lived up to their promise, and certain keywords (such as 'bittorrent' and 'rapidshare') will no longer produce results with the Autocomplete or Instant Search features. The standard search feature, however, continues to display results as normal. Simon Morris of BitTorrent Inc., RapidShare, and Jamie King (the founder of Vodo) are critical of the change, pointing out the many legitimate uses of popular file-sharing technology."
Great, now I need to find a new search engine... I thought Google was anti censor... and had a don't be evil policy...
-nt-
The summary is misleading. This only refers to incomplete words. If you type "bitt" or "rapidsh" you won't get the (desired?) results, but if you type "bittorrent" or "rapidshare" you will get the results you expect.
Apart from that, it's quite childish. Also "pirate" gives me results leading to The Pirate Bay, for example.
Here's the secret to immortality:
Goodbye Google, it's been nice knowing you.
This just means Google will not autofill "torrent" just as they don't autofill "breast".
- But that certainly hasn't stopped people from searching for porn, and won't stop them from searching for free music/TV shows either.
My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
That's absurd. Google is considering that everybody is guilt. Pre-punishing is just a general assumption and can lead to odd situations.
Someone might say: Why not omitting EVERY google search them? After-all how sure can anyone be of not having (name your favorite illegal thing) links on slashdot commentaries?
Back in the day, searching for illegal downloads using normal search terms didn't really yield any useful results. Instead, you had to add "z" to the end of everything ... for example "warez", "mp3z", "serialz", etc. And now "torrentz" I suppose. So I doubt that censoring copyright-infringement vernacular will have any impact whatsoever on legitimate uses of P2P software, especially considering that normal search terms will result in any number of legitimate MP3/video download sites. And for crying out loud, it's on the *instant* search, which has got to be the least useful feature I have ever seen in any search engine.
Just press like you used to! Jeez, they just don't want people in sensitive places getting potentially dodgy links coming up on their screens. I know when i'm at work I'd rather not have pirate sites coming up on my search result screen while I'm typing...
That's great, so now I just have to start my search with "torrent" or "arrrr" and I won't have to suffer through Google's rediculous "instant" crap? Sign me up!
In all seriousness; if you like Google just blacklist it for JavaScript, no more instant results. Or search from the address bar. Or, best option IMHO, use https://ixquick.com./ *
* google it for more details!
Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional by CowboyNeal
Why not block nzb, iso, nfo, zeroday or terms people might actually use. You don't need the .iso to find a .iso of a legit image, and turning off autocomplete is just plain useless
Censorship is what they did in China, making it so that results are not displayed. Controlling what is in the autocomplete box is just good policy.
The last thing I want at work is for my legitimate searches to autocomplete with warez sites and the like.
If anything, though, it shows that google's instant search mechanic is a failure -- not the actual searching for warez.
That extra strain on my enter-finger builds up, you know! I could get carpal tunnel 0.00004% faster!
It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
- E. Debs
Every single time Google removes certain words from Instant , its censorship.
No its not.
You can still type it in, hit enter and get your results. They just don't want to 'suggest' them for you - for various reasons.
So if you type 'tor' you won't get "Torrents! Download all your favourite stuff for free!" until you press enter. Big deal. Same happens for a bunch of adult terms.
Given that filenames have taken a relatively standard form in torrent circles, the material can be found without specifying any more than the general name form.
Simply using: "[name of show] s##e##" will typically lead to torrent results without any other keywords. Usually occupying at least the top few listed results.
Fear is the mind killer.
I'd say remove. They aren't censoring the search, they're just removing it from the autocomplete queue. Alarmist alarmism is alarming.
/in before the google hate?
I bet the Bittorent guys are F'ing pissed right now. It sucks that a great technology like Bittorrent immediately gets the spotlight on it's seedier uses as opposed to the really good ones (like legitimate releases of software that take the load off of individual servers).
And yes, if you want to know, I am not sure "pirates" are evil. A decade ago I was rather clearly against software, music and video "piracy". Not anymore.
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
My company is Warez Brothers! I can't help that this was my family given surname!
You are taking away legit business from my company!
...is there somewhere a good stat showing the percentage of illegal uses of torrents compared to legitimate ones?
As others have noted, they're not filtering any results. They're just not suggesting piracy-related terms in the autocomplete, along with some other filtered terms like sex-related terms. Probably a prudent decision, because while returning search results for a query the user entered is fairly safe legally, prompting the user with something illegal that they didn't actively look for might be more questionable. Not sure if they could actually be liable, but it at least is less solid.
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
Besides "bittorrent", "rapidshare" and a couple of other, the following words are now also unable to auto-complete:
http://www.morewords.com/starts-with/bitt/
http://www.morewords.com/starts-with/rapid/
http://www.morewords.com/starts-with/torr/
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
They should also filter searches for other things that are used to facilitate copyright infringement...
FTP, IRC and HTTP - all have been used for downloading warez a lot longer than bittorrent or rapidshare.
Microsoft & Windows - the most popular platform both in terms of being copied, and in terms of being used by those that do the copying (far less linux users use warez, because there is far less software for linux that its even possibly to acquire this way).
Any form of commercially sold media - if everything were given away freely, there would be no "pirates"...
And dont forget anything to do with ships or seafaring, pirates need ships...
http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
They didn't get rich listening to a bunch of "whiners", but those having the money. Although, they provided a way to not look so "evil". Now Google is prisoner of his own debts, just like a politician funded by doubtful sources.
Open Source Network Inventory for the masses! Kuwaiba
They're not censoring anything, they're just filtering the results of the annoying autocomplete, which I hate anyway. If someone is really looking for a linux torrent, they'll just have to click the damn button. The absolute legitimacy of torrents will not be denied in spite of this.
-Restil
Play with my webcams and lights here
I’m sure rapidshare won’t be very happy about this
especially considering
mediafire
filedude
fileape and many many other file sites still work
http://snappeh.com/blog/ - My Blog, not that any of you care...
Do they stop the term 'Blogspot' in autocomplete? ;)
Arrr! I guess we won't be able to look for Pieces of Eight,, buried treasure, or bottles of rum using Google then. We will have to rely on Jack Sparrow's compass instead.
Considering the higher percentage of malware to result in piracy compared to most everything else, perhaps they are just trying to avoid the malware sites...
Not saying big companies aren't performing CYA.
This could be a trial balloon to see what the public response is.
You know, get the headline without actually censoring their regular results, see what happens. I hope that any public outcry/criticism reminds them of their old corporate tagline "don't be evil," and reinforces that censorship is ridiculous and wrong, and that it could hurt their reputation, especially among the sort of people who are active on slashdot (geeks/IT workers/generally above average intelligence).
It's not a matter of whether you support piracy (and of course, all of these technologies have other, what society would consider "legitiate" uses as well) - it's that censorship is unacceptable, especially from such a dominant and important tool.
That makes it slightly harder to find things to which you are not freely entitled.
How about trying to make some "content" yourselves? Or go for a walk in the forest?
This is going to make finding 'eye patches,' 'wooden legs,' and 'rum' a little tough to find.
Up until last year instant search wasn't enabled to everyone. Auto complete has been around for quite some time. Truly, who cares? I can still type in the name and pull it up. They're not banned from the search. They're just leaving them out of the auto crap.
What will happen to those people that cannot spell right or even type more than 3 letters in a row?
I'm a developer and it is still a problem and still irksome.
When I typed my product name into google the auto complete suggests currently suggests the following pirate related searches:
PRODUCT crack
PRODUCT key
PRODUCT activation code
Every one of those sites leads to a malware site or adware site that definitely does not include keys, activation codes, or cracks.. but are definitely bogus results.
No longer suggested are:
PRODUCT torrent
PRODUCT rapidshare
Eh I think this is fair enough.
They don't shown porn related stuff on the instant / suggestion, but you can still search for it (believe me, you can).
So now they don't come up with torrents and stuff automatically, but you can still search for it if you want. I can see the logic, if someone was innocently searching for like "How I Met Your Mother" to see some info about it, and the first thing that comes up is an automatic link to "How I Met Your Mother Season 1 Torrent". Doesn't that kinda make Google not as innocent any more as opposed to someone specifically searching for that torrent? In this case you would have someone residentially finding out about and acquiring the torrent via Google alone.
I know that is stretching and I'm taking this logic with a grain of salt.. because of course they aren't intentionally putting torrents on top, it's just the algorithm maybe choosing it. But still, food for thought..
Anyway, I'm OK with this kind of automatic filtering.
there is no more polite way to say it. the entire country has become a whore bowing to every whim of a group of corporations. even the technically incorrect, capricious ones like these - thinking that censoring certain words will accomplish what they want.
even google now. no wonder they are producing stuff like american idol etc to keep the public sleeping.
Read radical news here
Just a few more in the list, and just as weak as their previous filtering attempts. Someone put up this site almost immediately when instant search came out http://www.2600.com/googleblacklist/ and it points quite a lot of funny examples or words that do or don't get filtered very inconsistently. Mind you, if you enter "bit" it shows bitcomet (a bittorrent client), doesn't filter out eMule and other non-torrent P2P programs, and for "thep" or "pir" the first result is thepiratebay. Doesn't filter out any other trackers that I know of either. For autocomplete it's no different, even better - shows an ad for thepiratebay on top of the suggestions and lists more torrent clients.
Clearly it's not an effective censorship/filtering of any sort, which leads me to wonder why exactly is it that way. I doubt Google programmers are stupid and would miss a lot of obvious things. What's more likely is that they aren't comfortable with this either and try to block as little as possible - just enough to satisfy managers and/or companies complaining.
I think Linux isn't better than Windows hence in the slashdot realm I'm a troll
I think that what's considered relevant is anything that can easily lead to piracy for the average user.
And, as you've heard in this comments, it's easier to associate torrents with piracy as the only relevant use that they have (I'm not saying it is, I'm saying it's a common claim).
The other means you suggested are viewed mainly as:
IRC -> Chat. FTP -> Storage of webpage related content.
"Science can amuse and fascinate us all, but it is engineering that changes the world. " - Asimov.
Cool! I hate that feature, it's actually a good news. Now if they could only drop that feature altogether... I turn it off on my pc, but I frequently use other machines
I don't have an intelligent phone, so I need to be.
When doing a search on some particular device, I get tons of results that point toward dealers selling crap or worse, links to ebay listings. I remember years ago when I search for something, i..e JVC 5000U, I get various articles (useful ones, not promotional junk) or webpages by individuals describing how they use or hack such items.
mfwright@batnet.com
They censored uTorrent, but not Vuze, nor Transmission.
Censored Rapidshare and Megaupload, but not Megavideo (???) nor Mediafire.
If I were uTorrent I would be pissed off. I mean, just by typing "vuz" I have a BitTorrent Client in the first result. If I type "utor", seems like utorrent does not exist!!!
Well its been my experience that if you censor any content your are responsible for all content on your servers. So good opens itself up to legal liability by making this change. The might skate the line by allowing main searches to find torrents and rapid share but this I suspect is just a first step.
--- Always remember. 99.36% of all statistics are inaccurate.
Google's New Mantra: Do Evil.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
other piracy related search terms like "pegleg", "eyepatch" and "jolly roger" are still auto-completed.
Substantial non-infringing use here. Pegleg and eyepatch are medical terms.
So I have a 75% hearing loss.
Patronize cinemas with rear window captions. If there are none in your area, find other hard of hearing people and petition each cinema to install rear window captions. If the petitions fail, hire a lawyer.
You are paying for the big screen, the speakers, the chairs, and the building's rent.
Under national disability discrimination acts applying to public accommodations, one ideally should be paying for the rear window captions.
Just because you can justify it to yourself does not make it legally justified; whether or not you give a whit about what the law says is up to you.
Likewise, just because movie theater operators can justify failure to install captions to themselves does not make it legally justified; whether or not they give a whit about what the ADA and foreign counterparts say is up to them.
You have yet to see this story. (Google keywords used: site:slashdot.org google scientology)
Because the copyright owner won't sell me a copy at any price. Where can I buy a lawfully made copy of Disney's Song of the South? Or the English version of Nintendo's Mother (which exists as a prototype)?
I just googled "shiver me timbers!" and got zero results!
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
metallica filetype:torrent
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
That is the most annoying feature ever, especially when on a slow rural network.
It appears that Google is censoring the autocomplete for news searches as well, so remember that when searching for articles on this topic, because "Google censorship" will autocomplete, but "Google torrent" won't.
... to see if it censored 'bittersweet symphony'.
Needless to say, it did, but the previous 'instant results' remained on screen. The first one? Bing.com - now if that isn't a sign... ;)
Yeah, those singles are nice, but check out my tripz.
After verifying the truthfulness of this allegations only one phrase came to my head.
GOOGLE IS EVIL
warez still seems to work with instant search :)
Downloads of Avast! antivirus drop significantly...
> Not sure if they could actually be liable, but it at least is less solid.
The Supreme Court made up something about inducement to commit infringement in one of the major filesharing cases. I'm betting that Google doesn't want to find out if it could be held liable for that or not.
I like Google. But if Google is so willing to at least bend for the media companies to protect their property rights, then why is it that when I do a Google Image Search for "doctor" I get as the first related search Google suggests, "philadelphia abortion doctor"?!? All I was trying to do at the time was find clip art of a doctor to use as part of an ad. I was shocked to find Google suggesting pictures of abortion doctors so people against abortion can supposedly hunt those doctors down. Why else would someone need to find pictures of "philadelphia abortion doctor"?
Does Google care more about protecting property and money that the lives of abortion doctors?
In related news, a Google search for "don't be evil" no longer returns any results.
Someone call Tom Cruise, Google may be about to commit corporate suicide.
And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
EOF
Instant search is a huge pain, and I turn it off immediately. Then when it decides to randomly enable itself again every so often, I turn it off again! Autocomplete, on the other hand, I will grant is useful and nonannoying, but if it doesn't automcomplete the word bittorrent, and I have to type in the whole thing if that's what I'm looking for... who cares? I usually type the whole thing in anyway, cause it takes longer to wait for the dropdown to finish initializing and then count how many times to press down to get to what I was looking for, than it does to just type the whole query in.
Censorship is removing results from searches. Censorship is *not* removing entirely optional features from searches, that don't affect search results.