Chrome Browser Usage Artificially Boosted, Says Microsoft
bonch writes "Chrome was recently called the world's no.1 browser, but Microsoft is accusing the source, StatCounter, of using flawed methodology. When a user enters a search in Chrome, the browser preloads an invisible tab not shown to the user, and these were being counted by StatCounter. Net Applications, another usage tracking group, ignores these invisible tabs and reports IE at 54%, Firefox at 20.20%, and Chrome at 18.85%." Whereas the saturation of MSIE is totally organic, right?
StatCounter does not tally pre-loaded pages.
It's not only Chrome - they try to inflate Google+ user count also, by counting every single Google service - including search engine and YouTube - as part of Google+. Then they boast user counts of like 100 million while the users have been nowhere near Google+ itself and it's perfectly clear there's not that kind of users. It's part of their marketing.
Regardless of how the market share was gained, duplicate counting inflates numbers. Get over it, Timmy.
Kinda funny how editors don't give a shit about editing, but when they want to put in some of their own editorial commenting that have no problem with it.
is not at all artificially inflating the numbers.
or what about MS specific webapps such as their CRM system? I mean I could see if opera were the company that was making the complaint.
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
It seems like kind of a quick jump otherwise.
Hah, yeah right! Totally organic....
...Lynx rules all the browsers anyway.
As usual, the summary makes no sense at all.
So, Google Chrome users who search on Google are counted as users, but they should not be counted?
Or, they are being counted twice? Or are they being counted for the number of tabs they have open?
What's an "invisible tab?" I don't want to read the article, but I don't understand how it inflates the actual number of chrome users. If the summary indicates what the article actually says, then there's no reason to discount these users, as they're not "actually not running Chrome"
Hanging chads!!!!
Restating the obvious since nineteen aught five.
Is this one of the ways of Microsoft to take down Google? I love Microsoft and I even use Win 7. But I just hate it every time they try to take down Google. Just accept that almost everyone uses Chrome and no one will use IE.
There's something "natural" on a completely artificial construct?
I swear they give me mod points to shut me up.
In any case isn't what is being counted is page loads, not users? IE has more users because most computer users have IE. Mozilla and Chrome users may be more savvy and may actually use the internet more than IE users. It makes sense that if you care that much about the internet you probably have strong opinions about the browser you are using. If your company is trying to reach users you may want to know the percentage of users each browser accounts for. If your company is trying to reach the more engaged users you might be interested in page loads. This is similar to the android/iphone marketshare nonsense. Iphone users access the internet from their phones more than android users. More people own android devices than iphone devices. Everyone claims victory.
Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
Whereas the saturation of MSIE is totally organic, right?
That has fuckall to do with anything. You might not like the fact that IE was bundled with every copy of Windows, but that doesn't mean they executed behind the scenes shenanigans to inflate their numbers.
Slashdot: butthurt about Microsoft since 1998.
Stats from a website which has mostly Canadian viewers:
Unique Users for the past 30 days
1.IE 66,554 42.21%
2.Safari 37,213 23.60%
3.Firefox 20,703 13.13%
4.Chrome 14,552 9.23%
5.Android 3,736 2.37%
*source: google analytics
I can't think of anyone's computer Ive seen recently that has been using Chrome, it's all Firefox or IE and one computer had Safari on Windows (Dont know why)
Could it be that Chrome is on every Android platform and Android is on a lot of things? Many more pieces of hardware than Windows Mobile. Although I am a little dubious of the claim that "Chrome is #1" the growth makes a lot of sense where it has nothing to do with "hidden tabs" but that the installbase has exploded.
The Wikimedia browser stats pretty much match the StatCounter ones: 25.36% IE, 24.99% Chrome.
Note that Wikimedia is (a) a top-10 site with a broad general international readership (b) a charity with no direct interest in the question of "which browser wins?" but only in knowing the actual answers, so as to serve the readers.
http://rocknerd.co.uk
If we're going to be pedantic, would you prefer "emergent vs. engineered" to "organic vs. artificial"?
I am typing this on netscape at the moment and I totally agree with th ^^^^NO CARRIER
I was thinking the same thing. The stats indicate that Chrome is using more bandwidth and resources than IE despite having 1/3 the install base. Seems inefficient.
You can't use a browser without adblock these days and retain sanity. And unless you decide to throw away your privacy, you'll block trackers like Google Analytics or StatCounter.
So join me on the mission: drive apparent Firefox usage stats to 0.
The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
What is country level weighting, and why do you do it?
The Net Market Share data is weighted by country. We compare our traffic to the CIA Internet Traffic by Country table, and weight our data accordingly. For example, if our global data shows that Brazil represents 2% of our traffic, and the CIA table shows Brazil to represent 4% of global Internet traffic, we will count each unique visitor from Brazil twice. This is done to balance out our global data. All regions have differing markets, and if our traffic were concentrated in one or more regions, our global data would be inappropriately affected by those regions. Country level weighting removes any bias by region.
So I'm to trust numbers that I know have a flawed methodology?
Why not these then
http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp
Oh, but weight, stat counter started removing chrome over counts.
Further to a significant number of user requests, we are now adjusting our browser stats to remove the effect of prerendering in Google Chrome. From 1 May 2012, prerendered pages (which are not actually viewed) are not included in our stats.
So the fact that I have to open up IE to go download another browser isn't getting counted at all either correct? Unless you're saying my act of clearly choosing an alternative as some means of support of your browser. How about instead of preloading a browser you give me a link of which browser I'd like to download and install during the OS install so I can pick which browser I really want.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_browser_market_share#Summary_table
In the data for April, only Net Applications put MSIE significant ahead of Google Chrome. The other 3 sources, on average, give *lower* usage of MSIE than Stat Counter.
Eventually Chrome will rule the market. Google promotes it aggressively from their homepage. Under today's musical doodle was this text: "Upgrade to a modern browser and see what this doodle can really do." I'm on Firefox 12, by the way.
Google Chrome currently top the chart of all the web browsers that I have used before and even now it even accelerated my site http://www.upnaija.com thanks to GOOGLE
Actually yes, and I'm not ashamed of my preference.
I swear they give me mod points to shut me up.
I was under the impression that counting browser share is done by taking a sites visitors and identifying the ACTUAL number of users of each browser. But then i read that page hits are counted and hidden tabs are skewing results. Ok , so i use browser X and i have tons of tabs open, HIDDEN OR NOT, does that mean that i somewhat contribute to artificial inflation of my browsers share? Because as i understand it browser share should indicate the usage of a browser by actual people and NOT the amount of VISIBLE tabs opened by them. By this metric, people like my wife are essentially skewing the results (she has the habit of opening 50 or more tabs)? Additionally netstat uses weighting that takes this whole counting thing into a more "controllable" area - just downgrade country x, upgrade country y and voila you have a few percent +/- (well not that simple, but anyway). I am no expert in statistics but i know that when different stuff are factored in, the greater the chance of adjusting the results. Personally i see that fewer people use IE - mostly company execs/workers who are under the impression that it is actually good because its made by Microsoft or because the computer came with it and they dont "have the time" to "learn to use" something safer and faster - most users actually use Firefox or Chrome.
In the 'old' days when I worked with software, I knew what I had. Punch cards, core dumps, later DOS, wysiwyg.
Now everything lies. Windows hides stuff, Linux hides crap, browsers hide stuff. How the hell is one supposed to know what is going on, particularly when trying to troubleshoot/debug stuff when even the software lies?
By the way, I don't know what software slashdot uses, but trying to write this post was annoying, I kept loosing the insertion point and couldn't navigate the text!
MS IE has to be installed for Windows to work. This is not the case for any other web browser. I suspect that if MS removed the dependencies IE would be removed from many more computers. Invisible tabs or not, Chrome is just a more pleasant and useful browser.
A tangentially related question: Has anyone gotten in trouble with violating their employer's Acceptable Use Policy due to browser preloading / precaching? Often, in search results or even certain news sites there are outbound links to places I'd never visit from work. But if Chrome (or even Firefox) is clicking those links behind my back, my IP address is in a corporate log somewhere as having "visited" that site, isn't it?
How are these preload/precache "hits" distinguished from normal hits? Obviously, if some of the sites are filtering these out, there's some way to tell them apart. At the same time, if the "hits" were noticeably different, there's always the chance the webserver would serve up different pages based on this difference.
Program Intellivision!
Not in terms of body mass, obviously, but in terms of how much surfing they do. My completely unscientific, completely anecdotal observations, suggests that Chrome users on average have more tabs open and surfs considerably more web pages than IE users. Not least because Chrome is much more suitable for that task.
The "grandma" type surfers who visits the internet bank and Facebook are still much less likely to have downloaded Chrome.
So Chrome probably visits more web sites than IE, but IE is probably still the browser used by most people. To be able to discern between these two different rankings, you have to have the right methodology, including either being able to separate individual users, or compensating for the average number of web sites visited by users using the different browsers.
Why aren't they looking at the number / percentage of users who USE a specific browser?? It shouldn't matter how many visible / invisible (pre-rendered) tabs they open...?
That's nothing, Facebook has this habit of paying people to troll Google on Slashdot!
Possibly not in this case. The person who posted the story was bonch, who appears to post questionable stuff in favor of MS and against Google.
Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
WTF does the cause of browser distribution, have to do with the fact that if you write a web page to use standards, about half the users won't display it correctly?
Imagine my surprise when I loaded up Skype on my iPhone today and noticed that at the top of your contact list, it now displays an ad banner - for Internet Explorer! With an "install now" notice.
Not only did I think someone at MS might be smart enough to realize that I can't install IE on my iPhone, but I thought this is the exact anti-competitive behaviour they had been found guilty for? You know, pushing the crapware IE with their near-monopoly in other areas?
Anyone got a Skype alternative? I knew it was time to dump it when MS acquired it. It was such a nice piece of software. :-(
So yeah, the IE market share is all organic. You know, as organic as plastic wrapped in shrinkwrap foil.
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
> When a user enters a search in Chrome, the browser preloads an invisible tab not shown to the user, and these were being counted by StatCounter ..
What's the name of this ' invisible tab`?
AccountKiller
Give me any "decent" company that survives over 10 years that never "boosts" any statistics, never "sues" its competitor with stupid patents, never kill its competitors using its monopoly power......
Whereas the saturation of MSIE is totally organic, right?
Decide if this is "News for nerds" or "Fox News for nerds", please.
Also, fix that goddamn mobile detection.
I run it on 100% of my two machines!
Who cares how the stats comes to be? Doesn't mean that Internet Explorer doesn't suck any less if 80% of traffic coming from it or 2%. IE STILL SUCKS REGARDLESS. Microsoft's claim is really just lame obviously MS will has an advantage when their crappy browser is preloaded with just about every computer in the world and unfortunately, most people in the world don't even know they don't have to use IE.
This accusation is clearly the pot calling the kettle black.
The last couple months my girlfriend and I have been playing these dumb flash games on Club Bing, a service that has just closed down in the past month. The whole point of these games is to obviously inflate the perceived search share of Bing. Each game pops up a window that is split into two frames, one with the flash game on top, and the second with a Bing search page on bottom. As you interact with the game, searches related to the game go on in the background in the bottom frame. For example, when playing a crossword, every answer you correctly enter results in a search through Bing and every "hint" is a search through Bing (e.g., "1920s female dancer").
All in all, this seems like one of the more sleazy inflationary tactics by Microsoft. Even if I were to accept the hint system in the above example as a valid use a search engine for the game, there is practically *no reason* in most cases for a correct answer to launch a search, since you already know what the word/phrase means. Further, the fact that I am not given the option to either search on my own or specify my own search engine is annoying (although understandable since it is their own product).
Did you read the article, or even the summary? Chrome prerenders invisible tabs, which inflates the numbers. It's no surprise that Net Applications, the one that began filtering out these invisible hits, has results that contrast with the others.
It doesn't matter. You can't criticize Google here. You will be attacked by trolls, modded down by subversive moderators, and effectively filtered off the site. Google is perfect and flawless. The company can hack into rivals' servers, drive vans down your street and steal your emails and passwords over WiFi, and leverage its search monopoly to prop its own services over others, and Slashdotters do not care.
Any other company, they would care. There would be massive outrage. But it's Google, so they don't care. Because Google uses Linux.
I was writing code on my raspberrypi and couldn't be arsed walking upstairs to my other PC too look stuff up on the www, so I installed Lynx and found that thanks to the web being a tad more semantic these days, it wasn't that hard to gather information from things like wikipedia and other wiki-like websites. Before I knew it I had vim/irssi/lynx on seperate VTs and was being surprisingly productive. For a moment, the idea that people like RMS actually work in this sort of environment full-time didn't see as crazy as it used to.
But then I snapped out of it and sat back down in front of my shiny mac...
Seriously? Use whatever browser works for you. Who gives a shit about this stupid pissing contest.
IE only runs for a lot of people when they run windows update.
Because no one has found a way to use Chrome or Firefox to run windows update.... yet..
Tsukasa: All I really want, is to be left alone...
"Whereas the saturation of MSIE is totally organic, right?" - I'm assuming a level of sarcasm here, but the funny part is that IE's saturation is indeed organic. The Windows OS may be insinuated on us and every Windows computer ships with IE but as long as they don't break the law like they did in the EU then its all perfectly normal and totally organic. They're pre-loading a browser in their OS and since they make one they include theirs. Mac OS includes Safari and nothing is stopping anyone from downloading and using whatever they want. We all like to whine about Windows but the truth is that until they break the law or commit an ethical violation bad enough, we shouldn't much care. I mean if you want bad ethics just point your peepers at Apple and the Foxconn debacle.
And the world cares, why?
Hooray for Bonch then! If "the best you've got" is the type of reply you just made? U FAIL, badly!
It's a "clear win" for bonch when all you have is the likes of the weak off-topic reply you just made, instead of disproving his points on a technical level with proofs that contradict that which bonch posted, and cleanly so in all cases (or most @ least).
I know what it's like. I have my own "fanclub" of WEAK trolls who troll me by AC posts after downmodding my posts (& before any FOOL here says "that would take away the downmod", no, it doesn't IF the troll logs out of his registered 'luser' account here first after his downmod, & then trolls by AC posts... only logging back into his registered 'luser' acct. here on /. afterwards. The system here is SO WEAK, it's not even funny on that account in fact!)
Proof of my statements of my own "personal troll fanclub" doing unjustified moddowns of my posts? Yesterday here, for NO GOOD REASON, I was downmodded -> http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2866943&cid=40079777
That happens to me all the time from trolls who when using their registered 'luser' account I utterly annihilated on things computing technical that they don't DARE try it again using their registered 'luser' account because I track when they fuckup & bookmark/fav. it here to throw at them once again...
(Man - lol, it's hilarious, and even better when they screwup again, and they ALWAYS DO, because they're "wannabe noobz" @ best in things computing technical - it happens SO much, that they've largely given up on trying to "take me on directly" & instead resort to things like impersonating me or trying to here, downmodding "hit & run" style as shown in the link above, &/or trolling me by AC posts also, usually completely OFF-TOPIC & in ad hominem attack illogical means too... every time)
Were I bonch, & I read your post now? I'd have realized that he is doing a HELL of a GOOD JOB then... especially if his posts elicit off-topic responses such as yours.
Question: HOW BADLY HAS BONCH DUSTED YOU & YOURS THAT YOU MUST RESORT TO TALKING BEHIND HIS BACK LIKE A GOSSIPPING WENCH LIKE YOU'RE DOING NOW?
APK
P.S.=> All I can say, is that bonch must do ONE HELL OF A GOOD JOB, especially @ putting his naysayer trolls in their places, because when all you have is a reply the likes of yours instead of disproving that which bonch posts with undeniable technical proof that puts his words into the crapper? Then, it's clear that bonch is "roasting trolls" here to NO end... lol! Good for bonch I say, even though I've never interfaced with him here directly... apk
By bundling Internet Explorer with every copy of window it ships to its indentured OEMs, Microsoft artificially inflates its browser share.
When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
Pot calling the kettle black...
Everyone is biased as hell.
Sure, MS is trying to make IE look more popular somehow even though it's the crap browser. But then look at all the people that don't really care what the data is they just want to dog pile on Microsoft?
I hate these issues. People either need to be objective, detached, and open minded or they need to stay the f' out of statistics. Just go bang rocks together somewhere else with the other barbarians.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
What've you done better, or earlier in computing? Nothing!
(Yes - I never saw a ware or award go to "Anonymous Coward" (then again, that pretty much describes YOUR life now, doesn't it? Absolutely!)).
* It must be nice to amount to nothing and *try* to give others who did OK in the art & science of computing a hard time, but it's useless - I, & I am sure others also, know you're nothing more than a trolling "ne'er-do-well" who uses ac posts to harass/stalk others online.
(If you ever wonder WHY your life is what it is, that of a truly anonymous coward? Don't - your actions speak for you...)
APK
P.S.=> Where you go to school doesn't matter as much as what you do with what you learned there (and as I know for a fact above? I am 100% right, about YOU) - in fact, where you went to school only matters for absolute ROOKIE NOOBZ in the comp. sci. realm in fact, not once you're a many years-to-decades veteran in a field of endeavor (that off-topic ad hominem attack attempt that just failed on your part told me much about you in fact - you're obviously some "noob" student @ best/most)... apk
Whereas the saturation of MSIE is totally organic, right?
Other than the possibility that some small amount of spam bots might be hitting some sites and identifying as IE, yes, it is organic.
Is this a slashvertisement for Net Applications? 54% for IE?? Did they grab their data from 2009?
Also, not all traffic is search traffic. The stats for the last two months at http://www.calcudoku.org/ (which has < 35% search traffic):
What really stumbles me is the country normalisation factor. Can somebody explain to me why is "more correct" to balance the percentage of people browsing a page according to the "impact" of the country on the internet marketing?