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Google Search Results Have Liberal Bias, Study Finds (thedenverchannel.com)

According to a new study reported by The Wall Street Journal, Google's search results tend to lean liberal. "An analysis by online-search marketer CanIRank.com found that 50 recent searches for political terms on Google surfaced more liberal-leaning webpages than conservative ones, as rated by a panel of four people." The Denver Channel reports: "Minimum wage" tended to yield more liberal results, while "does gun control reduce crime" resulted in more conservative ones. Searches for "financial regulation" and "federal reserve" found mostly nonpartisan links. CanIRank used the opinions of four people to determine how liberal or conservative each website was. For 16 percent of the political search terms studied, no right-leaning results showed up at all on the first page of results. CanIRank noted this could be a problem for democracy. A different study found most people click on one of the first five search results. Users rarely move on to the second page. A Google spokesperson said in an email to the WSJ: "From the beginning, our approach to search has been to provide the most relevant answers and results to our users, and it would undermine people's trust in our results, and our company, if we were to change course." According to Google, their results are "determined by algorithms using hundreds of factors" and "reflect the content and information that is available on the internet."

34 of 385 comments (clear)

  1. Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is a well known fact that reality has a strong liberal bias.

    1. Re:Reality by amiga3D · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Fact has no bias. It just is. Bias is when we inject our emotion and opinion into facts.

    2. Re:Reality by Jodka · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is a well known fact that reality has a strong liberal bias.

      What insufferable arrogance.

       

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    3. Re:Reality by quantaman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It is a well known fact that reality has a strong liberal bias.

      What insufferable arrogance.

      Then get your fellow conservatives to stop lying their assess off.

      I'm sorry but if I were a Conservative with intellectual integrity I'd be absolutely ashamed of the state of my movement and wouldn't have the first idea where to go.

      Did you not watch the party that represents your movement first spend years falling head over heels with an obviously incompetent Sarah Palin, only to eventually go all in behind a man so lied so shamelessly that I can't even think of a comparable individual and with only a vague idea of what a President actually does?

      Did you not see The Volokh Conspiracy, a site so solidly right wing their favourite candidate was Ted "I'm going to threaten the country's solvency to launch my Presidential bid" Cruz, come out almost uniformly against Trump.

      Did you not watch virtually every respected intellectual within the Republican party either oppose Trump, or only back him with extreme reluctance?

      Were you paying attention when your base was taken over by ridiculous birther conspiracies and freakouts that the federal government was about to invade Texas?!?

      This is not "there's two sides to every story", or "well Liberals are just as bad". Stupid Liberal conspiracies happen too, but they're the exception, not the rule. They don't end up dominating the entire movement.

      There is a valid role for conservatism to play in the public discourse, so toss out the damn clowns and hucksters and start playing it!!

      --
      I stole this Sig
  2. side effects of truthiness by supernova87a · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well, as they say, truth has a liberal bias, so if your search engine weights things that provide more credible factual information, and more credible factual information is associated with liberal news/information sources, what's the problem?

    If the effect however, is that conservative opinions / viewpoints based on factual information are being deemphasized, then that's a valid point - but I don't think that's the effect going on here. Or perhaps conservative viewpoint webpages tend not to contain the same amount of credible factual information...

    1. Re:side effects of truthiness by Desler · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There's not even objective evidence of what is being claimed. This is just the opinion of four people.

    2. Re:side effects of truthiness by CaptainDork · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This.

      "...CanIRank used the opinions of four people..."

      What the simple fuck?

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    3. Re: side effects of truthiness by dilvish_the_damned · · Score: 4, Informative

      And yet the people who assume that the study agrees with their world views are quick to accept it as some sort of reflection truth.

      It is a well known fact reality is distorted.

      --
      I think you underestimate just how much I just dont care.
    4. Re:side effects of truthiness by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "...CanIRank used the opinions of four people..."

      I guess the takeaway is that the Wall Street Journal is a fake news site.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    5. Re:side effects of truthiness by kimvette · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In many conservatives' minds, it is, because they are obviously co-conspirators in the liberal conspiracy. All too many conservatives disregard anything that disagrees with the tinfoil hat set's holy trinity (Limbaugh, Beck, and Jones) because obviously so-called "legitimate news sources" are trying to hide the truth... the truth that gay and nonwhite people are in cahoots with the lizard people who run the Illuminati and therefore the shadow government.

      Yes, some people really believe that.

      It's maddening, and no amount of evidence will prove to them that "crooked Hillary" isn't, and that Trump isn't a saint. Oh, and the videos of Trump admitting to sexual assault, bragging about ripping off small businesses deeming it "good business," and so forth are faked, just like the moon landing.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    6. Re:side effects of truthiness by zifn4b · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's not even objective evidence of what is being claimed. This is just the opinion of four people.

      What you don't realize is that some belief systems that have been popular for thousands of years only need a crusty old book with no contemporary evidence to basically enslave all of the Western Europe for several centuries. We've come far as a culture but still very far from rational, it pains me to say. I think we'll eventually get there though.

      --
      We'll make great pets
    7. Re:side effects of truthiness by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 3, Funny

      There's not even objective evidence of what is being claimed. This is just the opinion of four people.

      Ya, but they were: Zeus, Athena, Apollo and Hermes -- Hades was busy with the election.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  3. Re:Bias in [current year]? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Intelligence has a liberal bias.
    Google is a smart search engine built by smart people.

  4. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    CanIRank.com found that 50 recent searches for political terms on Google surfaced more liberal-leaning webpages than conservative ones, as rated by a panel of four people.

    Four people rated the results? That sounds like pretty flimsy evidence. Why are their opinions some definitive source of truth?

  5. And yet it leans conservative sometimes ... by drnb · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As the summary indicates the bias varies with the topic. Having a conservative bias on gun control suggests the engine is getting things correct. In this case the conservative side is more fact based and less appealing to emotion and placebo "solutions". So yeah, maybe the search engine page ranking is working fine.

  6. Do Google Search Results also have. . . by Idou · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a fact bias? Because that could explain things. . .






    Note: Moderators that modded this down had a small penis bias.

    --
    Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
  7. Goes conservative on gun control by drnb · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The summary in fact offers an example where conservative websites are emphasized and it happens to be on a topic where the conservatives usually have the facts on their side. Gun control. Like it or not the facts from an engineering and historical point of view favor the conservatives. The liberal side of the argument seems mostly emotion and embracing placebo "solutions".

    1. Re:Goes conservative on gun control by drnb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The summary in fact offers an example where conservative websites are emphasized and it happens to be on a topic where the conservatives usually have the facts on their side. Gun control.

      Most conservative "facts" when it comes to gun control are still based on the long-ago debunked statistical model of John Lott Jr. If the claims of conservative websites were true, countries like Japan wouldn't have a murder rate per capita that is less than 1/10th of the US nor would countries like Somalia with no gun control would have one that is nearly double that of the US.

      Except for the fact that gun violence is more about a poor educational system and few to low quality job opportunities, and not so much about civilian access to firearms. Switzerland has a vibrant sport shooting community but they also have a good educational system, a good social safety net, etc. Plus firearms owners have had safety training and practice safe storage. What is going right in Japan and going wrong in Somalia has little to do with gun violence. Gun violence is a symptom of other problems. But to acknowledge this with respect to US gun violence would mean accepting decades of mistaken US policy and liberal politicians would rather not do that.

  8. Just try to find by Hylandr · · Score: 3, Informative

    I have read a lot of lines about 'the truth has a liberal bias', or 'liberal information tends to be science based', and I have to shake my head.

    Try googling for any information on how to 'combat the rise of gender-fluidity', or 'how to explain physiology is a binary gender system', or 'how to explain gender fluidity is a social construct' and you get Nothing, Zip, Nada, that isn't in support of this brand of mental disorder.

    Science based? Truth? Not even close. Everywhere you see sex that's outside a human social construct there's a male and female. Only humans social structure describes non-existent genders in liberal circles.

    Not a troll, or flamebait, but I have asbestos underwear on, and I can already feel the flames from the mod-activism firing up.

    Fact is, The science and truth hurt the liberal cause acutely no matter how much spin they try and put on it.

    --
    ~ People that think they are better than anyone else for any reason are the cause of all the strife in the world.
    1. Re:Just try to find by Capsaicin · · Score: 3, Informative

      Firstly, you are WAY too obsessed with trannies. Your revulsion, lust, or repressed urge to be one is clouding your mind when it comes to understanding what is even being discussed in those links.

      Everywhere you see sex that's outside a human social construct there's a male and female. Only humans social structure describes non-existent genders ...

      As I've explained to you more than once I believe (will this be the time the penny finally drops?), the very purpose of the concept of 'gender' used in contradistinction to 'sex' is to distinguish biology from narrative.

      'Sex' is a biological fact, and it falls into the classification of male, female, or occasionally intersex. 'Gender' on the other hand is a social construct by definition, usually described by the adjectives masculine, feminine and, given there is hardly any limit to our ability to craft narrative, all this contemporary gender fluid stuff (though even in traditional societies the idea of a 3rd gender for feminine (gender) males (biological sex)).

      Gender used in this sense refers to that which is not biologically determined, but instead reflects the cultural ideas of how people of a given biological sex ought to behave. Eg. Bearing children is a function of female physiology, skirt wearing is not. A clue that skirt wearing behaviour is a matter of gender, and child-bearing is not, is to be found, as we have discussed, in the fact that in certain cultures skirts are items of masculine (gender) attire. This illustrates that the idea in our culture (with apologies to all you Scots out there) that skirts are for females (biological sex) and pants for males (biological sex) is a social construct. Thus a skirt (in our culture) is a feminine (gender) garment, not a female (biological sex) one.

      It will thrill you, no doubt, to learn, that the most extreme (and thus easily ridiculed) branch of feminism, ie. RadFem (cf TERF), shares your disgust not only of gender (which they understand to exist, but wish to eliminate, see 'Gender critical' or GC) but also of male-to-female transsexuals, referring to them as male-to-transsexuals (or MTTs), that is when they are not too busy calling for fun stuff like the restriction of males (biological sex) to being 10% of the human population and the like ... Horseshoe effect?

      What this does indicate though is that the very concept of gender (in contradistinction to sex) can be deployed to undermine the notion of gender-fluidity (i.e. as traditional gender roles break down what does this even mean anymore?) It is for this reason that the trans-gender lobby is seeking to infect the notion of gender with physiology by relying on the, imho rather dubious, concept of "brain-sex" as an explanation of why their gendered (feminine/masculine) self-image is at odds with their biological sex (male/female). Which amounts in effect to arguing that skirt-wearing behaviour is a function of physiology. That mainstream feminism (as opposed to RadFem) is so happy to accommodate the claim of trans-gendered males (biological sex) to being 'women' (biological sex or gender???) seems self-defeating to me. Were they not trying to escape the idea of sex as destiny (i.e. physiological femininity) But as a traditionally masculine (gender) male (biological sex) all I can say it's your movement girls.

      And I'm WAY too obsessed with someone being obviously wrong on the internet.

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
  9. Google's results are dependent on the searcher! by RhettLivingston · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google's results are not the same for every searcher in every locale. They are dependent on what you've searched for in the past, where you're at, what is in the news at the moment, etc.

    In other words, they are quite intentionally biased to meet the likely desires of the user. This article has no basis in science, though it cloaks itself in that fashion to those who know nothing about science, and is far more biased than Google's search results.

  10. Re:Need a better search engine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    "How about a search engine that just searches?"

    It's obvious you've put a tremendous amount of time thinking about this.

    So, what does this mean? What does the search engine return, Mr. Wizard? Web sites that have the most occurrences of the search phrase in them? Search engines have to be written to do something. It's not magic. It seems that Google is trying to return results that are the most relevant. I would imagine that part of "relevant" would be factual, which means that it's not going to point to lots of sites run by people using the "SJW" acronym.

  11. Re: Cold, heartless liberal bean counters by Chirs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think that many people on the right behave the same way, just about different topics.

    And it's annoying no matter who is doing it.

  12. Too small a study by Chalnoth · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This study is just way, way too small to have the conclusion it claims to have.

    Whether left-leaning or right-leaning results turn up depends upon a wide variety of factors, not least of which is wording (left-leaning sites and right-leaning sites often use slightly different wording for the same issue). I don't see how it is even remotely possible for a group of four people to review enough searches to make up a representative sample, and four people is too small a number to provide a solid opinion.

    Also, there's a distinct possibility that for some issues, left-leaning sites have talked about those issues far more frequently and in far more depth, while right-leaning sites will have discussed other, different issues.

    Finally, I see no reason why Google should be held to any sort of standard of false balance: there are many issues for which the facts very solidly support the left, and it makes sense for Google's search results to reflect that bias. One of the clearest examples here would be global warming, but there are many others.

  13. News at 11 by GerryGilmore · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Search phrase wording affects results returned. GASP!!! Almost like the algorithms are working as designed.....

  14. Re:Cold, heartless liberal bean counters by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Liberals speak of what they desire *could* be, and very often of how things *should* be. Conservatives focus much more on the cold, hard facts of how things *are*. So much so that it often makes discussions difficult:

    Your describing what conservatives *should* be, not what they are.

    In reality, their "cold hard facts" are often aren't facts at all, but are instead per-conceived postulates. Thus, so much emphasis on "faith" and "principles", objective evidence be damned.

    They are also usually focused less how things *are*, than on how they think things *were*, as interpreted through some distorted rose-colored filter.

  15. Can you see Google's Code? by s.petry · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I tested the theory several times through the election process. "How do I vote" would immediately fill in "for Hillary Clinton" and the name "Donald Trump" would not appear even when you typed in "Donald Trum". Searching for "Presidential Candidates" would show Hillary and Obama, with Trump being down between 6 and 9 places in the list. When millions of people report the same exact symptom, it no longer remains something you can explain with a personal anecdote.

    Google Management and executives have a bias toward Democratic/Liberal politics. This can show up in their product with relative ease, and if you don't believe so perhaps spend a bit of time with data analysts who can show you how to manipulate data for the effect you want. Study Statistics, which is all about manipulating data for effect.

    While it's true that the study will be accepted by people who have the world view that Google censors content, people who happen to favor Democratic/Liberal politics will disbelieve it.

    Reality is not distorted, only our view of it is distorted. Without facts, such as the question in my subject, we can only speculate on the facts that we do have.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  16. Re:It's not just reality that's biased... by chiguy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    BTW... Apparently Slashdot also has a left-leaning bias. Wont' let me say "Nig.ers" with two 'g's.
    Remember that as you read all the other posts here. This is a left-leaning site.

    So you're saying since Slashdot doesn't let you use a racial slur, it's left-leaning? So you're saying right-leaning users want to use racial slurs but are thwarted by this left-leaning site?

    That's what I thought.

    --
    passetspike!
  17. Re:Ps both are needed, dreams AND plans by swalve · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Except that's complete nonsense. Conservatives have been responsible for the vast majority of new spending in the last decades. They sign the laws and then blame the liberals for the costs. Conservatives just use the budget excuse to complain about things they don't want to do.

  18. Re:Cold, heartless liberal bean counters by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have observed that liberals tend to be idealists, conservatives realists.

    That's right. That's why the Earth is 6,000 years old, climate change doesn't exist no matter what the science says, evolution is a myth, market forces are the answer to any problem, implementing a minimum wage totally ruined our economy, we are safer if we all have guns despite the statistics from other countries, the government should not try to control our lives and yet somehow gay marriage not only devalues our normal marriages and causes earthquakes.

  19. But he is right by aepervius · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I will explain you why. Most right wing party are what we call "conservative". Which means a tendency to not change the status quo, to ark back to position which static , "what was done before is good enough" etc... It is only a tendency so look at the average. By nature conservative stay on the habitual position we had. The problem is, science and the new technology we have had for the last 100 years and especially 20-30 years are disruptive. New knowledge is disruptive of the habits of the old one. For example science discovered that spanking is contra productive. Science pointed out at global warning. The problem is that that "new" fact , is disruptive of "old" fact. So they go AGAINST the current for conservative. That is why even it is said in jest, science and new stuff , as disruptive of old stuff as they are, have an anti-conservative bias by nature. New discovery by necessity disrupt old habits/old knowledge, and so by definition will be anti conservative. Some people say "liberal" bias but I would say "disruptive" as politically neutral, as some of the cow of "liberals" (I hate those term) are also slaughtered by disruptive new findings.

    So yes, even if said in jest, there is a base of truth in it.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  20. Re:Bias in [current year]? by Big+Hairy+Ian · · Score: 3, Informative

    I suspect if you actually dug into Google's algorithms you'd discover that Google is probably not biased but that the internet almost certainly is

    --

    Build a Man a Fire, and He'll Be Warm for a Day. Set a Man on Fire, and He'll Be Warm for the Rest of His Life.

  21. Conservatives aren't about budget responsibility by sjbe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Then respect the conservatives' that the budget won't cover all that, but we CAN afford to do A, B, and C.

    Baloney. The conservatives NEVER argue to cut the things that actually matter from the budget. They just borrow the money instead of raising taxes but are just as irresponsible. Conservatives NEVER bring up cutting social security, medicare/medicaid, or the defense budget which together account for about 3/4 of the federal budget. Any politician that claims to be about fiscal responsibility who doesn't talk about how they are going to cut the defense budget or medicare is lying through their teeth about what the budget will cover. They are unwilling to make the hard choices and cut the programs that matter.

    You could cut every cent of every program except for medicare, medicaid, defense and social security and you STILL couldn't balance the budget. So anyone who talks about "cutting pork" without discussing those four programs is full of shit about being fiscally responsible.

  22. Re: Name ANY conservative and I'll show you by david_thornley · · Score: 4, Informative

    Since I have been able to vote (1972), Democratic Presidents have lowered the deficit, and Republicans (with the arguable exception of Nixon) have raised it.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes