Google considers Bing a serious threat
- 05 February, 2011 03:37
- Comments
Google very publicly called out Microsoft's Bing search engine -- claiming that it copies its search results from Google. The initial charge has been followed by a back and forth exchange of insults and accusations, but one thing that is sort of lost in the melodrama is that Google apparently considers Bing to be a serious threat.
Google engineers were so sure that there was something suspicious going on with Bing search results that they set up a sting operation designed to trap Bing and prove that the Microsoft search engine is simply pulling information from Google. They created intentionally ludicrous searches with equally ridiculous search results, and then waited for that information to propagate to Bing. Lo and behold, Bing eventually returned the same search results for the same silly search queries.
The evidence seems damning. There is no denying that the gibberish queries planted by Google return the same results in Bing. Microsoft, however, denies that it "copies" Google, but rather that it tracks a variety of metrics for ranking sites and delivering search results, and that the Google sting evidence is actually just proof of common search indexing practices.
In effect, because of the myriad ways that sites are ranked and indexed, the Google sting amounts to something akin to Schroedinger's Cat. The very act of planting false search results becomes a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy guaranteed to eventually "prove" that Bing is copying Google, but without planting the false search results there is no way to determine if it's true or not..
The underlying message to the whole sordid affair, though, is that Google is concerned about Bing -- or at least takes the Microsoft search engine quite seriously as a rival. Why? Because nobody goes to the lengths that Google has gone to attempt to expose a company they don't consider a worthy competitor.
During political campaigns in the United States, you don't see Republican or Democrat candidates running attack ads against the Green party candidate. NFL teams don't talk trash about the Detroit Lions. McDonald's doesn't run marketing campaigns slamming the local burger joint on the corner. Why? Because none of these "rivals" is actually a threat worth the effort.
Whether Google uncovered some nefarious activity on the part of Bing, or Google simply gamed the system to entrap Bing, the fact is that Google is closely watching Bing, and is investing time and effort in understanding the metrics and algorithms used by Bing to index sites and generate search results.
Perhaps Bing should consider the accusations a compliment?
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- Transforming Software Delivery: An IBM Rational Case Study
- Optimised License Management for the Datacenter
- INFORMATION FOR SUCCESS - Customers Achieve Extreme Performance at Lowest Cost with Oracle Exadata Database Machine
- Award-winning unified information security from Clearswift.
- Mobile Security: Don’t leave employees to their own devices
-
NBN build gaining momentum daily: Quigley
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Monday Grok: Will Siri crack the walls of GOOG?
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Guidance for Calculation of Efficiency (PUE) in Data Centers
The benefits of determining data center infrastructure efficiency as part of an effective energy management plan are widely recognised. The standard metrics of Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) and its reciprocal Data Center Infrastructure Efficiency1 (DCIE) have emerged as recognised standards. This paper defines a standard approach to collecting data from data centers and showing how to use it to calculate PUE, with a focus on what to do with data that is confusing or incomplete. -
Oracle SOA vs. IBM SOA - Customer Perspectives on Evaluating Complexity and Business Value
The Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) model has become the cornerstone of business computing. Its ability to greatly accelerate the development of business-critical applications promotes business agility, decreases time-to-value and total cost of ownership (TCO), and greatly increases the efficiency and strategic value of IT. SOA implementations tend to be complex, IT decision makers should carefully consider their choice of a SOA platform in terms of its ability to simplify the fundamental development, deployment, and management tasks involved. Read on. -
Risk management: ensuring the security of your hosted information
Organisations of all sizes are becoming victims to cybercriminals, data breaches, information theft and security risks. But before you go out and spend a fortune on security software, solutions and consultants, the starting point is to identify and measure your business’s exposure to those risks. In this whitepaper, “Exploring, Identifying and Measuring” risk, we examine how to identify risk and share an approach for identifying and measuring risk in your organisation.
-
Cloud Computing for Dummies®
-
Emergent Information Technologies and Enabling Policies for Counter-terrorism
-
Blackjacking
-
Twitter Marketing for Dummies
-
Photoshop CS Timesaving Techniques for Dummies
-
More Java Pitfalls
-
Complete Java 2 Certification Study Guide, Fifth Edition (Includes CD-ROM)
-
Teach Yourself Visually Flash Cs4 Professional
-
Flash Cs4 All-In-One for Dummies®








Comments
Post new comment