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Planet Google is proudly presented by Piotr Konieczny, who IS NOT (and never was) affiliated with Google Inc.
If you want to suggest a website or read Planet Google in a different language - let me know.
Sergey Brin is telling employees to stop making old products and start improving new ones. "For example, said Chief Executive Eric Schmidt, Google plans to combine its spreadsheet, calendar and word-processing programs into one suite of Web-based applications."
Bill Slawski over at SEO by the Sea wrote an interesting post about the Google patent application for their new “Plus Box” feature in the search results.
There are several valid concerns regarding what and how much content from another site should be shown by Google to still qualify as “fair use” and how much is too much and copyright infringement.
Phillipp Lenssen demonstrated nicely a case where copyright infringement would not be the case, because of circumstances that are virtually impossible to know by Google, but are clearly raising the question if the plus box could result into unfair completion of the content owner against Google and its various properties.
Philipp wrote as comment to Google showing his post with the video first in the results, but without plus box, but added the plus box for the same video at Google’s own property and another one.
“Now, Google doesn’t just add their own properties – they also add sites like MetaCafe for instance. However, they fail to turn my linked WMV video into a screenshot to show next to the snippet. In result, this means people may simply click the “Watch video” link right on the Google results page, thereby expanding the video to play immediately, skipping the originating video source. And this, in return, means they’ll be only exposed to the ads Google is displaying as opposed to the ads the blog is displaying.”
I had another concern, but it seems that Google did think about it, because I was not able to come up with a search result so far that shows an example to demonstrate it. I consider this a good sign although it might be there, but negligible.
This statement in Bill’s post was the trigger.
“The elided data may be extracted and associated with the target document in a repository created by a crawling engine that “crawls” content, copies the content in a repository, and then indexes the content”
This means that the information shown in the plus box, which were taken from the crawled website are cached information that might or might not the current content on the target website. My concern is about invalid and/or outdated contact information.
The Google help page about address information in the plus box was not 100% clear about it.
“The address link shown below some sites in our search results (in an expandable area called a Plus Box) is meant to help searchers locate businesses and compare search results. We show the address link for results that are local in nature and for which we have an associated address. If we don’t have an address for your business, or we don’t think that an address is relevant to your site we won’t show it.”
It seems to be the case though that Google only shows addresses and phone number if
1) The user query clearly indicates a local search
2) The address is available in the Google Local Business Center
I tested a few cases and noticed that generic searches made Google decide to either stock information (if the company is public) or site links. The address appeared only, if a local search indicator, such as the name of a City, extended the search phrase.
The address itself does always seem to come from the local business center, which makes sense. The information there come from numerous sources, but it provides an interface for businesses to specify details about their business location manually, which has of course precedence over sources like yellow pages or addresses gathered from the website itself. Google flags unverified addresses and May does not show them in plus box results. That would be worth testing.
The concerns may seem not warranted for the address example, but it raised a general concern, which might becomes a problem down the road, if it is not being properly addressed by Google. What I am talking about is the probable problem of users getting used to avoid visiting a website from the SERPs.
They may be trained to trust the extended and often very specific information to be fresh and current. They might be in most cases, but may be not in enough cases where crawled content is being shown which might be several days old or older.
Most sites in regular search results are not crawled every 10 minutes or so like Google News sources. Most are glad if Google shows up once a week others are more unfortunate and is even less than that.
It would be interesting to know if the very specific plus box results have some kind of date stamp and are being suppressed from the SERPS if the content is older than a specified maximum.
All this boils down to the same concern, that Google makes the user stay longer on Google’s site and may be even prevent the user von visiting websites altogether, because the content provided by Google might be enough already for the user who then has no more reason to visit the site directly.
This shift in strategy might be the most troublesome thing that comes out of this, considering the previous statements done by Google co-founder Larry Page in an interview where he said,
“We want you to come to Google and quickly find what you want. Then we’re happy to send you to the other sites.”
and
“We want to get you out of Google and to the right place as fast as possible.”
Kudos to Philipp Lenssen again, who found the quote in the Playboy magazine.
Carsten Cumbrowski
Internet Marketing Resources at Cumbrowski.com, including resources to Local Search and Geo-Trageting.
by CarstenCumbrowski at May 27, 2007 07:29 PM under Local Search
Techcrunch reported on Saturday about an interesting test conducted by Yahoo!
Yahoo! linked to outside websites from their homepage, something that big portals like AOL, MSN at of course Yahoo! usually don’t do, with the exception of advertising. The homepage of the portals was traditionally only linking to content within their own website or to other company properties.
Yahoo! explained that they hope that this will increase the user’s actual or perceived relevance of Yahoo! as a portal in general. They will analyze the data and user feedback to decide if they will make this linking to 3rd party websites from prominent homepage spots a general Yahoo! policy and continue to do so in the future or not.
I am sure that Yahoo! does not have any problems with finding “beta testers” for their experiment.
Loren would probably not mind to have Yahoo! use SearchEngineJournal.com for some test runs, I have a few sites of my own where I would be willing to make this “sacrifice” and I am sure that most of you would be willing to do the same for them. I for my part am always willing to help other people out and I just fell in love with Yahoo!, probably even more so if they would have a homepage that links to my site.
Okay, I know. Nice try. It probably takes a bit more than a bit sweet talking before they put up a link to your site on their homepage, contextual relevance and importance for example, but hey everything is fair in love, war and getting a link from Yahoo!’s homepage ;).
The new Google universal search interface also provided some spare room for extra links. They might also want to do some tests with linking to 3rd party websites, without adding NOFOLLOW and getting paid a dime for the link of course.
Cheers!
Carsten Cumbrowski
Cumbrowski.com Internet Marketing Resources

by CarstenCumbrowski at May 27, 2007 11:44 AM under Search Engine News





by Ionut Alex Chitu at May 26, 2007 08:54 PM under Image Search
The list of non-allowed advertising at Google's AdWords just got a little bigger.
Those "Buy A Term Paper" sites now join the comapny of gun dealers, alcohol and tobacco sellers as well as hackers, phisers and prostitutes; illustrious company.
The "banned" advertising list is growing... now if they could only drop all my competitors' ads I would be happy.
Technorati, a blog search engine in search for its own meaning – and possibly hoping to get acquired in one of those crazy multi-billion bucks deals – redesigns every couple of months. The latest redesign (which was down for me yesterday, so I’m posting with some delay; today, it’s only partly down) is found at the end of the gallery below, showcasing past Technorati designs throughout the years.
In the latest relaunch, there’s a scrolling live ticker on top (yuck), though the rest of the page was thankfully cleaned up a bit. Still, what we need from a good blog search engine remains: speed, scope & relevancy... and Technorati doesn’t always score high in those (example: Google Blog Search returns 169 results for sergey brin marriage at this time, and Technorati returns zilch, except for the sentence “There is nothing in the known universe about sergey brin marriage”). Either not finding what you’re looking for, or searching for a conversation and then having to wade through dozens of spam blogs, is just not helping anyone. But good luck to Technorati to find what they’re looking for, perhaps in 2008!






[By Philipp Lenssen | Original post | Comments]

Xiaowan in the forum created a couple of mockups to propose a way for Gmail to handle multiple email addresses of yours, with a synchronized signature for each. What do you all think?
[By Philipp Lenssen | Original post]
. Maybe you like them colorful and fun
. Or maybe you're a square
. Everybody can be themselves with the Google Talk Gadget, and you'll find it right here.Wow! Information and the Future is going to discuss Information Trapping! Awesome! I hope you like it.
Soundscapes coming to Google Earth? Dear Sir: please come to Second Life. Thank you.
Confidential to Zatz: You bet your domain name I’d go nuts.
York Diocese court papers dating back to 1300 will be put online.
Database of food consumption habits across three countries.
Bill Gates says all reading will be online within five years. Well, gosh, he’s been right about everything else so far…
Completely off-topic: Some guy ate just over 7 pounds of hot wings in 12 minutes. When I read that my stomach sympathy-cramped.
A new virtual EMS Museum.
Last week I attended a Google off site workshop on leadership training in Santa Cruz. The workshop is called "Edge" and it was awesome. A group of 25 Googlers from around the company got a 2.5 day intensive course on personality types, leadership styles, group dynamics, etc. We formed teams and had to do a lot of exercises where we had limited time and/or information and we had to be able to work as a team communicate, coordinate, and execute a plan of action. All of the activities had very short time limits and most of them involved us being blind folded during the execution stage. It is funny to think they trained us for leadership by blind folding us... I guess they took to heart the saying "the blind leading the blind".
2007 (weeks): 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 |