Internet Monopolies

This blogger’s story about how his Page Rank 9 blog was hacked and removed from Google’s index shows the power of Google to essentially wipe out a guy’s work.

Yesterday was one of the scariest days I’ve had in a long time and it put in total perspective the power that Google wields. It also made me hope that every single company with an idea about how to improve search, including Microsoft, continues to try and beat Google. I was working on a blog post and was searching for something I’d written before so that I could reference it. Instead of using my blog’s search, I of course used Google’s site feature, like I always do. Only this time, I got nothing…

Now I think Google is to be commended as a company, for the great success it has had. I have nothing against success. But people are so polarized today– if Google decided to ignore you, then the world ignores you. It is a BAD thing for this to happen. Competition is supposed to be healthy, right? Well, currently there is no competition. Google reigns. And when Google makes a decision, there is no buffer, nothing to rely on.

The guy I mentioned had his blog hacked and spammed. Google will remove a spammy website. But the gi=uy’s blog was not a splog (a blog made for the purpose of spreading spam). He’d been hacked. And when he tried to fix it, he had to go through tremendous hoops and hurdles just to get Google to listen to him; and then he had to wait for weeks before corrective action was done.

It’s a sad monument to our times. I, like this blogger, hope to see more search engine companies rise to the top. It looks like Yahoo has dropped the ball. This was strange, because Yahoo could have given Google some great competition; but Yahoo backed away.

There’s now Cuil, but that is unsatisfactory and needs improvements.

We’ll see what develops. I am hoping for a new contender soon!

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Posted in blogs, crime, search engines, security programs. Comments Off »

Is There Such a Thing As Search Engine Privacy?

I was aghast to discover a few months ago the policies of search engine companies. The SEOs hold on to your searches information for inordinate periods of time. I’d read recently about a new policy by Ask.com. They are hoping their new policy will give them the edge over the giants (and you know who they are).

Jumping on the privacy bandwagon, Ask is offering users the chance to take charge of what happens with their search history.

An AskEraser link will feature prominently on the Ask.com homepage and, when enabled by the user, will delete all future search queries and associated cookie information from its servers.

The information it destroys includes IP address, user ID and session ID along with the complete text of a query.

I could wish all SEOs did such. MSN and Yahoo save the information for 18+ months, although policies bounce up and down more than stock market numbers. And when the Bush Administration demands the numbers from AOL, MSN, and Yahoo, they obediently hand it over. AOL might even broadcast that information– oopsie!

Google holds on to the info forever. Well, they say they’ve changed that to be 18 months, but who believes them?

Here’s a great comparison chart by CNet, showing the policies of the SEOs.

Moral of the story: your searches are monitored, and may be used against you. Be clean with your searches and use a variety of search engines frequently.

Eventually all the information will be condensed anyway, but at least we’re stemming the tide.

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Posted in Google, search engines, security news, tips. Comments Off »