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November 20, 2008 1:06 PM PST

Google SearchWiki brings custom search results

Posted by Stephen Shankland
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Disagree with Google's search results? You'll be able to do something about it with a change the company plans to release starting Thursday.

Google's SearchWiki is a feature that lets people elevate, delete, add, and annotate search results. Google remembers the changes a person made to search results, so repeat searches will show the same customizations and notes.

Google has been offering SearchWiki as an experimental feature to some people for months, but starting Thursday it will become available to anybody who's searching while logged in with a Google account.

"This is a search feature that gets a user more control over their search results," said Cedric Dupont, Google's SearchWiki product manager.

SearchWiki shows an up arrow for promoting Web sites, an X for deleting them, and a 'note this' speech bubble for adding comments.

SearchWiki shows an up arrow for promoting Web sites, an X for deleting them, and a 'note this' speech bubble for adding comments.

(Credit: Google)

There's also a collaborative element: people can show the collective wisdom of the masses by clicking a "See all notes for this SearchWiki" link at the bottom of each search results page. That shows notes and how people have promoted or deleted pages in aggregate.

Google isn't alone in its customization work. With a research project called U Rank, Microsoft has been testing the user-tuned search results idea. Mahalo presents search results created by humans. And Wikia Search, an open-source search engine, is open to user suggestions. "Today, search undervalues the human touch," argues Wikia Search.

Feedback for ordinary search?
Where things get interesting is whether Google will use people's voting behavior as an input to the regular search algorithm that determines the order of search results. Google already employs human judgment in its algorithm by virtue of its PageRank technique, which judges a Web site's merit in part on how many other Web sites link to it, but people promoting or deleting specific Web addresses could be another signal.

Dupont was noncommittal about whether the company planned to build in that feedback loop, either directly as a signal to influence search rankings or indirectly as extra data that could help the company judge the relevance of its search results. But he certainly didn't rule the idea out.

"We don't close any doors. We constantly evaluate signals" that are incorporated into the search results algorithm. "Search is adapting to the Internet as it becomes a more participatory medium. Now you have people telling us specific things about how they'd like to see their search results."

Certainly people's collective behavior could be useful. For example, Dupont said, "You could imagine if we do see a particular site (about which) people have a unanimous opinion, that might trigger external things. Like maybe we should check out our spam control," he said. In other words, if a lot of people deleted a particular page from search results, perhaps Google should check why its system isn't flagging that page as a problem.

Another narrower possibility could be to use SearchWiki customizations to influence the personalized search results people can get through Google by signing up for the Web history feature. Dupont seemed cooler on this idea.

With SearchWiki, Google produces "customized search results in a very granular and precise manner," adjusting only specific Web addresses and not broad influencers on search results. "At this point we don't have anything to say about how to combine these two features."

Stephen Shankland covers Google, Yahoo, search, online advertising, portals, digital photography, and related subjects. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered servers, supercomputing, open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 8 comments
by wango2007 November 20, 2008 2:05 PM PST
"Certainly people's collective behavior could be useful [to change rankings]."

This new plan by Google will enable companies to smash their competitors, it seems.

Soon SEO experts will be hired not only to improve organic search results, but also to downgrade competing sites.
Reply to this comment
by lonestarState November 20, 2008 2:40 PM PST
It sounds like a nightmare a search engine which works like digg. One day you are on top and the next day you are done. I will stick to building my own search engine at BuildaSearch.com.
Reply to this comment
by new_media_works November 20, 2008 3:39 PM PST
I guess it's too late to get the miserable failure problem fixed, but I I guess now Google may learn a thing or 2 about "wiki wars" ... either that or it's just "window dressing"
Reply to this comment
by jackdaniels08 November 20, 2008 5:51 PM PST
@new_media_works. Calm down. I believe this is more of an enhancement to tweak and personalize things to a laser pinpoint. You almost sound like Google is scrapping their whole search engine. Your cognitive mindset is fixed so black and white. Google's algorithmic model will always be the central solid base infrastructure framework on which substructural minutia such as this is to be built upon.
Reply to this comment
by Dean_Ansari November 20, 2008 9:41 PM PST
This is a copy of what our search engine AnooX introduced some years ago.
Although with AnooX the votes that you do to change the search results are instantly visible
to all, that is with AnooX the Wisdom of Crowd does change the search results not just
for those who have Voted but for all. But still this is a very cheap copying (stealing) an
idea that AnooX pioneered some time ago.
It is amazing how the Big Media does not give credit to AnooX for having pioneered search
engine powered by the knowledge of the people.
Reply to this comment
by vjlenin November 21, 2008 4:14 AM PST
Indeed, the search wiki offers new ways for Google to better its index. I see as you mentioned, removing spam results by high volume of user removal a great new way to improve index. But isn't it open to manipulation by spam parties? For instance, if people open huge number of Google account and start to remove specific search results or adding specific search results?

Here is <a href="http://cutewriting.blogspot.com/2008/11/google-searchwiki-wiki-search-feature.html">a review of Google searchwiki I wrote</a>.
Reply to this comment
by vjlenin November 21, 2008 4:16 AM PST
Indeed, the search wiki offers new ways for Google to better its index. I see as you mentioned, removing spam results by high volume of user removal a great new way to improve index. But isn't it open to manipulation by spam parties? For instance, if people open huge number of Google account and start to remove specific search results or adding specific search results?

Here is my review of searchwiki: http://cutewriting.blogspot.com/2008/11/google-searchwiki-wiki-search-feature.html
Reply to this comment
by yeapmadhu November 21, 2008 7:11 PM PST
Hai i cant Access the Search wiki Features . After Login in my google Account , i cant See the + and Other Option after the Results . I get the Old Search itself . How can i get the Google Search Wiki Features
Reply to this comment
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