Declare peace on Google, goodwill toward
searchers
By Molly
Wood (3/29/02)
Oh, Google.
How do we love thee? Let me Google the ways. The gold-standard
search engine that could, colorful Google charms the stodgiest with its
ever-relevant logo and warms cynical hearts with its altruistic guiding
principles (No. 6: You can make money without doing evil). Its name has
become a verb, its IE
toolbar an indispensable fixture, and, of course, its search results a
treasure trove of trivia and knowledge. But you already know all that.
Games Google plays
You may not know this: Google is under attack. It's true, our beloved search
engine could become the Web's own Velveteen
Rabbit, worn and changed forever by the weight of our adoration. The Web's
subversive (I mean that in a good way!) little community of bloggers,
or weblog editors, just can't leave the searching gem alone. Bored and
too-savvy Web geeks have penetrated Google's technology
and used their knowledge and a ravenous hunger for entertainment to create
seemingly innocent Google games.
One such game has only a
mild impact. Known as Googlewhacking,
the game's afoot when you pair two search terms so obscure that they produce
only one search result. (You'd think animatronics minutiae would
work--but, no. Four results.) Previously successful whacks include fetishized
armadillo, insolvent pachyderms, and, my personal favorite, flibbertigibbit
boogers. The net effect? As documented whacks, the above search terms now produce
more than one result. In fact, by listing them here, I've mucked up the works
even further. See? Google's already corrupted. But it gets worse.
Is that a Google Bomb in your pocket?
Google games took a potentially nefarious turn about a year ago, when a clever
blogger named Adam
Mathes discovered a way to manipulate Google's search results. He determined
that, as an exceptionally smart search engine, Google often returns results
based on related--not exact--search terms. For example, if your blog and many,
many others always use the term jailbird when referring to a certain
captain of industry, over time, the search term jailbird will return
results such as these.
Mathes entreated bloggers
everywhere to link the words talentless hack to the Web site of his, uh,
friend, Andy
Pressman. It worked. Within months, Pressman's site became the No. 1 search
result for talentless hack. Lucky him. And Mathes kindly coined an
appropriate term for his assault: Google Bombing. Others took up the call,
creating bombs as ego boosts or for amusement or political reasons (one hoped
to draw attention to the kidnapping of Wall Street Journal reporter
Daniel Pearl).
Better business bombing
Good intentions aside, there's money to be made here, and I don't like it. If,
say, you paid enough bloggers to link to your business often enough, why,
Google could end up as your inadvertent sponsor. Alas, some bloggers are more
than willing to oblige. For example, a guy named Tony
Pierce recently auctioned
off link space on his blog. But wait, it gets even worse.
Many of you probably read
that Google removed
links to a Web site critical of the Church of Scientology after the church
complained about the negative comments, then reinstated the links after public
outcry. But most of you don't know that the offending site came to the church's
attention after a concerted bombing
campaign.
Do I blame Google for
caving in to the church's demands? You bet. But you'd better believe I blame
the mad bombers, too. They claim they were only counteracting the
Scientologists' own manipulation of search site results, but the Google
bombers are simply bathing in the same scum. (Google--at least before the
Scientology bombast--benevolently announced that it's keeping
an eye on would-be search terrorists but believes them incapable of serious
damage.)
Mostly, I find it ironic
that Google, of all sites--so beloved by geeks, so representative of one of the
good things on the Net, the Southwest Airlines of search sites--could find its
demise in our unwelcome attention. Bloggers and geeks, in our endless search
for fun, amusement, and technological nooks and crannies, may have just shown
the enemy the Next Big Thing. Blogs, not bombs, people. Declare peace on
Google!