WebProNews

Tag: Search

  • Bing It On Challenge Finds Only 33% Of “Primary Google Users” Would “Use Bing More Often”

    Last month, Bing launched the Bing It On Challenge, a campaign and website where people can do a “blind taste test” comparison of Google’s search results compared to Bing. Today, Bing has provided an update of how it’s been going.

    “Our goal with the Bing It On Challenge is to contrast the habitual use of Google with research showing that people chose Bing’s Web search results over Google’s nearly 2:1 in blind comparison tests,” a Bing spokesperson tells WebProNews. “Since launching the great search debate, we have had over five million visits to the Bing It On Challenge site. The strong response inspired us to conduct a new round of research designed to test what happens to perceptions about search quality when people take the Challenge.”

    “Our independent research partner, Answers Research, conducted a statistically significant survey across 4,700 people who took the Bing It On Challenge to understand how their Challenge results were impacting their attitudes about search,” he adds. “Of those surveyed, 64 percent of people were surprised by the quality of Bing’s results and over half of the people surveyed indicated their impression of Bing improved after seeing Bing’s search results right next to Google’s. We see people’s perceptions of Bing shifting, with 33 percent of the primary Google users surveyed saying they would use Bing more often after taking the Challenge. All it took was a try!”

    Here is Bing’s blog post about the news.

    So basically, 67% of people who primarily use Google would not use Bing more often after taking the challenge. Also, based on the wording Bing uses, the 33% would use Bing “more often,” which does not necessarily mean they would stop using Google as their primary search engine and start using Bing instead.

    Additionally, Bing says, “17% who found Bing more favorable after taking the side-by-side comparison said it revealed flaws in Google’s results.” Emphasis added.

    It’s still unclear just what percentage of people who took the challenge actually think Bing has better results than Google. When the challenge was launched, Bing said people preferred Bing 2:1. They’re still pushing those numbers. We’ve asked Bing what percentage of users have actually indicated that they prefer Bing results to Google results. We’ll update if we get a response.

    Update: We got a response from Bing GM Adam Sohn, who tells us, “We aren’t keeping track of the results from the Bing It On tool, because it’s non-scientific and was intended to be a fun way for customers to experiment with both search engines, seeing web search results side-by-side from both Bing and Google, hopefully noticing the progress Bing has made over the past few years.”

    Either way, I’m not sure how much the Bing It On challenge really tells us about user preference, considering that the tool strips out key user experience elements from both search engines. Because of this, it hardly portrays an accurate representation of either Google or Bing results.

    Meanwhile, the jury’s still out on the Million Short It On challenge.

  • Google Webmaster Guidelines Get An Update

    Google Webmaster Guidelines Get An Update

    Remember when an update to Google’s Webmaster Guidelines was spotted prematurely, before Google pulled it back down? Well, Google has officially updated them now.

    “Both our basic quality guidelines and many of our more specific articles (like those on links schemes or hidden text) have been reorganized and expanded to provide you with more information about how to create quality websites for both users and Google,” explains Google’s Search Quality team.

    “The main message of our quality guidelines hasn’t changed: Focus on the user,” the team adds. “However, we’ve added more guidance and examples of behavior that you should avoid in order to keep your site in good standing with Google’s search results.”

    This video is now at the top:

    The guidelines are important for not only ensuring that you aren’t manually penalized by Google, but also that you don’t get hit by an algorithm update designed to enforce them (like Penguin). They’re also just good general rules to follow for SEO and user purposes.

    The guidelines are still divided into design/content, technical and quality guidelines. Peruse the new guidelines here.

  • Google Shopping Transition To Be Complete Oct. 17

    We knew it was coming in October, but Google officially announced today that starting October 17, Google Shopping results in the U.S. will start coming only from merchants who are Product Listing Ads advertisers.

    “We will be ranking these results based on relevance, with bidding as an additional factor,” the company reiterates. “The ranking of natural search results on Google.com will not change.”

    Google also announced the availability of product level bidding for product listing ads.

    “You can now improve your Product Listing Ad performance by setting your cost per click bid at the item level,” says Sameer Samat, Vice President of Product Management, Google Shopping. “This functionality should help you meet your volume and profit targets at the product level.”

    Product Level Bidding

    Advertisers/merchants can also create product targets using the product ID in their Merchant Center feed to manage bids at the product level.

    Google is encouraging merchants to get set up in time for holiday advertising.

    For more discussion on the positives and negatives of Google’s paid inclusion Google Shopping model, read this.

  • Safari Makes Google Searches Encrypted, Distorts Analytics

    Safari Makes Google Searches Encrypted, Distorts Analytics

    Mobile Google searches are more secure from Safari on iOS 6 than they were in previous versions of iOS or from other mobile browsers. Apple is reportedly routing Google searches through the SSL version of Google, which Google made the default experience for signed in users from the desktop last year.

    This makes searching more secure, and ncreases privacy. At the same time, it distorts analytics data. When Google turned it on for the desktop, it turned keyword data in Google Analytics to “not provided”. With Apple’s version, it’s just making search traffic count as “direct”. In other words, if someone gets to your site by searching Google from the search box in Apple’s latest version of Safari, it will look like they just went to your site directly instead of finding it through a search. Your search traffic may seem down, and your direct visitors may seem up.

    Danny Sullivan explains the situation in great detail at Search Engine Land, where he shares a statement from Google, who says:

    If you go to google.com on most mobile web browsers today, you don’t get SSL. Currently there’s significantly more latency for SSL connections on mobile devices that we believe creates a poor user experience, so we’re looking into the best way to make HTTPS connections faster on mobile devices. That’s why we don’t yet show personal results on mobile, either.

    For now, SSL Search on desktop continues to be a leader for offering more secure searches, which other major search engines don’t offer in any form.

    For the web browser on iOS 6 with SSL on by default, our web servers don’t yet take that fact into account. We’re investigating different options to address this issue.

    It will be interesting to see what Google’s solution is. Will the company find a way around Apple’s increased privacy? Would they want to do something involving Safari that somehow decreases user privacy after being handed the largest fine for a single company in FTC history over Safari-related privacy issues?

    Also, Google seems to consider “poor user experience” the problem with doing SSL search on mobile itself. If this is the case, where are all of the complaints about the “poor user experience” from the Safari search box? I can’t say I’ve heard any.

  • Gmail Gets Ability To Search Through Attachments

    Little by little, Google has been improving search in Gmail. Back in May, Google made improvements to autocomplete predictions in Gmail, so that they would take into account the actual content of emails. About a month ago, Google added support for autocomplete predictions in the From: and To: fields, so you can find messages exchanged with specific people more easily.

    According to a report from Google Operating System, Gmail recently began letting users search inside attachments. This includes support for PDFs, DOCs, and PPTs. “To find messages that have attachments, search for has:attachment and add some keywords to your query,” suggests Alex Chitu. “To restrict your search to PDF files, search for has:attachment filename:pdf.”

    One reader commented that it was not working on Google Apps, but was for personal Gmail.

    Google did recently launch Gmail Log Search for Google Apps admins.

    Of course, the most noteworthy feature Google has added to Gmail, in terms of search, is the addition of Gmail results to the Google web search results pages. Granted, this is only in limited trial at this point, it’s an interesting feature that puts email into the greater search experience, and could even have some ramifications for email marketing.

  • Google Penalties Won’t Necessarily Kill Your Rankings

    According to Google, just because your site is manually penalized, it does not mean that your site will vanish from the rankings. In fact, it may not hurt it much at all in some cases. A lot of that depends on you, the webmaster, and the other signals you’ve managed to send the search engine.

    In a Google Webmaster Central forum thread (via Search Engine Roundtable), a webmaster discussed being denied his 4th reconsideration request, and Google Webmaster Trends analyst John Mueller had some interesting words. For that guy’s specific story, you can view the thread, but that’s not really the point. Here’s what Mueller said:

    The primary manual action that is affecting your site is that these unnatural links are being ignored. This is more or less in line with the spreadsheet that you have submitted, and would generally not be affecting the other links to your site. That said, while these things may have been counting for your site in the past, they no longer are — so it’s possible that you’d see some effect in your site’s crawling, indexing, and ranking. Past that, keep in mind that the manual action here might not be the strongest element affecting your site’s performance, we use over 200 factors in our crawling, indexing, and ranking, and regularly announce updates (such as http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.ch/2012/04/another-step-to-reward-high-quality.html ). My recommendation would be to not focus so much on this specific manual action, but instead to work to make sure that your site (and how it interacts with users and the rest of the web) is the best it can possibly be. Emphasis added.

    The manual action is just one thing Google is taking into consideration. If you have enough other positive signals going your way (or can at least gain some), it’s possible that Google’s manual penalty will have little effect on your site’s rankings.

    Speaking of signals, Google is about due to put out its monthly (at least it used to be monthly) list of algorithm changes. We have yet to see August’s changes, and September is almost over. Last time, they released two months’ worth of lists at the same time. Perhaps we’ll see them do that again. It seems likely at this point. Or who knows, maybe they’ll wait and give 3 months’ worth next time.

  • TheFind Thinks Google Shopping Will Hurt Consumers

    Google is scheduled to complete its transition to the paid inclusion-based Google Shopping model for its product search results next week. Some retailers have expressed disdain for the move, while others have embraced it. At least one has compared Google to a drug dealer.

    TheFind.com, member of the FairSearch Coalition, is the latest to speak out against the transition. FairSearch, if you’re unfamiliar with the organization, is a group of Google competitors who frequently speak out against Google’s business practices in an effort to paint Google in an anticompetitive light.

    TheFind CEO and co-founder Siva Kumar tells WebProNews, “Google’s switch to an all-paid model is likely to confuse many consumers who will no longer see every product for their search, but will instead only see paid placements. It will be interesting to see how Google communicates this change to consumers who have come to trust that search results are a combination of ads and organic results.”

    It’s certainly worth noting that Google has said from the beginning that in its search results pages, it will display the “Sponsored” text with results from Google Shopping. Currently, if you look at shopping-specific results pages, Google displays a links that says “Why these products?” When you click that, Google says, “Products and offers that match your query. Google is compensated by some of these merchants.”

    “This change means that using Google, consumers are no longer able to find the lowest price, nor do an exhaustive search for availability of a product among all retailers,” Kumar says. “Instead, they will only see the results from the small group of retailers who are paying to be on Google and will likely miss out on deals and availability from other retailers who are not participating.”

    “With this move by Google, consumers lose most because they will end up paying higher prices across the board as retailers are forced to pay higher ad rates to Google,” Kumar says. “Smaller retailers also lose out when they cannot afford to participate in the pay-to-play model to have product appear.”

    Of course, Google does not see the move as something that hurts consumers. “When searching for great local restaurants, people want places to eat right there on the results page, not another click or two away. It’s the same with hotels, flight options, directions and shopping,” says Sameer Samat, Vice President of Product Management, Google Shopping.

    “We believe that having a commercial relationship with merchants will encourage them to keep their product information fresh and up to date,” Samat has said. “Higher quality data—whether it’s accurate prices, the latest offers or product availability—should mean better shopping results for users, which in turn should create higher quality traffic for merchants.”

    Either way, the full transition is almost here. It will be interesting to see how users react.

    Learn more about Google Shopping here.

  • Google Lets You Watch Movie Trailers From SERPs

    Google announced via Google+ update today that it has added a “Trailer” button for movie search results, which let you watch a trailer from YouTube without having to leave the search results.

    Here’s the post:

    Google

    Finding the perfect movie for your next excursion to the theater just got easier, thanks to an improvement that enables you to watch trailers directly from the search results page. For example, if you want to check out all of the movies available in your area, you can search [showtimes nyc] on google.com in English, click the Trailer button next to a listed movie, and the official trailer on YouTube will pop up. If that movie's not your cup of tea, you can click the X in the right-hand corner and watch the other trailers available. The Trailer button is also available if you're searching for a specific movie—say, [finding nemo 3d]. 

    #searchtips#googlesearch

    When you click the button, it blacks out the screen and serves you a YouTube video with a movie description. The look is very similar to when you look at a photo on Google+:

    Movie Trailer from Google Results

    This is just the latest example of Google finding more ways to keep you on Google, without having to send you to a third party site (although in this case, Google also owns the third party).

  • Google Launches New Google Trends (With Insights For Search)

    Google Launches New Google Trends (With Insights For Search)

    Google announced today that it is merging Insights For Search into Google Trends, creating the “new Google Trends“.

    Google Trends now includes features from both products, and the line chart and map have been updated to use HTML5-based Google Chart tools. This means the page can be loaded from mobile devices, and results can be visualized without scrolling. Google will also show “hot searches” not only for the United States, but for India, Japan and Singapore.

    Google Trends

    New Google Trends

    “We’ve seen so many examples of insights gleaned from Trends, from the Oscars to the Super Bowl; from shopping to elections; from our yearly Google Zeitgeist summary to the many we’ve found around the web,” says Yossi Matias, Google Senior Engineering Director in Search, Head of Google’s Israel R&D Center.

    “Google Trends data can be used to better understand global trends — identifying health trends such as in flu trends, nowcasting in economics, and studies on the predictability of search trends,” Matias adds. “And it has been used in many scientific articles across disciplines.”

    If you go to Google Insights For Search, it now redirects to Google Trends.

  • We’ve Now Had Google News For An Entire Decade

    Google announced over the weekend that it is celebrating the tenth anniversary of Google News’ launch. The product was unveiled on September 22, 2002, and has gone through quite a few changes in that time.

    According to Google, Google News is now available in 72 editions in 30 languages, and counts 50,000 publications among its news sources. Along with Google News search, Google says Google News connects a billion unique users a week to news content.

    “Inspired by the widespread interest in news after the September 11 attacks, we invested in technology to help people search and browse news relevant to them,” writes Krishna Bharat, Distinguished Scientist and Founder of Google News, in a blog post. “Google News broke new ground in news aggregation by gathering links in real time, grouping articles by story and ranking stories based on the editorial opinions of publishers worldwide. Linking to a diverse set of sources for any given story enabled readers to easily access different perspectives and genres of content. By featuring opposing viewpoints in the same display block, people were encouraged to hear arguments on both sides of an issue and gain a more balanced perspective.”

    “As we have scaled the service internationally, we have added new features (Local News, Personalization, Editors’ Picks, Spotlight, Authorship, Social Discussions), evolved our design, embraced mobile and run ancillary experiments (Fast Flip, Living Stories, Timeline),” says Bharat. “In parallel, we have monitored our quality and challenged our engineers to improve the technology under the hood—increase freshness, group news better, rank stories more accurately, personalize with more insight and streamline the infrastructure.”

    Last week, Google announced a new ranking signal for Google News in a news keyword meta tag, encouraging publishers to associate various keywords with their stories, in an effort to help Google better understand the content of an article without having to sacrifice the quality of the content itself in order to help Google. More on that here.

    In honor of Google News’ tenth anniversary, Google put together the following graphic, looking at the top news stories for each year of the past decade, as well as some noteworthy changes to Google News:

    Google News For The Past Decade

    Bharat wraps up Google’s announcement by saying, “Opportunities abound, and we are excited for where we can take this product in the next decade. While change is inevitable, one thing remains the same: our mission is to bring you the news you want, when you need it, from a diverse set of sources.”

    Might I recommend getting realtime search back?

  • People Are Increasingly Turning To Social Over Search

    To be clear, people are still turning mostly to search for seeking the answers to their questions. However, the gap between search and social networks is narrowing.

    Are you getting more traffic from social media than you were a year ago? How’s it looking compared to search? Let us know in the comments.

    There are plenty of sites out there that are getting more traffic from social media sites than they are from search engines. In fact, Google’s constantly changing algorithm almost demands that sites diversify their traffic sources and rely less on Google (the clearly dominant search engine) for the bulk of their traffic.

    Doing great in Google now? There’s no guarantee that will last. You’re relying on an algorithm, and algorithms don’t care whether or not they have a substantial impact on your business.

    Social media, on the other hand, is much more about people, and regardless of where they share it, people will always share good content, and are not necessarily influenced by over 200 mysterious signals when they share it with their own networks of friends and followers.

    With that in mind, it might be good news that social media is apparently gaining ground against search in terms of the traffic it can drive to websites.

    Paid Content’s Robert Andrews has a short, but interesting piece on the subject, citing UK Experian Hitwise data indicating that UK visits to major search engines dropped by 100 million through the month of August to 2.21 billion, and dropped by 40 million year-over-year. He shares the following comentary from Hitewise:

    “The key thing here is the growing significance of social networks as a source of traffic to websites. Search is the still the number-one source of traffic, but social networks are growing as people increasingly navigate around the web via recommendations from Twitter, Facebook etc.”

    This bodes well for Facebook, should it launch its own search offering in the near future, as CEO Mark Zuckerberg has hinted at.

    “We’re basically doing 1 billion queries a day and we’re not even trying,” he’s quoted as saying, adding that “Facebook is pretty uniquely positioned to answer the questions people have. At some point we’ll do it. We have a team working on it,” and “Search engines are really evolving to give you a set of answers, ‘I have a specific question, answer this question for me.’”

    As Andrews notes, people are increasingly finding answers to their questions in social networks. This is why a Facebook search engine could be worth something to users. It’s why the search engines like Google and Bing have added more social content to search results, and it’s why Google is now failing in its mission to index the world’s information and make it universally accessible.

    A recent survey from Greenlight Digital suggested that a Facebook search engine could instantly grab 22% of the market share.

    According to recent research from Webmarketing123 (pdf), the number of marketers able to attribute leads and sales to particular social channels more than doubled (leads from 15 to 31%, sales from 23% to 60%) year-over-year.

    “Compared to last year, nearly 50% more B2Bs now identify social media as having the most impact on lead generation (2011 vs 2012),” the firm said in its report.

    In social media engagement, the firm says, “B2c marketers are ahead with 70% moderately to highly engaged (40% highly engaged), but B2B is catching up, with 63% at those levels of engagement (27% highly engaged), overall, only 1 in 10 have no social
    media program.”

    90% of B2Bs have some level of Social Media engagement, according to the research, with 63% describing themselves as “moderately to fully engaged,” and 25% “very” to “fully” engaged. The majority of this group, Webmarketing123 says, are seeing a return on their investment. Top areas of investment (for the 60% that spend) are Facebook & LinkedIn (where 40% are active), and Twitter (30%).

    Other research from RichRelevance indicates that for ecommerce, Pinterest is increasing in terms of traffic value (specifically average order value).

    Webmarketing123 says that 20% of the marketers active on social media aren’t sure if they’re generating leads, and a full 40% aren’t sure if they’ve closed sales attributable to social media.

    We looked more at the search-related data the firm collected here.

    Are you finding social media to be valuable for traffic? Leads? Conversions? Let us know in the comments.

  • Look At All This Stuff Google Maps Has Launched Since Apple Dropped It

    At Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference in June, the company revealed iOS 6, which replaces Google Maps in the operating system with Apple’s own product. This week, iOS device users got “treated” to Apple’s new product. Suffice it to say, there’s been a bit of complaining. Many users want Google Maps back.

    We thought it might be fun to take a look at what Google has announced for Google Maps since Apple’s official announcement that it would be Google Mapsless. Google has been busy. Following is a series of announcements from the Google Maps Google+ page dating back to June 11 when Apple’s event kicked off (and this isn’t even all of the Maps-related announcements).

    Google Maps

    A new batch of satellite images for Google Maps and Google Earth!


    Google Earth originally shared:
    We just published a fresh batch of high-resolution aerial and satellite imagery in Google Earth and +Google Maps. Visit the Lat Long blog for a full list of updated countries: http://goo.gl/efEXp.

    One highlight to note is this updated view of Donbass Arena in Donetsk, Ukraine, home of the Group D opener of the #EURO2012 Football Championship earlier today.

    Happy exploring!

    Google Maps

    We're now eight steps closer to mapping the world with Google Map Maker!  http://goo.gl/w4QKN

    At the heart of Google Map Maker are citizen cartographers helping to build the most accurate maps of their communities – ones that reflect the identity, culture and pride of regions across the globe. Today, Map Maker is expanding to the following countries, enabling people who know and live in these locations to share their local expertise: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, and Switzerland.

    From the moment you make your first edit in Map Maker, know that you are joining an ever-growing community of passionate mappers as they make online maps of our world more detailed and useful. Get involved by introducing yourself to fellow mappers or find an event near you: mapyourworldcommunity

    We happily welcome mappers in each of these new countries. Google Map Maker is available in more than 190 countries and territories, and as we forge ahead with continued expansion over the coming months, stay tuned for additional country launch announcements!

    Thanks and happy mapping!

    A golf course in Oslo, Norway comes to life with Google Map Maker

    Google Maps

    It goes without saying that commuting is a day-to-day routine for people all over the world, so we’re excited to announce that we’ve recently launched traffic coverage in regions of 7 new countries to help you plan your commutes! Welcome Belarus, Estonia, Latvia, Mexico, Peru, Romania and South Africa!

    We’ve also improved and expanded our coverage in 19 other countries and regions including Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Puerto Rico, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, and the UK.

    For more information check out the Lat Long blog: http://goo.gl/H1hDk

    Here’s a quick glance at our traffic coverage around the globe:http://goo.gl/maps/GK0J

    Google Maps

    Google Maps Coordinate is a great new Enterprise product that lets you organize teams in the field!


    Google Enterprise originally shared:
    Organize teams on the move with Google Maps Coordinate

    Today, we’re making it easier for your business to efficiently organize teams in the field with Google Maps Coordinate, a tool that gives businesses real-time visibility into their teams’ movement and assignments with just a couple of clicks and a smartphone.

    Team members in the field download the mobile app to their phone and then can:
    Share real-time location. Google Maps Coordinate is built upon all of Google’s mapping and geolocation infrastructure so the app will send an accurate location…even if you’re indoors.
    Receive instant alerts. Mobile teams are instantly notified when a new job is assigned to them.

    Meanwhile, employees at headquarters can:
    Manage jobs. Easily create jobs, precisely locate the job with autocomplete and custom locations, and assign the job to the nearest team member.  
    View past jobs and locations. Easily visualize the locations of jobs and teams, including current and past jobs.  Businesses can assess where they should be assigning or hiring more workers and how to optimally place their teams.

    Learn more about Google Maps Coordinate at http://maps.google.com/coordinate.

    Google Maps

    Take Google Maps for Android with you anywhere you go, no data connection required! You can even find and orient yourself by using GPS and compass mode. Read more about offline maps on the Lat Long Blog: http://goo.gl/67QNq 

    Google Maps

    It’s time for another round of 45° imagery updates — adding coverage in 29 US cities and 5 international locations. 

    Visit the Lat Long blog for a full list of cities: http://goo.gl/UvC7I 

    Check out the Aragonese Castle in Reggio Calabria, Italy:http://goo.gl/maps/W3yN

    Google Maps

    Feeling lost indoors in London? Use your Android device to now get indoor Google Maps in over 40 select UK locations from King's Cross Train Station, British Museum, Harrods and even the Barbican Centre in London. Read more on Lat Long: http://goo.gl/bGh4b

    Or visit maps.google.co.uk/starthere 

    Google Maps

    Use Google Maps to navigate your way around a museum exhibit!


    Google originally shared:
    We've added more than 20 U.S. museums to our growing collection of indoor maps. Locate the great whale hanging in the Museum of National History in New York, or find your way to a Picasso in the de Young in San Francisco. Across the country, plan your route from exhibit to exhibit and explore great museums with any Android device.


    Indoor Google Maps help you make your way through museums
    In the past, navigating through museums could be an art form in and of itself. But Google Maps for Android has got wayfinding inside your favorite museums down to a science. With indoor maps and walki…

    Google Maps

    Attention bikers — Starting today, we’ve added extensive biking data to Google Maps for Austria, Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. In many of these countries we are also enabling biking directions in beta mode.

    For more details visit the Lat Long blog: http://goo.gl/p3hCG

    Bike paths in the Netherlands

    Google Maps

    Earlier today we announced that biking data and directions were added to many countries in Europe and Australia (http://goo.gl/p3hCG). To add to the excitement, we’re happy to announce the launch of walking directions in 44 African countries! To learn more, visit the Lat Long blog: http://goo.gl/b5qsA

    Google Maps

    Visit a National Park or two on your lunch break!


    Google originally shared:
    Take a (virtual) trip through some of California’s most breathtaking national parks. We’ve added Yosemite, Redwood, Sequoia & Kings Canyon, Death Valley and Joshua Tree National Parks to Street View. Make John Muir proud and check it out at http://goo.gl/jHYU0.

    Google Maps

    You can now visit the South Pole with Street View as part of our World Wonders project. Take a look at past explorers footsteps including Sir Ernest Shackleton and Robert Falcon's huts and hopefully it can inspire you take some journeys of your own. 


    Google originally shared:
    In 1913, a trip to Antarctica was advertised with the following: "Men wanted for hazardous journey. Low wages, bitter cold, long hours of complete darkness. Safe return doubtful. Honour and recognition in event of success." Now, nearly 100 years later, you can take the same journey wearing shorts & a t-shirt, from the comfort of your browser. We've added new panoramic imagery of historic Antarctic locations (inside and out) to our World Wonders Project site (www.google.com/worldwonders). Learn more on our blog: goo.gl/XgVhy and in the video below.

    Google Maps

    Check out our new and updated maps in parts of Europe, Africa and Asia!


    Google originally shared:
    Today, we’re launching updates to +Google Maps for Croatia, Czech Republic, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Lesotho, Macau, Portugal, San Marino, Singapore and Vatican City. These new maps are more detailed, with better information for things like parks, coastlines and bodies of water; more accurate names and locations for major points of interest; and more clearly-labeled ferry routes—plus some other improvements. 


    More detailed maps in parts of Europe, Africa and Asia
    Whether you're travelling abroad or exploring your own city, the maps you carry with you should be comprehensive, accurate and easy to use. We're constantly making improvements to Google Maps to help …

    Google Maps

    We’ve recently made it much easier and faster for you to start your journey on Google Maps from your current location. Now, when you visit Google Maps you’ll be automatically zoomed into your city as the starting point for your search. You can dive right in and discover the local businesses, restaurants and attractions near you, without having to manually enter your location.

    For more information, visit the Lat Long blog: http://goo.gl/uhEvS

    Location information displayed on left with option to correct it.

    Google Maps

    We’re always working to build the most comprehensive and accurate view of the world — courtesy of the +Google Earth and Maps teams, we have exciting new updates to both our high resolution aerial and satellite imagery and our 45° imagery. Updates available for over 70 countries/regions! Visit the Lat Long blog for the complete list of updated places: http://goo.gl/8dXfT

    Here’s The Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago, Illinois, viewed in new 45º imagery. http://goo.gl/maps/TciG

    Google Maps

    We now have Street View imagery of the Olympic Park in London. Here is a view of the Olympic Stadium: http://goo.gl/maps/G2EZ5

    More to come with #streetview !

    Google Maps

    Back in 2008 we added public transit directions for subway, bus, commuter rail, and ferry services in the New York City metro area.  Starting today, we’re also including planned service alerts in step-by-step transit directions for the city’s subway system. And when you click on any of the 468 stations labeled on Google Maps, you’ll see whether any planned service changes might affect your trip.  If you’re a frequent traveler on the subways of New York, please be sure to let us know what you think.  Read more on the Google Lat Long Blog: http://goo.gl/fNPXQ

    Google Maps

    G’day mappers — at last it’s time to share the treasures of the Great Southern Land. Today,Google Map Maker opens its maps to Australia, so you can add your local knowledge to Google Maps for all the world to see.

    Google Map Maker warmly welcomes the people of Australia to the team of citizen cartographers from 200 countries and regions across the globe as they continue to build the world map. To learn more, subscribe to the Map Maker YouTube Channel, and get started mapping today!

    http://google-latlong.blogspot.com/2012/07/calling-all-aussie-mappers-google-map.html


    Google Lat Long: Calling all Aussie Mappers! Google Map Maker is now available in Australia
    Help share Australia's natural gems with tourists and locals alike by drawing the hiking trails through the Eucalypt forests of Tasmania or adding all the campsites surrounding Uluru-Kata Tjuta Nation…

    Google Maps

    A collaboration between NASA and Google has made way to the largest special collection of Street View imagery to date — 6,000 panoramic views of the Kennedy Space Center. Help us celebrate the Space Center’s 50th birthday by taking a virtual tour through the famous gateway to space: http://goo.gl/maps/hFqTX. Read the full story on the Google Lat Long blog: http://goo.gl/2qCPu

    Google Maps

    Many of you currently use traffic information in Google Maps to plan out your trips and save you time. Today, we’re excited to announce that we’re expanding our traffic coverage to include more than 130 smaller cities across the United States as well as the capitals of Colombia, Costa Rica, and Panama. Learn more on the Lat Long blog: http://goo.gl/g9xzA

    You can check traffic conditions on your Android device and web browser

    Google Maps

    Today, Google Map Maker has become available in Ukraine and Poland, joining 200 other countries and regions, and bringing us two steps closer to building the most comprehensive world map possible. From the peaks of Ukraine’s Hoverla mountains to Poland’s cheerful Baltic coastline, you can now contribute your local knowledge to help create a more complete and accurate map of Europe for the world to see. 

    We welcome both residents and folks who are familiar with Poland and Ukraine to the team of citizen cartographers across the globe who are continuing to build the map of the world. Learn more here: http://goo.gl/EsDq0

    Thanks, and happy mapping!

    The area around the Olympic Stadium in Wroclaw comes to life in Google Maps.

    Google Maps

    Nearly 7 years after the disaster of Hurricane Katrina, the people of New Orleans are building up their city stronger than ever. We’re excited to help share the progress the city has had in our newest addition to Street View!  Among other things, you’ll see major investments made to playgrounds, community centers, roads, and parks, like historic Congo Square in Armstrong Park (http://goo.gl/maps/3Yc64) — the "birthplace of jazz”. Check out the Lat Long article by Mayor Mitch Landrieu of New Orleans for more information: http://goo.gl/UVnYH

    Google Maps

    +Google Maps  now has schedules for more than one million public transit stops worldwide in nearly 500 cities. Update to the latest version of Google Maps for Android http://goo.gl/fjwt1 and see some of the changes we’ve done to the Transit Lines layer.  For more information visit the lat long blog.

    Have you ever used transit directions? 


    Google Lat Long: Google Maps now has schedules for more than one million public transit stops worldwide
    Since 2005, we've collaborated with hundreds of transit authorities around the world to make a comprehensive resource for millions of riders to find out which bus, train, subway or tram can take them …

    Google Maps

    Over the last few months, we’ve taken you everywhere from the Amazon to Antarctica, and we’re continuing to add imagery of even more places around the globe. Beginning this week, you can dive even deeper into Latin America with new Street View imagery of Brazil and Mexico. Go ahead, visit Chichen Itza! (http://goo.gl/maps/gnR4x) Check out the Lat Long blog for more information: http://goo.gl/TXqpe

    Google Maps

    Building a more comprehensive, accurate and usable map for local cyclists in Detroit, Michigan is just one part of Map Maker Todd Scott’s mission. From the smallest town to a rapidly evolving city like Detroit, maps reflect the heart of a community. Whether you’re improving directions, adding local businesses or mapping an entire area from scratch, your local expertise will help make life easier for not only you, but all Google Maps users. As Todd says, “It goes beyond map making. It’s a way to take back your neighborhood.” 

    You can learn more about Todd's inspiring Map Maker story here: http://goo.gl/y5y8z. How are you helping to map your world? It's time to share your story.

    Google Maps

    We’re putting on our parkas and heading north to Cambridge Bay in the Kitikmeot Region of Nunavut in Canada’s Arctic. Millenniums worth of stories in this region are hidden by an intricate lacework of tundra, waterways and breaking ice. Today, we’re setting out on an ambitious mission to tell some of those stories and to build the most comprehensive map of the region to date. By empowering the Cambridge Bay community, we’ll be able to share the spectacular beauty and rich culture of Canada’s Arctic. Get the full story on the Lat Long Blog: http://goo.gl/NQbQ9


    Google Lat Long: Google Maps heads north…way north
    Wednesday, August 22, 2012 at 6:00 PM. Search for [cambridge bay] on Google Maps and you'll fly to a tiny hamlet located deep in the Kitikmeot Region of Nunavut in Canada's Arctic, surrounded by an in…

    Google Maps

    Time to strap on your helmets — we’re adding turn-by-turn, voice-guided biking navigation to Google Maps Navigation (beta) in every country with biking directions. In 2010 we launched biking directions on your desktop for the US and Canada, today we have over half a gigameter of biking navigation in 12 countries across the globe. Read more on the Lat Long Blog: http://goo.gl/u6Gpx and get the update from Google Play: http://goo.gl/r6MIS.

    Google Maps

    Hello mappers,

    We’ve got some exciting news. You can now map with your friends on Google+! With a few simple steps you can share from Map Maker to your Google+ circles, and build your ever-growing Map Maker community in the process.

    Anything you share from Map Maker will appear on your Google+ profile to the circles and individuals with whom you’ve shared the post. People in your circles can comment on your post, and from there you can continue on your way to creating comprehensive maps of the places you care about most!

    To learn more about how to share Map Maker edits on Google+, go here: http://goo.gl/4TxGf

    Thanks, and happy mapping!


    Sharing in Map Maker – Map Maker Help
    Share your Map Maker hobby with your Google+ circles. By sharing your map edits and reviews with people connected to you on Google+ who may be regional experts or know about a particular area, you can…

    Google Maps

    Today, we’re making Google Maps even better with new voice guided, turn-by-turn directions with traffic conditions in India, biking directions and Map Maker in New Zealand, and new Street View imagery of university campuses around the world. These improvements are part of our ongoing effort to build the best map we can — one that’s comprehensive, accurate and easy for you to use.  

    Learn more about these and other exciting Google Maps updates here: http://goo.gl/u9D4z

    Help Google Maps go everywhere!   http://youtu.be/UrS9AVPUMFQ

    Google Maps

    Today, we’re excited to announce our latest round of imagery updates, making our maps even more accurate and comprehensive. Look out for new aerial, satellite and 45º imagery for many regions across the globe, from Mecca to Allentown. Some images are only available in Google Earth for the moment. Visit the Lat Long blog for a complete list of updated areas: goo.gl/kHKUC

    Google Maps

    As one of our most beloved features, we’re excited to announce our recent Google Maps Navigation (Beta) launch for a suite of new countries, including Algeria, Bahrain, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, and UAE. 

    http://www.google.com/mobile/maps

    Google Maps

    We’re excited to announce the latest release of Google Maps for Android! http://goo.gl/9ljjy With some improvements to better sync your maps experience across all of your devices, it’s now faster and easier for you to get the information you’ve searched for on your browser, right on your Android phone. Less tapping, fewer typos! Find out more: http://goo.gl/wcXo9

    Google Maps

    Today, Google Maps is expanding its offering of live road traffic in three new cities: Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (goo.gl/maps/AINXH); Kuwait City, Kuwait (goo.gl/maps/hrrEn) and Guayaquil, Ecuador (goo.gl/maps/QPCwJ). We’ve also improved live traffic information to include more roads and highways in 15 regions where this popular feature of Google Maps is already available: Australia, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Russia, Sweden, the U.K., and the U.S. We hope this more accurate picture of traffic conditions will help you avoid getting stuck in traffic jams and more easily get you where you want to go. Visit the Lat Long blog for more info: http://goo.gl/wfSjj

    And again, that’s not even everything.

    More Google Maps coverage here.

  • Facebook Now Lets You Delete Your Search History

    Since the dawn of search engines, internet users have utilized the ability to delete their search history. It’s a simple, quick, and painless way to prevent prying eyes from getting up in your business, for lack of a better phrase.

    Now, Facebook is giving their users the ability to monitor their search activity and yes, delete it if that’s what they wish to do.

    “Starting today, in addition to your other activity, you’ll be able to see the searches you’re making on Facebook. Just as you can choose to delete any of your posts, you can use the same inline control on Activity Log to remove any of your searches at any time. It’s important to remember that no one else can see your Activity Log, including your search activity,” says Facebook.

    All you have to do is go to your Timeline and click on “Activity Log” right under your cover photo. From there, simply click the “all” button at the top right corner and find “search” among the options. You’ll see a list that says “John Q. User searched for _______” and you can delete each search at your own discretion. Of course, your activity log (including your searches) is private anyways, but sometimes it’s good to have ultimate control.

    Speaking of Facebook and search…Facebook is doing search. Well, at least some time in the future. Mark Zuckerberg said so himself earlier this month. “We’re basically doing 1 billion queries a day and we’re not even trying. Facebook is pretty uniquely positioned to answer the questions people have. At some point we’ll do it. We have a team working on it.”

    Adding search to the activity log isn’t the only thing Facebook’s done this week to enhance user privacy. Yesterday, they unveiled a new social plugin called Shared Activity, which will allow developers to give users a way to control which activities they share with friends across web apps.

    Users should start seeing the “Search” option within the activity log within the next few weeks.

  • Million Short Launches Its Version Of “Bing It On” Challenge (Million Short It On)

    Did you have fun with the Bing’s Bing It On Challenge? Well, welcome to the arena MillionShort It On, a similar offering from alternative search engine Million Short.

    We reported on Million Short a while back. It’s an experimental search engine that lets you remove the top million sites from your Google results. It may not always be the most useful way to find the info your’e specifically looking for, but if you’re not looking for anything specific, and want to find some really deep content about a subject that you otherwise may never find in a million years, it could be just what the doctor ordered.

    Founder Sanjay Arora tells WebProNews, “Inspired by BingItOn, we’ve set up a head to head search results challenge against Google. Niche, long-tail searches are resulting in a strong preference of MillionShort results over Google results, and I invite you to try the challenge as well.”

    And of course, like with Bing’s version, there’s a video (though this one seems to have more of a sense of humor than Bing’s):

  • Google Maps Adds Live Traffic Info To More Countries

    Google Maps has expanded its live road traffic feature into three more countries (one city each). These include: Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; Kuwait City, Kuwait and Guayaquil, Ecuador.

    “Now, the maps of these locations are much more useful, as drivers can quickly determine the clearest route to their destinations and reduce the amount of time spent in the car,” writes product manager Stephan Seyboth in a blog post. “In addition to being able to see current traffic conditions, estimated travel times are also available to ease anxiety and help you plan your trips accordingly.”

    In addition to the new countries/cities, Google has improved live traffic info to include more roads and highways in 15 other regions, where the feature already existed. These include: Australia, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Russia, Sweden, the U.K., and the U.S.

    “We hope this more comprehensive coverage provides a more accurate picture of the traffic conditions in these areas, and helps people to not only avoid getting stuck in traffic jams, but also more easily get where they want to go,” says Seyboth.

    In other Google Maps news, the company also launched some improved syncing features for the Android version, as Google Maps has disappeared from iOS (in favor of Apple’s own Maps product).

  • Google Maps Gets Updated On Android, While Disappearing From iOS In iOS 6

    Now that Apple has launched iOS 6, Google Maps is officially off of the iPhone Maps experience. Meanwhile, Google has launched an update for Google Maps for Android adding better sync across devices.

    “Just make sure you’re signed in to Google Maps and your web history is enabled to get a number of new benefits including search and directions history,” says Google Maps software engineer Keiji Maekawa in a blog post (which appears to have been at least temporarily pulled). “When you start to type a place or directions into the search box on your Android device, you’ll see suggestions for directions and locations that you’ve previously searched for – making it easier to quickly find directions on the go.”

    “You can also see your mapping search history, as well as your directions history, on your Android phone by going to the ‘Search’ or ‘Directions’ tab under My Places,” says Maekawa. “This way, places and businesses you have already searched for will show up in your suggestions to save you time when you’re out and about.”

    You can still access pre-specified locations, like “home” or “work” by typing “home” or “work” from your Android device.

  • Google May Soon Update Its Webmaster Guidelines

    It looks like Google may soon be changing its Webmaster Guidelines. Patrick Sexton from FeedTheBot claims to have spotted an updated version of the guidelines, and posted about them. However, he says, two Google employees told him that they were put up by mistake and “were not meant to go public yet.”

    Sexton removed his post, but in the comments of the following Google+ post about the post (via Search Engine Roundtable), someone posted a link to a screen cap of her account of the guidelines.

    Eren Mckay

    Official Google Webmaster Guidelines gets updated
    thanks to +David Harry  for sharing:
    http://support.google.com/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=35769 here's a post about it too:
    http://www.feedthebot.com/blog/official-google-guidelines-get-updated/


    Official Google Guidelines Updated – Webmaster Advice
    update: I have confirmed with two Google employees that these new guidelines were put up by mistake and were not meant to go public yet. I just happened to notice them and I naturally wrote about them…

    (Click the timestamp to go to the comment thread.)

    Google must have had some reason to pull the guidelines, so it’s hard to say how much of what Sexton spotted is what Google will end up going with. The webmaster guidelines are obviously important, however, in ensuring that a site stays in Google’s good graces and doesn’t face getting penalized or hit by algorithm changes designed to enforce the guidelines. The Penguin update was geared towards enforcing the quality guidelines specifically (part of the Webmaster Guidelines).

    According to the screen cap of Sexton’s post, there is some new stuff about rich snippets, which are not currently mentioned on the Webmaster Guidelines page at all.

    There are things like, “Review our recommended best practices for images, video and rich snippets,” and “Avoid abusing rich snippets markup.”

    Things to avoid include: automatically generated content, participating in link schemes, cloaking, sneaky redirects, hidden text/links, doorway pages, scraped content, participating in affiliate programs without adding sufficient value, loading pages with irrelevant keywords, creating pages with malicious behavior (such as phishing or installing viruses, torjans or other badware,” abusing rich snippets markup and sending automated queries to Google.

    It says to “engage in good practices” like: monitoring your site for hacking and removing hacked content as soon as it appears, preventing and removing user-generated spam on your site.

    Some other quotes from the post:

    “Think about what makes your website unique, valuable, or engaging. Make your website stand out from others in your field.”

    “Don’t deceive your users.”

    “Avoid scraped content.”

    “Avoid automatically generated content.”

    “Monitor your site for hacking and remove hacked content as soon as it appears.”

    “Prevent and remove user-generated spam on your site.”

    This is all pretty basic and common sense stuff, but that’s essentially what the guidelines are are about, for the most part, anyway.

    I guess we’ll see if the changes are implemented soon, and whether Google has even more to add.

  • Bing Ads Launches Keyword Suggestions

    Bing Ads Launches Keyword Suggestions

    Bing announced the launch of a new keyword suggestions feature for Bing Ads (formerly adCenter). Advertisers can now apply suggested keywords customized, based on the ads and keywords they’re already using.

    “On the Bing Ads Opportunities page, we now provide you with exact match keyword suggestions that we think are relevant to your campaigns and will help your ads serve more often,” says Microsoft’s Manu Aery. “The suggestions are based on the keywords and ads you’re already using in each ad group.”

    Bing provides an estimate of how many monthly searches you could reach by using the recommended keyword, a suggested first page bid, a recommended ad group and campaign, an “easy” accept option to apply the suggested keyword, and an option to add unique destination URLs and parameters.

    To access the feature, go to the Opportunities tab, and then the Keyword Suggestions tab.

    Microsoft notes that API users will call the GetKeywordOpportunities API to get the list of keyword suggestions that are relevant to the specified ad group.

  • Bing Launches Bing News App For Facebook

    Bing announced the launch of a new Facebook app called My Bing News. The app lets you browse top stories and subscribe to categories you’re interested in.

    You can select from selected topics (Entertainment, Business, Health, Politics, Sports, etc.) or create your own. The app will pull what it deems the most important stories based on your interests from sources across the web to your personal page on Facebook.

    This could be a new way for Bing to capture some users who are already using Facebook, even if they don’t always go to Bing for their everyday search needs.

    “Integration with Facebook makes it easy to check the news while you’re checking in on your friends, and easy to share what you find with others,” says Nathan Penner, Senior Program Manager on the Bing News team. “You’re in control over what and how you share. You can share and comment on an individual article, or, if you choose, enable sharing as you subscribe to topics and read stories. It’s up to you.”

    Your friends can easily read what you share without having to install the app.

    My Bing News is currently in Beta.

  • Survey Suggests Facebook Search Engine Could Instantly Grab 22% Market Share

    This week at TechCrunch Disrupt, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that search is something that Facebook will do, and that the company already has a team working on it. We talked about what this could mean to the search landscape, in terms of competition with Google here.

    There’s an interesting report (pdf) out from Greenlight Digital (via AllFacebook) about a survey asking respondents if they would use a Facebook search engine. The survey took responses from 500 people with a wide variety of job titles from all around the world (though the 70% majority were from Europe).

    While 500 is nothing compared to the 955 million active users Facebook has, it’s still interesting to see the results.

    When asked, “If Facebook incorporated its own search engine, would you use it over your preferred search engine?”:

    27% said, “Maybe, but only if it was better than Google/Bing

    26% said simply, “No.”

    22% said, “Probably not.”

    12% said, “Probably.”

    9% said, “Don’t know.”

    5% said, “Definitely.”

    “These stats therefore suggest that Facebook could capture around 22% of the global search market by
    simply launching its own search engine tomorrow morning (the ‘definitely’, ‘probably’, and half of the
    ‘don’t know’ respondents combined),” says Greenlight COO Andreas Pouros. “It wouldn’t need to be a spectacular engine either, just well integrated into the Facebook experience and generally competent. This 22% market share would make Facebook the second most utilised search engine in every major market except for China, Japan, and Russia, where it would occupy an uncontested third place.”

    “On the flip side, we found that Google’s own social endeavours with Google+ might be more successful
    than most initially speculated,” he added. “We found, for instance, that 23% of Google users have been +1’ing listings in Google’s search results, giving Google lots of data about what people like. If you compare this to the 35% of users that we found routinely ‘like’ a brand or company on Facebook, then that’s not significantly more than Google’s social signal collection, particularly as we found that 28% of respondents had no idea what ‘+1’ actually meant, which will invariably decrease rapidly over time.”

    Apparently a Facebook search engine is going to happen sooner or later, and it could very well be the most interesting thing we’ve seen come to the space since Google, as it would no doubt be primarily socially driven, and based upon a pretty different set of ranking factors than Google and even Bing. But we won’t speculate too much (just a little).

  • FairSearch Gets Blasted By Prominent Search Industry Voice

    The FairSearch Coalition held en event on Thursday, called “Searching For Innovation And Competition In The Online Marketplace”. If you’re unfamiliar with FairSearch, it’s a group composed of Google competitors in the travel search space, and includes main Google rival Microsoft. Its primary objective is to paint Google in an anticompetitive light. More background on the group here.

    During the event, there was a panel called “Tech Executives: Exploring Barriers to Innovation in Mobile and Online Services”. Here’s video from the session:

    Tech Executives: Exploring Barriers to Innovation in Mobile and Online Services from FairSearch.org on Vimeo.

    Susan Athey, Microsoft Chief Economist and consultant for the company, said, “Microsoft tried to make deals to become the default search engine on mobile devices. On Android, that was rendered impossible. They were told, Android makers, and carriers, were told, that you cannot use another default besides Google.”

    Longtime search industry voice Danny Sullivan has put together quite a rant, titled “Google Doesn’t Require Google Search On Android, Despite What FairSearch & Microsoft Want You To Believe,” debunking such claims that Android device must use Google as the default search engine.

    “That’s not true. Not only is it not true, it’s impossible. It’s impossible because Android code is released to anyone to do anything that they want with. But if just being impossible isn’t enough proof, how about proof of Android devices that have dropped Google as the default search engine?”

    He then goes on to name specific Android devices that have used other search engines, including Yahoo, and Microsoft’s own Bing as the default search engine (Motorola Backflip and Samsung Galaxy S with Verizon respectively).

    “There was the Samsung Galaxy S with Verizon, also known as the Galaxy Fascinate,” writes Sullivan. “That phone, which I personally tested for several weeks in 2011, used Bing as the default search. You know, Microsoft’s Bing search engine, the one Microsoft supposedly couldn’t cut deals with device makers or carriers to be the default on Android devices.”

    Last week, it was revealed that Amazon’s new Kindle Fire devices (which utilize Android and Amazon’s own app store, rather than Google Play), are using Bing as the default search engine, as Sullivan also notes.

    Google D.C. guy Adam Kovacevich was in attendance at the event, and said, “I just want to clarify something that you said, that we require Android manufacturers to install Google as the default search. That is just not true.”

    He tweeted a similar response to the rest of the world:

    He later retweeted Sullivan’s article.

    It probably goes without saying, but he also tells us there was a lot of stuff said at FairSearch’s event that Google would disagree with.

    Sullivan continues, pointing out a variety of ways Microsoft and FairSearch appear to have manipulated the storyline in their own favor, including omitting elements of the discussion from FairSearch’s own coverage.