GeekNights 071119 - The Prehistoric Internet
Tonight on GeekNights, we talk about Google past and present. In the news, you don't need this processor, and Tiny URLs are dangerous to the web?
Scott's Thing - The Mona Lisa
Rym's Thing - Knights of Cydonia
Comments
But, people do a lot of things that I don't get.
Look at Android, it's not so much about creating an open cell phone OS as it is about insuring Google gets a spot on cell phones to sell advertising. That is likely why Google lost about $100 in share price since the Android press conference. People were expecting the G-Phone and were disappointed in what Google delivered (not entirely Google's fault).
The one failing in Google's algorithm is that they look at anchor text on links which allows them to be gamed they way people used to use meta tags to game search results. Page Rank, which is supposed to be an internal Google metric, should never have been made public. I think Google made it public as a way to carrot/stick webmasters but sites like text link ads turned it around and used it to game Google's SERPs.
Now Google is going out and zeroing out a lot of website's Page Rank numbers in an effort to stop paid links but I think it is backfiring because it paints Google in the light of an angry kid that takes its toys back when it does not get its way. It also makes Page Rank irrelevant when you see Google arbitrarily knocking sites from PR5 to PR0 just for selling some ads. If the content is still the same why the PR drop?
What I find very ironic is the way people defend Google when you point out that they are hypocritical. The standard response you get is one of love towards Google and "all corporations do it". It's never a defense of the hypocrisy charge, I guess that can not be defended against other than by saying "everybody does it"?
Google has never failed me in a search if what I was looking for actually existed. The algorithm, from a consumer perspective, is near perfect.
Now Google is going out and zeroing out a lot of website's Page Rank numbers in an effort to stop paid links but I think it is backfiring because it paints Google in the light of an angry kid that takes its toys back when it does not get its way.Actually, it makes Google look like a hero to the consumers. Google wrecking some SEO scammer only helps their reputation as the best search provider in the world, and they have never zeroed out a site that had any actual worthwhile content.
It also makes Page Rank irrelevant when you see Google arbitrarily knocking sites from PR5 to PR0 just for selling some ads.I say it makes Page Rank better, since they trim the fat and garbage away, making the actual rank mean more in the real world.
If the content is still the same why the PR drop?In those cases, someone at Google simply noticed that the site in question was SEO garbage and did what I want and expect them to do.
As for the G-phone. Rumour mill. I'm pretty sure that rumour mills have destroyed companies before, and you can see that the rumour mill strikes but Google is big enough to survive that.
I get less than 10% of my search traffic from Google but they control about 67% of the search traffic out there. How would you react if you did a search on Google for "Front Row Crew" and this site did not come up at all? What if you did a search for "New York Times" and the only link to nytimes.com was in the sponsored search section?
Buy into AdWords? Are you insane? There is far too much click fraud in the AdSense program for me to ever buy into AdWords. I prefer to buy ad space directly from websites that cover the same topics as mine.
I can't help but see Google as a 'pusher'. They come along and give you a ton of 'free' traffic. Then, once you are hooked, they pull it out from under you and tell you that now you have to 'buy' the traffic.
I have a question for everyone, how did you discover Google? and what was your initial impression?
For me I was doing a project with a few other people, we had no access to a library on our subject, so we were searching the Internet. One person tried their favorite search engine, some one else tried another and so forth, but no one could get any good information. Then some one came along and said "Oh, you can't find any information? have you tried this search engine? its new but I found it useful" We all looked at the screen and were quite stunned by the lack of.. anything. but we were all amazed by the results, they were so much more relevant then results from any other site, so amazed in fact that we passed the address on to anyone who was on a pc, if they were searching or not
aaahh the good old days.
Why do they let you buy AdWords? Because that's how they make money. That's the way the business works. When you search for something, it is in the search results. If you think that your site is relevant, but Google doesn't, they allow you to pay money to have your link in the ad section. I don't see what's so hard to understand about it. Even if I made a site about sheep and bought AdWords for iPhones and pointed it at my sheep site, Google doesn't give a crap. They make money from that, and it doesn't diminish the quality of their search results to the users, which is what allows Google to stay #1. Google isn't giving you free traffic. I think the problem here is not Google, but you being addicted to traffic like it's some sort of drug. Stop giving a shit about traffic. You care so much about your stupid traffic, you obviously don't care about your actual content on your site. That's why your sites are shit, nobody wants to go to them, and they don't show up on Google search results. Ignore your goddamn traffic. Ignore your ads. Ignore the money. Just concentrate fully on making your site the best site it can be, and make it as useful as possible for the visitors. If you make your site the best it can possibly be for the visitor, you can't lose. Following that philosophy is what got, and keeps, Google where it is today. The reason you hate Google is because your philosophy is the exact opposite of theirs. As you are right now, normal web people, and Google, consider you to be on the level of an evil spammer. You are a nuisance, and we want you to go away. You are on the same level as the RIAA dicking over its customers and complaining about losing money.
Google is a company which makes it easier for people to find and access information. The fact that they are so good at it is why their stock price is so ludicrously high, and why people keep using it. From the perspective of people searching on Google, you are the evil. You are trying to make Google shittier for your own benefit. You are trying to make Google search less useful for the user just so you can make a few extra bucks without having to do real work, and without having to do anything that is actually useful to people. Google speaks for all of us users by giving you two giant middle fingers, exactly what you deserve.
You can't go around complaining about a system that has made such a significant and positive change in so many people's lives, or try to sabotage that system, and expect sympathy. Either change, get over it, or shut the fuck up.
I'm not good at analogies but I see this as my competitor giving advice to my client. Google would much rather that I run AdSense on my site and use them as a middle man to sell ads. I don't want to do that, it puts far too much control in Google's hands. They are also far to cavalier in screwing over their AdSense publishers to keep their AdWords customers happy. Without AdSense publishers Adwords would be dead.
An advertiser that bases his ad buying on Alexa is just as foolish but Alexa is unbiased (even though easily gamed outside of the 10K and lower range).
That is my main beef with Google.
I am looking forward to SocialSpark. Giving advertisers a metric that is based on traffic (page views, hits, uniques, etc...) is far better than giving them an Page Rank number arbitrarily assigned by Google.
Google is known to have a problem dealing with Digg and Wikipedia in that there are cases where the digg or wikipedia link will rank higher than the actual article. Think of Scott's blog article last week that was on the digg home page. Imagine searching for that article and finding the first page of Google results pointing to digg and blogs that linked to Scott's blog and the link to Scott's article appearing on the second page of Google results.
However, of these ten sites each of them has a different Page Rank number, from 0 to 9. All other things being equal do you do you spend all your money getting ten times the ads on the PR9 site or do you spread it around and buy a mixture?
What if each site costs $100 per month?
What if each site costs (PR*$100) per month?