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orf | 1 month ago
I just searched for “stackoverflow” and the first result was this: https://www.perl.com/tags/stackoverflow/
The actual Stackoverflow site was ranked way down, below some weird twitter accounts.
orf | 1 month ago
I just searched for “stackoverflow” and the first result was this: https://www.perl.com/tags/stackoverflow/
The actual Stackoverflow site was ranked way down, below some weird twitter accounts.
saltysalt|1 month ago
dredmorbius|1 month ago
Even with PageRank result prioritisation is highly subject to gaming. Raw keyword search is far more so (keyword stuffing and other shenanigans), moreso as any given search engine begins to become popular and catch the attention of publishers.
Google now applies other additional ordering factors as well. And of course has come to dominate SERP results with paid, advertised, listings, which are all but impossible to discern from "organic" search results.
(I've not used Google Web Search as my primary tool for well over a decade, and probably only run a few searches per month. DDG is my primary, though I'll look at a few others including Kagi and Marginalia, though those rarely.)
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PageRank>
"The anatomy of a large-scale hypertextual Web search engine" (1998) <http://infolab.stanford.edu/pub/papers/google.pdf> (PDF)
Early (1990s) search engines: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Search_engine#1990s:_Birth_of_...>.
orf|1 month ago
It’s cool though, and really fast
pjc50|1 month ago
Indexing is a nice compact CS problem; not completely simple for huge datasets like the entire internet, but well-formed. Ranking is the thing that makes a search engine valuable. Especially when faced with people trying to game it with SEO.