If you pay close enough attention, you can learn all kinds of things from what Google does and doesn’t say in public. From patents to official statements, to comments that Googlers leave on message boards, there is a wealth of information out there that hints at what they really think.
In this presentation, Will is going to work through some of the most significant official announcements and the most insight-heavy comments and leaks of Google’s first 20 years. You’ll come away from this presentation not only with a deeper understanding of the search giant, but also with the tools to understand and interpret future statements and leaks.
7. Please stop
manipulating the link
graph
Links are how we
rank things
We’ll index
everything you put on
the internet
8. Please stop
manipulating the link
graph
Please stop putting
terrible content on
the internet
Links are how we
rank things
We’ll index
everything you put on
the internet
9. Please stop
manipulating the link
graph
Please stop putting
terrible content on
the internet
Links are how we
rank things
We’ll index
everything you put on
the internet
Just do what’s best
for users
10. Please stop
manipulating the link
graph
Please stop putting
terrible content on
the internet
Links are how we
rank things
We’ll index
everything you put on
the internet
Just do what’s best
for users
but also do sitemaps, hreflang,
robots.txt, upload feeds to GMB,
PLAs, write content on Google
my pages...
64. 2003
Florida
First big anti-spam update
2009
Vince
Favor big brands
2011
Panda / Farmer
Crack down on thin content and
content farms.
2012
Penguin
“Over optimization” penalty
including stronger algorithmic
treatment of low quality or
manipulative links
2014
Pigeon
Integrate local and core search
2015
Mobilegeddon
Pre-announced
mobile-friendliness update
Source
65. 2009
Caffeine
Integrate indexation and ranking in
near real-time.
2013
Hummingbird
Enable integration of more ML into
the core algorithm.
2003
Fritz
Google Dance is replaced by
“Everflux”
2005
Big Daddy
URL canonicalization and 301/302
redirect handling.
Source
66. Eric Schmidt on CNBC’s “Inside the Mind of Google”, 2009 via EFF
135. Source
Under the rules, search engines will ...
need to provide companies with “upfront”
information about how their ranking
algorithm works and assurances that “that
the ranking is conducted in good faith”.
136. Source
They will ... need to tell businesses if they
can pay to bump up their prominence in
search results.
137. Source
Platforms will have to provide “a clear
statement of reasons” if they delist or
suspend a company from their website,
allowing the possibility of legal challenges.
138. Source
They would also need to offer businesses
... a formal complaint process if they were
demoted or de-listed without explanation.
139.
140.
141.
142.
143.
144.
145. They’ve been working on this kind of problem since at least 2007. See
the paper entitled A fact/opinion classifier for news articles
172. α
α
makes PageRank even
less predictive as a model of attention distribution
while
this is very helpful in controlling manipulation of PageRank
it can have troubling social consequences
Source