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A New Campaign Tactic: Manipulating
Google Data
By Tom Zeller Jr.
The New York Times
Thursday 26 October 2006
If things go as planned for liberal
bloggers in the next few weeks, searching Google for "Jon Kyl," the
Republican senator from Arizona now running for re-election, will produce
high among the returns a link to an April 13 article from The Phoenix
New Times, an alternative weekly.
Mr. Kyl "has spent his time in Washington
kowtowing to the Bush administration and the radical right," the article
suggests, "very often to the detriment of Arizonans."
Searching Google for "Peter King,"
the Republican congressman from Long Island, would bring up a link to
a Newsday article headlined "King Endorses Ethnic Profiling."
Fifty or so other Republican candidates
have also been made targets in a sophisticated "Google bombing" campaign
intended to game the search engine's ranking algorithms. By flooding
the Web with references to the candidates and repeatedly cross-linking
to specific articles and sites on the Web, it is possible to take advantage
of Google's formula and force those articles to the top of the list
of search results.
The project was originally aimed at
70 Republican candidates but was scaled back to roughly 50 because Chris
Bowers, who conceived it, thought some of the negative articles too
partisan.
The articles to be used "had to come
from news sources that would be widely trusted in the given district,"
said Mr. Bowers, a contributor at MyDD.com (Direct Democracy), a liberal
group blog. "We wanted actual news reports so it would be clear that
we weren't making anything up."
Each name is associated with one article.
Those articles are embedded in hyperlinks that are now being distributed
widely among the left-leaning blogosphere. In an entry at MyDD.com this
week, Mr. Bowers said: "When you discuss any of these races in the future,
please, use the same embedded hyperlink when reprinting the Republican's
name. Then, I suppose, we will see what happens."
An accompanying part of the project
is intended to buy up Google Adwords, so that searches for the candidates'
names will bring up advertisements that point to the articles as well.
But Mr. Bowers said his hopes for this were fading, because he was very
busy.
The ability to manipulate the search
engine's results has been demonstrated in the past. Searching for "miserable
failure," for example, produces the official Web site of President Bush.
But it is far from clear whether this
particular campaign will be successful. Much depends on the extent of
political discussion already tied to a particular candidate's name.
It will be harder to manipulate results
for searches of the name of a candidate who has already been widely
covered in the news and widely discussed in the blogosphere, because
so many links and so many pages already refer to that particular name.
Search results on lesser-known candidates, with a smaller body of references
and links, may be easier to change.
"We don't condone the practice of Google
bombing, or any other action that seeks to affect the integrity of our
search results," said Ricardo Reyes, a Google spokesman. "A site's ranking
in Google's search results is automatically determined by computer algorithms
using thousands of factors to calculate a page's relevance to a given
query."
The company's faith in its system has
produced a hands-off policy when it comes to correcting for the effects
of Google bombs in the past. Over all, Google says, the integrity of
the search product remains intact.
Writing in the company's blog last
year, Marissa Mayer, Google's director of consumer Web products, suggested
that pranks might be "distracting to some, but they don't affect the
overall quality of our search service, whose objectivity, as always,
remains the core of our mission."
Still, some conservative blogs have
condemned Mr. Bowers's tactic. These include Outside the Beltway, which
has called him "unscrupulous," and Hot Air, which declared the effort
"fascinatingly evil."
But Mr. Bowers suggested that he was
acting with complete transparency and said he hoped political campaigns
would take up the tactic, which he called "search engine optimization,"
as a standard part of their arsenal.
"I did this out in the open using my
real name, using my own Web site," he said. "There's no hidden agenda.
One of the reasons for this is to show that campaigns should be doing
this on their own."
Indeed, if all campaigns were doing
it, the playing field might well be leveled.
Mr. Bowers said he did not believe
the practice would actually deceive most Internet users.
"I think Internet users are very smart
and most are aware of what a Google bomb is," he said, "and they will
be aware that results can be massaged a bit."
Go to Original
Free Speech Online "Under Threat"
BBC News
Friday 27 October 2006
Bloggers are being asked to show their
support for freedom of expression by Amnesty International.
The human rights group also wants web
log writers to highlight the plight of fellow bloggers jailed for what
they wrote in their online journals.
The organisation said fundamental rights
such as free speech faced graver threats than ever before.
The campaign coincides with the start
of a week-long UN-organised conference that will debate the future of
the net.
Watching Words
"Freedom of expression online is a
right, not a privilege - but it's a right that needs defending," said
Steve Ballinger of Amnesty International. "We're asking bloggers worldwide
to show their solidarity with web users in countries where they can
face jail just for criticising the government."
Mr Ballinger said the case of Iranian
blogger Kianoosh Sanjari was just one example of the dangers that some
online writers can face. Mr Sanjari was arrested in early October following
his blogging about conflicts between the Iranian police and the supporters
of Shia cleric Ayatollah Boroujerdi.
Amnesty wanted bloggers to publicise
cases such as this, said Mr Ballinger, and to declare their backing
for the right to free speech online.
The human rights group is also taking
its campaign to the Internet Governance Forum (IGF) - a group set up
by the UN to act as a debating body for national net policies. The first
big meeting of the IGF takes place in Athens from 30 October to 2 November.
"The Internet Governance Forum needs
to know that the online community is concerned about free expression
online and willing to stand up for it," said Mr Ballinger.
Many governments were using technology
to suppress the free flow of information among their citizens, said
Mr Ballinger.
"People have been locked up just for
expressing their views in an email or a website," he said. "Sites and
blogs have been shut down and firewalls built to prevent access to information."
Hi-tech firms such as Yahoo and Google
have been criticised for the help they have given to nations such as
China which works hard to monitor online discussion.
In May 2006, Amnesty International
started a campaign that aimed to expose the ways that governments use
the net to quash dissent. Co-ordinated via the Irrepressible.info website,
the campaign asks websites to use an icon displaying text from censored
sites.
Pledges gathered from those backing
this campaign will be presented at the IGF |