grant draws scrutiny, The StanfordDaily Understandably, such a statement would be intimidating to a long established industry that has based its entire existence on the model of selling information. This fear isn't paranoid: New business and...
Less than a year after the StanfordDaily decided selling links and hosting third party doorway pages was a bad idea, they've returned -- and at least one ranks pretty well. Paid Links, Hosted Doorway Pages Back At Stanford DailySearch Engine Watch...
Daily SearchCast, March 8, 2006: Windows Live Search Launches; A New Relevancy Test; TeraGoogle Ask's Maps Google's GDrive; Classified Ads From Microsoft; StanfordDailySelling Links Again & More! Try our podcast, The Daily SearchCast.
Rate Yahoo A New Relevancy Test; TeraGoogle Ask's Maps Google's GDrive; Classified Ads From Microsoft; StanfordDailySelling Links Again & More! Top Stories + More From The Search Engine Watch Blog + Daily SearchCast: Search News Via Podcast...
Today's search podcast coversĀ a brief recap of the recent SES NY show;
the growth -- or not -- of the search industry; Ask getting new features,
including maps; Google likely to offer file storage; Microsoft's new classified
ads service; MSN...
Last April, I
wrote about
how the StanfordDaily newspaper was
selling links for those seeking to rank better on Google, ironic given that Google was born out of Stanford University and is very anti-link selling.
The research was authored by Michael Ostrovsky a economics professor at Stanford, Benjamin Edelman, doctoral candidate in economics at Harvard, and Michael Schwarz at UC Berkeley. The paper is titled: Internet Advertising and the Generalized Second...
Meanwhile, Click Fraud Suit Names Google, Yahoo Buyers Might Get Targeted More, O'Reilly In Debate Over Link Selling, StanfordDaily Removes Paid Links cover how the "no no" tactic of buying links has probably become more acceptable as the "link...
I wrote back in April about how the sale of off-topic links to advertisers looking for search ranking
boosts had become well seated within university newspapers, with the StanfordDaily paper as a classic example.
Our forum thread StanfordDailySelling Links
also has discussion on the issue. StanfordDaily Removes Paid Links from our blog last month looks at
how the student paper at Stanford University recently removed paid listings after coming under...
StanfordDailySelling Links In April, I wrote about how Stanford University's student newspaper and many other student papers were
selling offtopic links to advertisers almost certainly trying to increase their search rankings.
The StanfordDailySelling Links thread at our Search Engine Watch Forums (and see also
this from Feb) looks at the ironic
situation of the student newspaper at Stanford University -- the birthplace of Google, Yahoo and
owner of the PageRank...
The StanfordDailySelling Links thread at our Search Engine Watch Forums (and see also this from Feb) looks at the ironic situation of the student newspaper at Stanford University -- the birthplace of Google, Yahoo and owner of the PageRank...
StanfordDaily Oct 5 2004 10:09AM GMT In contrast, Google Print isn't designed to make Google money off selling books. Click here to learn more about becoming a member. Google's nearly year-old Google Print program is set for a huge expansion of...
Turns out, Stanford University owns the patent on PageRank, a part of the Google ranking system. Here's a recap of recent articles from Search Engine Watch's daily SearchDay newsletter: Sign-up for the free daily newsletter from Search Engine Watch...
I mentioned Kaltix briefly in a previous newsletter, a search start-up out of Stanford University (which gave birth to Yahoo and Google). Why is Lycos selling listings on other search engines? Session itineraries, daily agendas, registration...
Personalized Web Search Company Formed by Members of Stanford's PageRank Project ResourceShelf, July 12, 2003 http://www.resourceshelf.com/archives/2003_07_01_resourceshelf_archive.html/#105792742403772187
Two Stanford University students will present a paper at the 12th Annual WWW Conference explaining ways to speed up the calculation of PageRank -- NOT the ranking algorithm behind the Google search engine but rather one component of that algorithm.