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13 June 2024
Google is evil, lies on its search algorithm - massive leak REVEALED!
Governments and corporations lie to us, the people / consumers / their products, every single day, period.
Even if caught, their 'brethren' in government will sort it all out for these deceitful people in corporations.
Google is not what it used to be since its inception, where today it's one of the world's largest advertising corporations.
It's also the world's largest copyright breachers, but zero action/fines etc are handed out but rather easy targets are singled out, the being person from the general population pool, but that topic is outside the scope of this article.
Governments also benefit hugely from Google as it is within the top tier spy network, that being the Five Eyes.
Google literally cannot be touched by the law.
Google had a massive data leak, on the technical ins and outs of its search algorithm.
Around 2,500 technical documents detailing the nuts and bolts of Google's ranking algorithms have apparently leaked.
If the documents are real, it's an unprecedented look into the workings
of the utterly dominant internet search engine. And one hell of an
error, because it is stated that Google itself published the documents
to GitHub before taking them down. But nothing published to the web
disappears overnight, and the documents have been kept for posterity
elsewhere.
This leak provides an interesting opportunity to compare the reality
of how Google ranks its search results with the various claims the
company has made about what has hitherto been largely a mysterious black
box. The inner workings of Google Search have long been speculated upon
but never really known outside of the company itself—or indeed inside
the company by most Google employees.
That
is obviously a very, very bold claim. Frankly, the documentation is
incredibly dense and technical and covers a huge array of topics and
systems. In really broad brush terms, it covers the type and character
of data Google collects and uses, which sites Google elevates for
sensitive topics like elections, how Google handles small websites, and
much, much more.
There are various areas where it's claimed that
analysis of the documents throws up clear contradictions with Google's
claims. For instance, in 2016 Google Search engineer Paul Haahr said that "using clicks directly in rankings would be a mistake."
But
it's claimed the documents prove that Google uses a system known as
NavBoost that directly incorporates various click count metrics into the
page rankings and search results.
Other areas highlighted in
contradiction to previous Google claims include the use of Domain
Authority, sandboxing new websites while more data is collected,
including user data collected from the Chrome web browser and more.
If these claims are all true, it's hard to be clear how much of this
comes down to Google simply wanting to protect its search IP from
potential competitors and how much can be chalked up to more cynical or
even sinister motives.
Moreover, as far as we can tell the documents do not actually reveal
exactly how Google currently ranks pages. In other words, it does not
appear that this leak will make it straight forward to optimise a web
page to improve Google search ranking, which is what a lot of observers
would presumably have been praying for.
But if the documents are
real, and the claims being made about the implications contained therein
are broadly accurate, at minimum Google has a pretty major scandal on
its hands in terms of the statements it has made in the past and its
corporate credibility and ethics.
For now, that's a pretty big
"if". This is a story that won't be resolved overnight. As far as we are
aware, Google has yet to comment whether the documents are real let
alone provide a riposte to the main critiques that have followed.
No
doubt Google is formulating a detailed response as we write these very
words. But we have a feeling that won't be the end of it and the full
fall out from this alleged scandal will be measured in months if not
years.
Source:supplied.
Google cannot be trusted, and your data in the possession on it servers is neither private nor confidential.
IF you value your privacy it is not recommended to use Google products.
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