Google economy

Google economy

The term Google Economy refers to the concept that the value of a resource, such as a web page, can be determined by the way that resource is linked to other resources. It is more complex than search ranking, and broader than interlinked web pages, though it draws meaning from both. The Google economy is an example of a network effect.

The Internet and World Wide Web have emphasized the role of the citation as a means of identifying the value of a resource. The structure of the print publishing world imposes strict limits on what information is promoted and distributed, but the web imposes much lower barriers to 'publication,' eliminating the old-media filters that information consumers once depended on to identify worthy information. Internet Search engines were developed to help navigate the growing number of web pages, but their results could not represent the value of individual pages until Google's Larry Page and Sergey Brin started to apply the concept of citation analysis that was developed in the 1950s by Dr. Eugene Garfield at the University of Pennsylvania. Google's PageRank algorithm is a form of citation analysis.

The PageRank of any single web page depends on the number of web pages that link to it, the PageRank of the linking sites, and whether those links appear to be natural or manipulative. [cite web|publisher=webpronews.com|title=The Google Economy|url=http://www.webpronews.com/insiderreports/2004/11/01/the-google-economy|accessdate=2007-09-23] The financial implication for commercial web sites are obvious and provide motivation for search engine optimization practitioners and website owners, [cite web|publisher=nytimes.com|title=Sites Become Dependent on Google|accessdate=2007-09-23|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/09/technology/09NECO.html] There are serious implications for non-commercial content as well. A person doing any research on the web will find his or her results heavily influenced by PageRank-style ranking. Accurate and correct information that is poorly linked may have lower ranking than incorrect or misleading information that is better linked. Because many of the most authoritative information sources, such as medical journals, or the Oxford English Dictionary, are subscription services, their content is not available for indexing by search engines, and by extension, to those using search engines for research. Even among free services—many library catalogs, for instance—it can be difficult to index the information because of technical obstacles, such as non-spiderable links, or explicit prohibitions in the site's robots.txt file. The result is that a person searching for a book is likely to find the Amazon.com catalog page or blog posts discussing the book long before they will find any library offering the book for loan. Information that is not indexable by search engines is part of the Deep Web.

As with market economies, the Google Economy is subject to uncertainties, fluctuation, and occasional manipulation. Manipulators do so, however, at serious risk, as search engines have been known to blacklist them from results pages. Further, search engine engineers continue to refine ranking criteria to deliver quality search results.

Opposition

Several Publishing industry groups, including the Association of American Publishers and Authors' Guild, have filed lawsuits against Google to prevent digitization of books for the purpose of making that content searchable. [cite web|url=http://nymag.com/nymetro/news/columns/powergrid/15202/|publisher=nymag.com|title=Googlephobia|accessdate=2007-09-23]

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Economy of Malaysia — Fixed exchange rates 1 Ringgit = 100 sen Fiscal year Calendar year …   Wikipedia

  • Economy of Indonesia — Jakarta s central business district at Thamrin Street, Central Jakarta. Rank 15th Currency Rupiah (I …   Wikipedia

  • Google Maps — Screenshot of Google Maps showing a route from San Francisco to Los Angeles on Interstate 5 …   Wikipedia

  • Google (поисковая система) — У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Google. Google (произносится /ˈguːgl/, «гугл»)  первая по популярности (77,04 %[1]) в мире поисковая система, обрабатывающей 41 млрд 345 млн запросов в месяц (доля рынка… …   Википедия

  • Economy of Germany — Downtown Frankfurt Rank 4th (nominal) / 5th (PPP) Currency …   Wikipedia

  • Economy of New York City — The NASDAQ MarketSite in Times Square. The economy of New York City is the biggest regional economy in the United States and the second largest city economy in the world after Tokyo.[1] Anchored by Wall Street …   Wikipedia

  • Economy of Africa — The economy of Africa consists of the trade, industry, and resources of the peoples of Africa. As of July 2005, approximately 887 million people were living in 54 different states. Africa is the world s poorest inhabited continent. Though parts… …   Wikipedia

  • Economy of the Republic of Ireland — The economy of the Republic of Ireland is modern and trade dependent with growth averaging a 7% per annum in 1995 ndash;2007. Agriculture, once the most important sector, is now dwarfed by industry, which accounts for 46% of GDP, about 80% of… …   Wikipedia

  • Economy of ancient Tamil country — The economy of the ancient Tamil country (Sangam era: 200 BCE – 200 CE) describes the ancient economy of a region in southern India that covers the present day stateTamil Nadu. The main economic activities were agriculture, weaving, pearl fishery …   Wikipedia

  • Economy of the People's Republic of China — Economies of Special Administrative Regions of Hong Kong and Macau are administered separately from the rest of People s Republic of China. Therefore, the information below pertains only to mainland China unless specified otherwise. For the… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”