Tag: Search

The latest update will not only incorporate results from different sources, like YouTube, Vimeo.com, CollegeHumor, eBaumsWorld, MetaCafe, Google Video itself, Yahoo Video or MySpace... it will also present those in a new frame wrapper, similar to what you’ll be used to at Google Images.
On top of the new wrapper, which you’ll land on whenever you click on one of the search results, you can see the title of the video and a list of related videos. You can also rate the video from 1-5 stars via Google Video, or email the page. And...
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According Valleywag, Calacanis' next venture It's a cross between Wikipedia and Google. the new site (called Project X or Kokua) will create more digestible search results for popular queries such as the names of Hollywood stars, and tech products. The pages will be seeded, initially, with content gathered automatically from the web and other sources. But they will be open to contributions by readers.

"As of December 5, 2006, we are no longer actively supporting the SOAP Search API. We encourage you to use the AJAX Search API instead."
Google decided to make 2006 to be the year of surprise product killing announcements (Google Answers ended just a couple of days ago).
There are more long-term implications contained in this latest move, however; just as the killing off of Google Answers might be a permanent warning sign for future communities Google wants to assemble, the killing off of this important API might be a permanent warning...
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Posted by
Kevom 1 year 7 months ago

Three AOL subscribers who suddenly found records of their Internet searches widely distributed online are suing the company under privacy laws and are seeking an end to its retention of search-related data.
The lawsuit is believed to be the first in the wake of AOL's intentional release of some 19 million search requests made over a three-month period by more than 650,000 subscribers, including the three plaintiffs - two unnamed Californians and Kasadore Ramkissoon of Richmond County, N.Y.
Filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Oakland,...
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Posted by
Kevom 1 year 7 months ago

AOL will hire its first chief privacy officer. This comes a month after it announced that two of its employees were fired and the chief technology officer resigned over the release of Web search data from more than 600,000 AOL members.
The release of the data, for scientific purposes, prompted widespread criticism from privacy advocates and Congress and could lead to an FTC complaint.
AOL announced that it would hire a chief privacy officer, but didn't say when or who, in a company-wide memo from Chief Executive Jonathan Miller,...
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Greg Linden reports that AOL has shut down their research department, following the big search privacy scandal that emanated from that department. Now, one commenter says on of the people they fired after the scandal basically was the whole department, but if AOL was serious about trying some research efforts, it is still disheartening to see them give up on it. AOL has so much customer data that could be a wealth of knowledge in the hands of the right researchers. Maybe they could outsource all their customer data to Google, which owns 5% of...
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The heads are rolling at AOL over the recent search engine data clusterfuck.
CTO Maureen Govern and two other employees are now history. John McKinley, AOL’s former CTO, will take over on an interim basis.
According Andrew Weinstein this entire event was caused by a single clueless researcher and a complete lack of oversight by his managers.

AOL apologized for releasing search log data on subscribers that had been intended for use with the company's newly launched research site.
"This was a screw-up, and we're angry and upset about it. It was an innocent enough attempt to reach out to the academic community with new research tools, but it was obviously not appropriately vetted, and if it had been, it would have been stopped in an instant," AOL, a unit of Time Warner, said in a statement. "Although there was no personally identifiable data linked to these accounts, we're...
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Check out the search history for user 17556639, most recent search is at the bottom of the list.. Does this look like the search history of a user wanting to do something bad?
17556639 how to kill your wife
17556639 how to kill your wife
17556639 wife killer
17556639 how to kill a wife
17556639 poop
17556639 dead people
17556639 pictures of dead people
17556639 killed people
17556639 dead pictures
17556639 dead pictures
17556639 dead pictures
17556639 murder photo
17556639 steak and cheese
17556639 photo of death
17556639...
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This is a blatant violation of users' privacy.
AOL just released the logs of all searches done by 500,000 of their users over the course of three months earlier this year. That means that if you happened to be randomly chosen as one of these users, everything you searched for from March to May (2006) is now public information on the internet.
This was not a leak - it was intentional. In their desperation to gain recognition from the research community, AOL decided they would compromise their integrity to provide a data set that might...
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