mostly research stuff
here’s an interesting conundrum: search engines are so good at what they do that they run the risk of becoming useless for certain types of research (namely academic and scholarly research) - looks like some of the most important findings have become superannuated…at least that’s one idea presented within a recent study published online at firstmonday by authors paul wouters, iina hellsten, and loet leydesdorff…and thanks to bonnie hohhof, because her extraordinariness turns up these kinds of gems all of the time for scip members (just one more reason to join folks, one mo’ reason)…
“Abstract: Search engines are unreliable tools for data collection for research that aims to reconstruct the historical record. This unreliability is not caused by sudden instabilities of search engines. On the contrary, their operational stability in systematically updating the Internet is the cause. We show how both Google and Altavista systematically relocate the time stamp of Web documents in their databases from the more distant past into the present and the very recent past. They also delete documents. We show how this erodes the quality of information. The search engines continuously reconstruct competing presents that also extend to their perspectives on the past. This has major consequences for the use of search engine results in scholarly research, but gives us a view on the various presents and pasts living side by side in the Internet.”
…that’s kinda problematic for elGoog, huh? you might recall that they’re going after the ’scholarly search market’…
this blog is mostly safe for work, though i sometimes throw around a 'fuck' or two. you'll find a bunch of my articles from CI Magazine, SCIP online, other research pieces and some other crap. enjoy. there's lost of content here related to getting information about, around, from and through people and organizations...
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