Multiple Presents: How Search Engines Re-write the Past

New Media & Society (forthcoming)



Iina Hellsten, Loet Leydesdorff, and Paul Wouters


Abstract


Internet search engines function in a present which changes  continuously.
The search engines update their indices regularly, overwriting Web  pages
with newer ones, adding new pages to the index, and losing older ones.  Some
search engines can be used to search for information at the internet  for
specific periods of time. However, these 'date stamps' are not  determined
by the first occurrence of the pages in the Web, but by the last date at
which a page was updated or a new page was added, and the search engine's
crawler updated this change in the database. This has major implications for
the use of search engines in scholarly research as well as theoretical
implications for the conceptions of time and temporality. We examine the
interplay between the different updating frequencies by using AltaVista and
Google for searches at different moments of time. Both the retrieval of the
results and the structure of the retrieved information erodes over time.


http://www.leydesdorff.net/searcheng/searcheng.pdf



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