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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 27 Feb 2004 07:52:46 
To:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Behind the Rise of Google Lies the Rise in Internet Credibility (NYT,
 27 Feb 04)

 
 February 27, 2004EDITORIAL OBSERVER Behind the Rise of Google Lies the Rise in 
Internet CredibilityBy VERLYN KLINKENBORG
 
or the past few months, it has seemed as if every week has brought more news about 
Google, the search engine invented in the mid-1990's by a couple of Stanford graduate 
students. Microsoft has offered, in vain, to buy the company and is now developing its 
own proprietary search engine, in part by looking for soft spots in Google's patents. 
Yahoo has introduced a Google-like search tool of its own and dumped Google's. 
Meanwhile everyone is waiting for Google's initial public offering, an event that many 
people hope will begin a new round of I.P.O.'s, a round that carries us back in equity 
and optimism to the late great tech bubble at the end of the last century. Microsoft 
and Yahoo want their share and more of the nearly $1 billion in ad revenue that Google 
generates. Investors want their share and more of Google stock. Most of the rest of us 
â at some 200 million searches a day â just want to keep Googling.
 
An early form of Google became available to Internet users in late 1998. Its rise to 
dominance in the search business came about for a number of reasons. One is the 
quality â expressed as relevance â of the search results it yields, quality that 
depends in part on the sophistication of Google's search algorithm but also on the 
sophistication of its users, who are growing wilier all the time.
 
Google has also been tireless in exploring new ways to search the Web. Through a 
catalog search tool and Froogle, its product search service, Google has morphed into a 
shopping engine. It has also turned into a news search engine, and has added the 
ability to search for images and to search by location. It now indexes more than four 
billion Web pages, updating every few weeks.
 
Plenty of people who want their Web sites to be listed near the top of Google search 
results have already figured out how to use Google's algorithm â its logic for 
getting results â to their own advantage. So the algorithm evolves, creating a 
Google Darwinism.
 
But what has really carried Google to the top is a change in our perception of the 
Internet. Some of the predictions made for the Internet in the late 1990's were as 
outlandish as they sounded, especially the economic ones. But a surprising number of 
predictions about how we would use the Web are being fulfilled.
 
Google has found ways to make advertising pay without making advertising obtrusive â 
something the big-banner portals are only now starting to figure out. It has changed 
the way we shop, travel and get basic information about our economic and cultural 
climates. Perhaps the most fundamental difference since those early days is an 
enormous change in the usefulness and credibility of what one can find on the 
Internet. 
 
Make no mistake. The Web is still a place where you find every kind of fraud, deceit, 
obscenity and insanity â more of it than ever, in fact. But the Internet has also 
turned into a stunningly important archive of documents of all kinds, partly because 
it is now so easily searchable. The Web has moved from the periphery of a good 
researcher's awareness in 1998 to the very center of it in 2004. In doing so, it 
confirmed what has always been true, that a good researcher is also a skeptical 
researcher.
 
Had the Web grown to be the farrago of nonsense it once seemed to be, a haystack with 
only a few needles, no one would have bothered to create a search engine, much less 
use it. But the Web is now a haystack full of needles. Once Google's motto might have 
been "Seek and ye shall find." Now it's really "Find and ye shall seek again."
 
What Google also reflects is our changing sense of the dynamism of the Web. Nothing 
captures how statically we used to see the Internet as well as "information highway," 
an old phrase that embodies pure linearity and the smell of asphalt. That stasis is 
also captured in the increasingly outmoded notion of an Internet portal like AOL, much 
of whose dynamism comes from offering a Google search bar. The fact is that many of us 
have grown comfortable within the amorphousness of the Web. We no longer need a 
breakwater like AOL when a good search engine promises to make the sea itself our home.
 
Sometimes the best metaphor for the Internet seems to be the population of earth 
itself, in which every human is a Web page related by kinship and conversation to all 
the other Web pages on earth. Sometimes the metaphor is a globe papered over with 
hyperlinked Web pages from which, more and more, tiny beacons arise, beaming updates 
to our computers like the old RKO tower. Whatever the metaphor, the only certainty is 
that we're going to need help finding anything for a long time yet to come.

 Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company 

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