Google Responds to SearchKing's Lawsuit 452
The Importance of writes "Back in October, SearchKing sued Google for reducing SearchKing's pagerank, as previously reported. Now, Google has filed a reply and a motion to dismiss. LawMeme has both documents as well as analysis."
If I were Google (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:If I were Google (Score:5, Funny)
"Objection, your honor."
"On what grounds?"
"It's devastating to my case!"
(okay, the reference is a little obscure. Hint: Jim Carrey.)
Re:If I were Google (Score:3, Funny)
Re:If I were Google (Score:2)
Personally, I would have preferred something with Mel Brooks...but I don't think he did anything with lawyers.
Unless you count Dracula: Dead and Loving It.
Re:If I were Google (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:If I were Google (Score:5, Funny)
Re:If I were Google (Score:3, Insightful)
M$ and Java (Score:2, Informative)
I don't think this search deal is anything like the MS / Sun case. Except for the president of search king and Bill gates are both idiots.
Re:If I were Google (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:If I were Google (Score:4, Insightful)
1) microsoft is being forced to HONOR A CONTRACT with Sun regarding java...
and
2) Microsoft has been deemed a monopoly.. in which case the rules change. Google is not a monopoly.. it is just a popular search engine. IT does not stay popular by abusing it's monopoly power.... it stays popular by providing results.
Re:If I were Google (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Different situations (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Different situations (Score:5, Insightful)
Read this [wired.com]. From the linked article:
Someone out there in the world makes a living as a Web accessibility consultant???
I'll risk redundancy in order to educate you folks that want to turn the Internet into $$$ by invalidating everything it stands for. This is Lawrence Lessig's [amazon.com] quote from this Alan Cox essay [usermagnet.com]:
Google is a search engine. It is a good search engine. When it fails to work for you, there are other search engines that you can use. That someone is earning a living by bumping up search engine results combined with this lawsuit by an obviously clueless company makes me worry about the future of this wonderful network that was created in an environment without MBAs, script-kiddies, and lawyers (apologies to EFF and LL...no offense).
--K.
Previous LawMeme Coverage (Score:5, Informative)
Best quote ever (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Previous LawMeme Coverage (Score:2, Interesting)
" If you take your web presence seriously, and accept that the words research.yale.edu means something, doesn't that put a responsibility on you to be open-minded and fair? To at least try to report objectively?"
This guy is almost as whiny as the Bernard Shifman [slashdot.org] twit! If you look at what was written, it says, basically, "this is a loser of a case and a waste of SearchKing's money." In other words, James Grimmelmann doesn't talk to Google either, he simply looks at the case on its merits and proclaims it is a loser.
I guarantee that if James stood on the opposite side of the fence it would be Massa proclaiming him a genius.
Silly (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Silly (Score:5, Informative)
If I recall correctly, Google changed its page rank formula in one simple way: It severely downrated any site that linked to SearchKing. Therefore, the link farms developed to pump up SearchKing's results were considered unimportant and did not boost its pages as they had previously. This was very much a move taken directly against SearchKing and only SearchKing.
Not that that's a bad thing.
Re:Silly (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Silly (Score:2, Insightful)
You're arguing with him, yet you agree with him.
Re:Silly (Score:3)
Re:Silly (Score:3, Informative)
Are you sure only SearchKing? I'm sure there must be other link farms and even geocities and other sources of noise that are penalized by google's formula.
That's the service they provide, seperating the wheat from the chaff.
Re:Silly (Score:5, Informative)
If I recall correctly, Google changed its page rank formula in one simple way: It severely downrated any site that linked to SearchKing.
No, what they did was more general, everything that resembled a link farm was ranked down. For example, many blogs were also hit by the change.
Definitely not silly... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:PlowKing! (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, pointed out in a previous article [searchenginewatch.com], Google has kept the exact method of its page rank for this as well as all other cases on the lowdown. However, if link farms were getting downgraded, I would wager that such things as Scientology would start to drop as well. Then again, I just did do a search for Scientology [google.com] and noticed quite a few highly ranked sites critical of Scientology. You'll note that scientology.org ranks very highly, but I believe that a domain that nearly exactly matches a search ranks very high for non-common terms. For instance, try searching for "searchking recipes" [google.com]. They're #1. Now, try searching for "recipes" [google.com]. They're still there, but they're in the 80s.
Though, my ultimately answer is: I don't know. But judging by the catastrophic drop of their pages, I would wager they just manually set the PageRank for any SearchKing site to a low value, or capped it similarly. Further, depending on how you read the wording in their reply, you could assume they are implying that:
Granted, I'm sure any strict logicican (and certainly Google's lawyers), would suggest that this simply means Google has a right to lower anyone's Page Rank either directly or indirectly through modification of their ranking algorithms, and it doesn't even state that Google changed its algorithms at all, let alone specifically to affect SearchKing.
Re:PlowKing! (Score:2)
That's like trying a search for "preferences" and then "slashdot preferences". Yeah, I bet Slashdot would be #1.
Google and $cientology (Score:5, Funny)
Nice hack
If I search for "SuperDuG" on google .. (Score:5, Funny)
This is the same as sueing the "A" group in highschool for not deeming you cool and because of that your self esteem suffered and you became a computer science major.
Re:If I search for "SuperDuG" on google .. (Score:3, Insightful)
They reference a court decision where a school district's bond rating changed, causing financial difficulty to the district. The court ruled that the organization issuing the ranking had a right to change it based on it's own techniques or rationales.
Oh hell (Score:2, Insightful)
Now why didn't *I* think of that?
KFG
Re:Oh hell (Score:2)
Scary thing is ... there actually is a chance we'd win ...
Honestly... (Score:5, Funny)
no one is stupid enough... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:no one is stupid enough... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe I'm stupid enough... (Score:2)
They know partly how google's algorith works and they are abusing that. Google knows what they are doing and compensated for this.
It isn't just about crunching numbers and pushing the algorith about... the idea was to logically weight pages... not drop a lead brick on the scale.
Re:Maybe I'm stupid enough... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Maybe I'm stupid enough... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe I'm stupid enough... (Score:2)
Until Google comes right out and says "We look for SearchKing specifically and downrank them!" It's not censorship nor is it wrong IMNSHO
Re:Maybe I'm stupid enough... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe I'm stupid enough... (Score:2)
Difference between fraud and puffery (Score:4, Insightful)
Where fraud comes in is when false claims are used to deceive someone into buying a product. For example, if the claim on that soap was "Cures Athlete's Foot" and you have athlete's foot, but it doesn't really cure athlete's foot, you would have been defrauded because you relied on the stated claim as a material part of your purchasing decision. But harmless puffery like "Our results are better because of our patented PageRank(tm) algorithm!" are no more fraud than "perfect for all of your 2000 parts!" on this box of Lever 2000 soap. You use Google because it works better, not because of harmless puffery that makes no material difference in your decision to use it or not.
-E
Re:Maybe I'm stupid enough... (Score:3, Insightful)
You're saying that PageRank itself isn't an expression of opinion, but that it is an aid to expressing an opinion. Of course they're making human decisions about what's good or bad - that's the function of their algorithm. That's why they modified it. As the lawmeme article says, there's no way to 'objectively' determine where SearchKing should be - 8, 4, 2. All any search engine can be is an expression of opinion. "We reckon that if you're searching for a water lily [google.com.au] then this [iwgs.org] is the 'best' site for you.
Alister
SK (Score:5, Informative)
Re:SK (Score:2)
And doesn't that deliberate manipulation amount to a "denial of service" attack against Google?
SearchScum is taking money to manipulate search results...
SearchKing ... PlowKing ... RainKing ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:SearchKing ... PlowKing ... RainKing ... (Score:2)
What a fool (Score:2, Interesting)
Google can do whatever they want (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Google can do whatever they want (Score:2)
Somehow, I think Google has just a little too much in that "black box" they call PageRank...
Search King SELLS the lawsuit documents! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Search King SELLS the lawsuit documents! (Score:2)
Of course... you can get the same documents under a public domain license at the courthouse, or from what will be sure to be several websites that'll spring up to host PDFs that were obtained from scanning courthouse copies. So, if you're stupid enough to agree to a license on public domain work, so be it.
Re:On, the Irony (Score:2)
Darn it. (Score:5, Funny)
II. Table of Authorities
United States Statutes and Other Authority
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell
485 U.S. 46, 53 (1988)
Sweet! Larry Flynt will set me straight. So happily did I turn on to page 10, for those playing along at home.
and it read: which is totally not what I was looking for. I even checked under the staples.
About Falwell (Score:2)
Falwell sued and won a $200,000 judgment for emotional distress. However, the Supreme Court sent him home with nothing. A key factor was that Falwell is a "public figure," and so is more limited in damages he can recover. A rare 8-0 slam dunk [epic.org] on a controversial topic, this odd little case was considered a major victory for free speech and satire.
Anyway, a far cry from anything here. I can't see how this case would survive the motion to dismiss.
SearchKing's Response to Google's Response (Score:5, Interesting)
Fortunately, my curiousity is outweighed by me desire to NOT give SearchKing money.
Legal Defense Fund? (Score:5, Funny)
It should be a "Legal Attack Fund".
We should sue them for false representation!
Re:SearchKing's Response to Google's Response (Score:5, Insightful)
RIGHTS TO USE CONTENT OR REPRODUCE
This site and all information contained within it are the sole property of SearchKing, Inc. and may not be reprinted, republished or used in any way, in part or in it's entirety, without the express permission of SearchKing, Inc. Violation of these terms, especially taking remarks out of context to support your own opinions, will be dealt with all the severity allowed under the law.
SearchKing, Inc. believes that if I take a remark from their website and form or support my own opinions is somehow a serious violation of the law, and "will be dealt with all the severity allowed under the law". What law do they speak of I wonder? What law is there that will restrict me from reading their publicly available content, taking some remarks and forming opinions on them?
I thought I was impartial when I tried to access their site, but after reading this crap, I think they are bunch of morons.
Oops, this may land me in court now.
Re:SearchKing's Response to Google's Response (Score:2)
They might as well have said "with all the physical force I can transmit from my bicep to your eye via TCP/IP".
Quote from an interview with the king himself. (Score:3, Interesting)
Robert Massa: To me, it only illustrates the reason Google has become as successful as it has. They run a good search engine at least in part because they care enough to investigate. I'm not asking for or expecting any special consideration. "
So, he WAS all in favour of google doing what they like. Until it turned out to be something he didn't like. Uh huh.
More proof that this guy is a moron... (Score:5, Interesting)
People like searchking should be lined up and shot next to all the spammers.
Re:More proof that this guy is a moron... (Score:2, Informative)
Funny you should mention that, there's a post [yale.edu] at Lawmeme :
We can save Bob Massa's bullet and have two for Alan Ralsky
I had never heard of searchking before... (Score:2, Interesting)
Well that does it... (Score:2, Insightful)
$20 to read the documents? (Score:2, Redundant)
Helloooooo?!?!??!! McFly!!!!!
Re:$20 to read the documents? (Score:5, Interesting)
SearchKing's order form also claims that your "donation" to their legal defense fund is tax-deductible. I'm no tax expert, but I thought a tax deduction was available only for donations to recognized charities, not to a for-profit company like SearchKing.
Anyone want to file a complaint with the IRS that SearchKing might be a party to income tax evasion due to its misrepresenting itself as a 501(c)(3) charity?
Sec. 170(c) (Score:4, Informative)
It is conceivable, but just barely, that the "contribution" could be deductible for some other reason -- if it's just an ordinary and necessary business expense, and for some reason exempt from capitalization, say -- but not for most "contributors." I'm fairly certain it is a crime for SearchKing to falsely claim these contributions are deductible.
Re:$20 to read the documents? (Score:2)
Actually, after you pay $20 you will also get answers to some questions that they posed on their site. Not to worry, I have meditated and posted the answers below:
DID GOOGLE DO IT INTENTIONALLY?
Yes.
CAN GOOGLE DO IT TO YOU?
Yes.
WHAT CAN YOU DO IF THEY DO?
Sue.
HOW IMPORTANT IS PAGE RANK TO PLACEMENT?
Extremely.
ARE THEY WORRIED ABOUT OTHER LAWSUITS?
Yes.
$20 please.
Re:$20 to read the documents? (Score:2)
$20 would be reasonable for getting court documents from a case at a far-away court house that don't exist online elsewhere. Too bad for SearchKing that isn't the case here.
Is it tacky? Yeah. Is it illegal? Nope.
SpamKing? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is exactly the same behaviour I see with email-based spamming. Any of the spammers tried to sue the manufacturers of spam-filter software yet?
Searchking's Web Site Isn't Slashdotted. (Score:2)
Searching for SearchKing (Score:5, Interesting)
Another example was the Microsoft and "go to hell" [theregister.co.uk] incident which dissappeared from Google rather quickly once it became public.
Incidentally, searching for "SearchKing" on SearchKing [searchking.com] doesn't even come up with SearchKing's front page, and the first result that is even close is number 7.
Re:Searching for SearchKing (Score:2)
I don't think we want the exact definition of PageRank to be made public... that'd make it far too easy for SearchKing-like sites to make PageRank useless by designing sites to bias the formula. However, I think some referee needs to be monitoring Google's movements so that they cannot making under-the-table changes to the formula while claiming their not. Google claims that they don't let sponsors pay to influence their PageRank system, but what way do we have to confirm that's true?
Re:Searching for SearchKing (Score:3, Insightful)
We have no way of knowing that the new york times does not alter their reporting to suit their advertisers.
We have no way of knowing that slashdot's moderation system is not somehow keyed to a secret agenda. There is evidence that the editors strip people of the ability to moderate without ANY PUBLIC SCRUTINY WHATSOEVER! (Gasp!)
Consumer Reports could have a vendetta against General Electric and GE would be basically screwed. There is no government watchdog.
The point is - just because people listen to publcation X does NOT give anyone the authority to regulate what X can say, how, or why X can say it. If the editors of X want to be sleazy, it is their right. The decision as to what constitutes sleazy or improper behavior belongs to the editors of X. The law intrudes on this in only a few areas - the legal, medical and financial professions only, for the most part. These three areas have special features that do not apply to google.
I look at it this way: the people at google have developed a reputation for utility and authenticity, and a technology that backs that reputation (two seperate things.) These things together give them power.
You are proposing a major power-play; you are saying, they have all this power, but they should not be in exclusive control of that power. Someone should referee them to make sure they don't abuse it. This means - some of their power should be taken away and placed in the hands of the public sphere.
In the case of power derived primarily from material wealth it so happens I agree with you. Individuals who amass material wealth have far too much power in our society.
In the case of reputation or know-how, I disagree totally.
No governing agency should ever be able to go "people listen to you, so now we're going to start regulating what you say." Doing so not only impinges on the freedom of the party with a reputation, google in this case, but on the freedom of all those individuals who looked at google and were impressed with its quality.
Likewise, no governing agency should ever be able to say, "you have unique skills, so now we're going to regulate how you apply them."
In closing - the Editors of google are entitled to their freedom of conscience. Google belongs to them, the prestige and technology behind google are theirs and no-one should be able to co-opt their work for some other purpose.
Re:Searching for SearchKing (Score:3, Insightful)
Yet another reason why Google is the best... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yet another reason why Google is the best... (Score:2)
Unfortunately, that's false. The PageRank values can be hand computed simply by using the PageRank formula, finding out the true values the objective variables are, and then a little algebra. The only thing that prevents SearchKing from doing that is the fact that they don't know the formula...
Oh boy, Google's playing with fire now. Assuming this case makes it to discovery, SearchKing could claim that the PageRank formula is material evidence, and try to get a subpeona for it. At that point, Google would be on the defensive... they don't want PageRank published, or even in the hands of SearchKing. Anybody wanna sign up to be the court-approved mediator?
What about terms of use? (Score:2)
And what about a counterclaim for fraud because they are ursuping the page ranking system and for adding pages for commercial purpose.
Re:What about terms of use? (Score:2)
All pretty standard, actually (Score:2)
Actually, it's pretty standard, as are most of the other moves mentioned by the reviewer, and which I read in the filings. No, I'm not a lawyer, but I've worked on lots of cases, including many tort cases, and that's my opinion.
That's Just a Burglar Alarm -- Ignore It! [xnewswire.com]
Ridiculous (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, right. Next, I'll be sued by spammers for deleting their junk mail without reading it, and depriving them from their principal source of income.
Interesting lawsuit (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think SearchKing is trying to get Google to undo the changes it made to its PageRank algorithm. I think SearchKing is trying to use the fact that Google changed its PageRank in order to get a massive settlement out of court.
The CEO of SearchKing is trying to force Google into a position where they will either have to give him a huge stack of cash or they will have to reveal more detailed secrets about the workings of PageRank in court. Google's entire business depends on PageRank remaining a trade secret. If I were Google, I'd fork over the cash if it looked like it might come down to that.
Re:Interesting lawsuit (Score:3, Insightful)
Why Google is So Important (Score:5, Interesting)
Well the reason Google is so important is that so many people use it, and the reason so many people use it instead of Yahoo or Altavista or Northernlights or Hotbot or LongDefunct.Com or Excite.com or Teoma or some of the other search engines out there is that they do a really excellent job. I used to use Altavista, who were not only the original big search engine, they were one of the best in terms of coverage, as opposed to Yahoo who had much better indexing but nowhere near as many pages. If you wanted to find something obscure, you'd use Altavista, but if you wanted to find something common, it might be hard because Altavista would get 50,000 references that you could look through 10 at a time. I switched to using Google because their search engine did a really good job of usually having the information I wanted in the first page or two, often in the first one or two references, as well as because their pages were lean and mean and not cluttered with dancing broken Javascript ads, and I've occasionally found the cache to be valuable for finding information that was once on the web but isn't any more.
As far as Daniel Brandt's rants about how the government ought to be regulating Google and PageRank because so many people use it, that's purely backwards. The government could accomplish any positive aspects of his goals by building their own search engines with their own page ranking algorithms, but if they go messing with Google, they're not only likely to censor some content and artificially inflate things they want to propagandize, but they're likely to make it less likely to have the material I want near the top, destroying the Pagerank in order to save it.
Some search engines have tried to make money by letting people pay for good placement - the pundits yell at them for it, and the public tends to use those engines less because they're better at finding advertising drivel than interesting content. Lots of web sites try to game the page ranking systems on all the major search engines, typically by including relevant keywords many many times in comments or meta-things, or by including them in small print at the bottom of the page, and the main reason the system doesn't get swamped by this is that the better algorithms try to detect this manipulation and neutralize it or seriously downrate for it. Otherwise the search engines would have a high proportion of uninteresting material near the top, mostly pages that are really just spam. If Google's PageRank didn't protect itself against whatever techniques SearchKing is using, he'd be doing the same thing, making it much easier to find pages people pay to promote than pages that are rated high because they're actually interesting. (I've got slightly mixed feelings about that, because his stuff seems to look less obnoxious than banner ads or dancing javascipts, and is usually on pages I don't ever read...)
Re:Why Google is So Important (Score:3, Insightful)
Your comparison of Google to phone companies falls on its ass simply because Google does not actually own any hard lines but the phone companies do. For you to start your own phone company you will need to put millions of kilometers of cable but for you to start your own search engine you only need some programming skills, a computer and internet access.
Google should never be regulated by government - it is not the essential service. In fact Google is already regulated by its users - if you stop using it - it will go away just like Excite did.
One more thing - why should anyone have rights to regulate a private company that does not have contractual obligations to anybody? Are you paying them to use them? Maybe you should, then ask for regulation.
SearchKing's 20 Dollar Documents... Right here... (Score:5, Informative)
http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/google/skgoogl
Watch out, you might be next (Score:3, Funny)
so much for Exhibit "C" (Score:2)
www://pradnetwork.com/rules.htm (website page)
'page can not be found'
www is not a registered protocol.
there goes the defence
They're made of brass, and the size of an elephant (Score:3, Insightful)
The paragraph that got me rolling was:
"In these documents, you will find answers, (according to google), to questions like:
DID GOOGLE DO IT INTENTIONALLY?
CAN GOOGLE DO IT TO YOU?
WHAT CAN YOU DO IF THEY DO?
HOW IMPORTANT IS PAGE RANK TO PLACEMENT?
ARE THEY WORRIED ABOUT OTHER LAWSUITS?
You can learn answers to these questions and more ---- but not for free. It's going to cost you $20 to see the documents. The $20 for the password to view these papers is not a sale. It is a donation to the SearchKing legal fund. "
W * O * W
That's so stupid it's just simply impressive. I have this morbid curiosity to find out just how many people would spend $20 to read this moron's "insights." Me thinks I've learned more from my cats.
I don't know whether to laugh or cry!
Google is a site designed to be a resource for US. That is their mission. They don't give a flying fsck about providing a profit center to some other company--nor should it be considered their responsibility to support.
Gads.
The apocalypse must certainly be arriving Monday. Or, at least, I hope it is.
-buf
Crap...I'll get sued next (Score:3, Insightful)
+ozzy +osbourne -searchking
I am hurting their business.
Larger Question Answered (Score:5, Insightful)
The obvious answer to this "larger question" is this: if Google becomes an arbitrary dictator, giving popular sites low rankings, they will quickly lose their dictatorship. Imagine if a search for "apache" gave apache.org a PageRank of 346. Google wouldn't last long.
But if Google gives SearchKing sites a low rank? Well, nobody seems to be complaining but SearchKing.SearchKing is just a portal scammer (Score:4, Funny)
Search: "Fuck You"
-1. Get Paid To Surf The Internet!
-2. Where to find music CDs, DVDs, select MP3 music tracks, free music download
-3. Never Be Sued Again!
-4. Get Paid to Surf
-5. Kudos and Compliments for You and for Those Who Bring You Happiness
-6. (see 5)
-7. How To Start A Money Brokerage Business
and I think you get the point. Perhaps a more 'relevant' search query could yield better results:
Search: Car
-1. 765469
-2. License Plates - Vanity License Plates
-3. Next Honda of New England
-4. Ramsfield.com Auto Parts
Hmm. Better results than the search for "Fuck You". But I still wanna know the logic that went into making "765469" the number one result. Oh, and another nice feature is that the linked pages come complete with a SearchKing adbar in a differen't frame.
Quoth the server, 404 (Score:4, Funny)
http://w.qooqle.com/technolouv/index. html
Anyway, this was qooqle's (not google's) response to my request
http://paradise.qooqle.com/404.html
"Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pron surfed weak and weary.
Over many a strange and spurious pronsite of 'hot XXX galore'.
While I clicked my fav'rite bookmark, suddenly there came a warning.
And my heart was filled with mourning, mourning for my dear amour.
"'Tis not possible", I muttered, "give me back my free hardcore!"
Quoth the server,
404
OCR wins again.
But, Searchking is supposed to be great! (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe they can sue google for taking that away from them too.
Enough is ENOUGH! (Score:5, Informative)
To sue Google for acting in its best interest and with a view to retain its effectiveness and credibility is nothing short of despicable. Whether SearchKing did it because it truly believes it is right or because it seeks publicity is irrelevant. Its actions are illogical:
a) SearchKing has come to depend on Google (as it stated) because Google can be trusted.
b) Google can be trusted because its algorithms are pretty accurate.
c) SearchKing tried to interfere with those algorithms, seeking INACCURATE results from Google.
d) Google modified said algorithms to counterbalance the interference, seeking its much-valued accuracy.
e) SearchKing sues Google.
I've read the LawMeme analysis [yale.edu] and SearchKing's opinions [searchking.com] and all I see is another unscrupulous dotcom trying to discredit a very respectable service to serve its own needs, regardless of the damage it may cause. So, fellow
Last time I checked,
Cheers,
Morel
I love their slogan... (Score:3, Interesting)
Hah! Only a market droid could believe that spamming search engines and paying for unmarked higher ranks (thus polluting accuracy) make the Internet a better place.
What is it about their name that make me think of Barney Gumble? Perhaps Google should consult the legal advice of Mr. Search - "Call Mr. Search, that's my name, that name again is Mr. Search"
Space, the final brassiere (Score:4, Funny)
Good news for DNSBls (Score:3, Insightful)
You're next (Score:3, Interesting)
That's Just a Burglar Alarm -- Ignore It! [xnewswire.com]
Re:PageRank explainted (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.google.com/technology/index.html [google.com]
PageRank Explained
PageRank relies on the uniquely democratic nature of the web by using its vast link structure as an indicator of an individual page's value. In essence, Google interprets a link from page A to page B as a vote, by page A, for page B. But, Google looks at more than the sheer volume of votes, or links a page receives; it also analyzes the page that casts the vote. Votes cast by pages that are themselves "important" weigh more heavily and help to make other pages "important."
Important, high-quality sites receive a higher PageRank, which Google remembers each time it conducts a search. Of course, important pages mean nothing to you if they don't match your query. So, Google combines PageRank with sophisticated text-matching techniques to find pages that are both important and relevant to your search. Google goes far beyond the number of times a term appears on a page and examines all aspects of the page's content (and the content of the pages linking to it) to determine if it's a good match for your query.
Re:PageRank explainted (Score:5, Interesting)
It wasn't SearchKing, it was all related to some bozo promoting techniques for improving search results. He had a lot of good ideas, some of which were even ethical.
I fired off an email to Google and at some point those pages disappeared. SearchKing might just be the only ones who sued.