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Should Google and Facebook Be Filtering Our Content For Us?

Personalization, relevance, and information overload in search and social media

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There are 95 Comments. Add Yours.
  1. The only google wants to do is filter out organic search.

  2. Brian

    I’m totally against any kind of tracking of where I go and What I do on the Internet. I want my filter bubble to be no bubble at all. Here’s a shocker for you, I consider this to be no different than the Nazis burning books in World WarII. They didn’t want the populas to read certain materials either. Where is the Constitution and those swarn to protect it. We the People…

  3. Diana

    I don’t like having my content filtered for me. I am thinking of leaving Facebook because of that feature. I hate it. I’d rather be given random choices if there are too many to list, than have them choose what they think I want to see!

  4. No definetly not. Thats is censorhsip.
    Google as a company with vested intrests has already decided what it thinks you are looking for. Eventually, as a business, Google will make you pay it to be found on Google as been seen in the changes occurring in both local listings and paid advertising.

    Google is a business after all.

  5. Growth and the expansion of the human mind are based on learning the new and unknown. If everything we encounter is tailored to each of us, then that kills our development. I prefer to learn something new than to live as a zombie.

    • Beamer

      I hadn’t read your comment before I wrote mine, but zombies and robots were the words I used. I’m in total agreement with you.

      Get a clue people. Time to remove the scales from your eyes and brains and see things for what they really are. Your internet life is being controlled by control freaks. Break free from the chains that bind.

      I tried duckduckgo search engine and really like it. You can set your preferences to how YOU want it. From here on it is my search engine of choice above Google, Bing and Yahoo.

  6. Richard Mathews

    He hit this one right on the head and I have the same gripe with how search and even blog commenting are going. I don’t care how popular a comment is or isn’t and I don’t want filtered search results because Google or some other search engine believes I want to see this or that. Search was so much better, before these started rolling out. I want to see the whole picture, not filtered results only!

  7. Margaret Liggett

    I really don’t like someone else (or some software) deciding what I want to see. I may show patterns of searching but assuming that my interests today are the same they were yesterday is taking a great leap. In fact, I resent their keeping track of what I search for so they can “help” me. It is an invasion of privacy! …and, suppose someone else uses my computer and spends an entire day searching out pornography. The next day, and for days to come, the response to my queries will be slanted towards that.

  8. It’s shocking and seriously creepy. If there was an opt out, that would be one thing, but for a Mozilla user with adblock plus, I really don’t think filtering is helping anyone’s advertisers. Not exposing yourself to other ideas is not healthy!

  9. Just say no to content filtering! Didn’t Google have a problem when China was doing this same content filtering – they called it censorship if memory serves. The reason Google became a dominant force around the globe is because it helps Internet users find products, services, and other information, right? Why then, would that, or any other search engine, think that they can personalize our results in such a way that they will be useful to us? I don’t want to know about places and products I am already familiar. I would much rather discover products and services that I, nor anyone else knows about. Otherwise, why should I waste my time trying to discover what I already know.

    It makes zero sense to me unless I am selling advertising and in that scenario…personalization makes good sense. I can show searchers what I want them to see because it brings in revenue. I am totally convinced it is a conspiracy. :D

  10. I feel that the personalization is a nightmare, honestly. I want to see what I want to see, not what someone else thinks I want to see. A computer isn’t capable of accounting for moods. One day I might want to see girls in bikinis in my news and the next day something may have happened in my life that requires me to look at something entirely different. I want my search results to follow a consistent course that only I alter.

    As noted in the article, this is also a problem from an SEO standpoint. I know that people who look for game reviews will love my site’s content, but will they even know it exists if the search engine has noticed that they click on links from major sites covering other topics? Will my site’s content get demoted? It seems likely. If it’s happening to me, it’s happening to others and it’s happening to content that I might want to see as I browse the Internet.

    There’s value in assigning people to demographics, obviously, but leave them with the ability to use your mainstream service and to break free from one demographic is–as people are likely to do–they change.

  11. Filtering information is contrary to what the internet was designed for. It was designed so that people can leave their comfort zone, celebrate differences in ideologies ect. Google and Facebook and their likes simply reinforces one own prejudices and thoughts and borders on control the freedom of the internetsphere. By doing so they can control what we like and bombard people with advertising and information that suit the agenda. This is not about end user it is about fat cats like Google looking for every opportunity to milk a dime.

  12. John

    Filter Off.

  13. Gary Bouskill

    Google and others do not have and never have had any honour nor integrity. Google has made millions by selling the ranking positions that show up in searches. These include all kinds of MLM adds that are scams and lightly hidden pyramid schemes.

    Time and time again I find web pages that contain ads that are very specific to where I live and other personal things, especially when I do a search.

    Try doing a search for a species like T Rex and e-bay and others will offer to sell you one. Books on the subject that show up are okay.

    When I do a search I want to be very specific about what I’m looking for and not get 10,000 irrelevent listings.

    The internet has become useless for any kind of research. I understand some universities are designing an alternative for doing research. I hope I can get to use it.

    • -

      panopticlick,ua,referer, httpseverywhere, ip,tor,i2p, javascript/noscript evercookies/supercookies, etc

  14. Stephen

    Global and National News content should not be filtered,
    personal shopping preferences are OK

  15. No filters for me please! How can any algorithm decide that I will only see particular type of pages – that’s anti-human!

    What SEs should actually provide is, a list of all the signals that they are detecting, in a side panel with check boxes and leave the choice of switching signals on or off at our will. Hey! that’s what is supposed to be advanced search, silly ;)

  16. What a great article followed by a bunch of predictably irritated responses. Sounds like there’s a consensus that filtering is bad, Google is evil and privacy is dead. Well, the last is certainly true.

    So, if we don’t want filtering, I assume everyone is good with Google returning results in Podunk, Maine to our query for Pizza, right?

    Google is trying to learn what we’re looking for by aggregating our behaviors. That way, they improve their chances of returning results which are relevant to us, based on our patterns of usage, so they can monetize their intellectual property.

    I’m not sure that’s the definition of evil. If we want more variety of results, we always have the option to use other search engines. Google (Yahoo!, Bing, pick your poison) don’t dictate that we use them for search. I find it pretty ironic that there are responses that seem to suggest that search engine’s filtering should be illegal or regulated. Seriously? Aren’t we responsible for our own search activity? If it’s research we’re embarked upon, isn’t it incumbent upon the researcher to ensure a variety of sources are used.

    The more information we have, such as this article, makes us better informed and enables us to make better choices. If you’re uncomfortable with the filtering inherent in Google’s business model, change your behavior, don’t yell at Google to change theirs. (And please, let’s not expect the Government to do it for us.)

    • Damian

      When I look up pizza, I don’t just google ‘pizza’ and get Podunk, Maine… I tailor my own searches to bring up specific things that I look for, such as pizza . Common sense is a great thing, and unfiltered search results with added common sense are far greater tools than filtered search results alone.

      • Damian

        *such as pizza [enter city here]

    • Neither Google nor the government should tell us what is good for us.

    • Daniel

      The problem is that you will find the pizza site with the best SEO and not the best pizza. A small pizza restaurant that puts his efforts, creativity and love into its marvellous pizzas has no chance against the crap seller who knows nothing abut pizza but everything about web optimizing,.

  17. Banatu

    I hate, hate, hate these stupid ‘personalized’ ads and content. It renders searches nearly useless and makes annoying ads downright offensive.

    I spend 90% of my time online doing research, which usually requires more than one point of view, something google has a real problem with.

    More and more the last few years it is becoming more productive to do research the old fashoined way, as google et al insists on presenting me with worthless garbage and, if the subject is remotely controversial, filtering out half the sites.

    I’ve long since stopped using google and others that personalize things for you whether you want it to or not, and that’s not even getting into all the tracking and tracing.

    Ixquick is your friend if you value privacy.

    • Beamer

      I’m with you on that! After trying duckduckgo, I have added its search box to one of my sites. Just tried it today and am very excited about using it. It is refreshing, No tracking or ignorant ads pushed in your face. Privacy and relevancy prevails.

      The more into it I look, the better I like it. Great Experience!

      Good for you that you have found an engine that meets your needs. I will try Ixquick out too. Goodbye Google. Don’t let the door knob hit ya. You may be big, but you are pure junk.

      Good freaking BYE! Now, as more and more people wake up from their zombie/robot state, they will do the same as many already have. It is a great feeling to be free from the Google BS.

  18. Cliff Frederiksen

    DO NOT FILTER MY INTERNET. I want to be able to choose freely the inoformation I’m seeking with NO filter !!!!!~

  19. I want to know what to know what is out there according to some objective criteria, not what I may have liked in the past. That’s like having Yes-men around you telling you what you like to hear, not what you need to hear.

  20. No. We should have the choice. Creating a win win and mixing it with freedom of choice is important – if not, who is running and controlling the world? This can be simplified. Why can’t the Search Engines give you something to click on to turn the restriction on or off? That way if you need their help to shorten the results displayed then you can, If you want to see everything available and have the time, then you have the freedom to choose. I use the internet to research things I have no knowledge about. How am I going to broaden my thinking or build on someone elses theories, if I am restricted to seeing theirs. Visa-versa, how will anyone find me, and team with me, if they never get to read what I do.

  21. -

    the revolution (of the machines) will not be twitterized

    • -

      Just adding, for example, the google algorithmeers probably receive ‘personalized’ search results. That’s a feedback loop.

  22. Sure you SAY you're sure, but we're not sure you're sure that you're really sure you're sure you're sure.

    Years ago, the syntax of inclusion and exclusion worked. more recently, I’d noticed google’s results seemed to try forcing results, but occasionally they offered a link with a “force my searchphrase” url parameter &nfpr=1. So, sometimes i manually added that to an url when google was disobeying “strict”/force syntax.
    But this year, I’ve noticed a few times that google even ‘disobeys’ their own “force” parameter! In results, I’ll see a FEW of what I want, amidst MANY of what my search deliberately excludes.

  23. I also do not like the filtered content. Having an option to do it yourself is different from having the content filtered for you without having your consent. And even if they do I really liked the point of one of the comments bellow that “they assume that my interests today are the same they were yesterday ” which is Bullshit

  24. good question. Like every statistic information it looks back only in the past. If you change some of your personal signals how fast does maybee google know and change my search results?
    Its like a TV where you can watch only filtered TV stations.
    Is it that, what we want?
    Probably not.

  25. The algorithms of Google and Facebook will never be sufficient, also Google and Facebook can also estimate what I like to see.
    Better not to filter. No censorship on the web!
    I like to filter results on my own decision.

  26. I think the arguments for discussion are a little bit flawed.
    It’s like asking: “Do you want to be free or not?” I mean who wants to be censored …? Everyone likes to be free.

    But Google and FaceBook don’t censor your information. At least for now. You are bombarded with info you are not interested in more than you think. So this discussion is redundant , at most, IMHO.

  27. I think Google’s filters should be turn-on-and-turn-offable, so consumers have the choice.

    Having worked in direct marketing for 25 years I know that, while targeting is the holy grail ofd marketers, it isn’t anywhere near as clever as it first seems. I don’t believe for a minute that Google can predict my wants and needs any better than I can myself… and I live inside my own head! So it’s a very disturbing trend.

    I don’t just want to see what Google and co think I want to see. I want too see everything available and make my own choices, thank you!

  28. I get that search engines are probably trying to make it quicker for us to get to what we want… but why do they assume that we WANT to see only that which is personalised for us? Maybe actually we would like the choice. I think having an obviously visible option to turn personalisation on and off on a search engine would at least give us the choice to use it or not….

    Joe

  29. Google is free right? Well people who offer free things tend not to care what you, the freebie seeker, is looking for. Quit whining and get with the program, your thoughts are not your own for the past ten years.

    Google gave them to you. And you were happy search was free. Don’t like it, pay them to change and they will. Its that simple.

    Thoriso

  30. This is a scary thing that they even know who we are enough to filter based on who we are.

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