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US Court Rules Google Can Arrange Its SERPs As It Likes

         

engine

3:34 pm on Nov 18, 2014 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



This is poles apart from the European view. Even so, it's Google's system to do as it wishes. The problem occurs when it has the majority market share, and that's where, in Europe, particularly, there are ongoing investigations.

A San Francisco court ruled last week that Google has the right to arrange its search results as it pleases, which confirms the company’s long-held position, while underscoring the stark difference in how U.S. and European authorities seek to regulate the search giant.

The new ruling, which is the first since 2007 to address Google’s rights under the First Amendment, came after a website called CoastNews argued that Google had unfairly pushed it far down in its search results – even though, CoastNews claimed, its site appeared at the top of results created by Bing and Yahoo. CoastNews suggested the poor rankings were because Google wanted to eliminate CoastNews as a potential competitor.

Google responded by filing an “anti-SLAPP” motion, a legal tactic used to quickly challenge lawsuits that seek to stifle free speech. In a one-paragraph ruling, Judge Ernest Goldsmith granted the request, saying CoastNews’ claims against Google related to “constitutionally protected activity.”US Court Rules Google Can Arrange Its SERPs As It Likes [gigaom.com]

EditorialGuy

3:20 pm on Nov 19, 2014 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Most of the time they don't change because it's easier to leave the default search where it is.


Until recently, Firefox automatically changed my default search engine to Yahoo! every time it did an update. I assume that was happening to other people, too. I wonder how many of those people stuck with Yahoo! as their default search engine in Firefox? (Not enough to keep Yahoo! from continuing to lose market share, apparently.)

rish3

3:30 pm on Nov 19, 2014 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Until recently, Firefox automatically changed my default search engine to Yahoo!


Are you sure? Google has been paying the Mozilla Foundation, continuously, since 2005, to be the default search engine. They most recently renewed the deal in 2011.

References:

2008 renewal: [techcrunch.com...]
2011 renewal: [blog.mozilla.org...]

EditorialGuy

11:08 pm on Nov 19, 2014 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Yep, I'm sure. I don't know why, but it was extremely annoying.

aherman

2:38 am on Nov 20, 2014 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Google News is my page of choice and just this evening I read on it that Firefox has just signed Yahoo as its default search engine for the next 5 years.

I have no qualms whatsoever about how G ranks - unless, of course, intentional deviousness and/or maliciousness on their part can be proven.

It's a friggin jungle out there.

rish3

3:25 am on Nov 20, 2014 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Google News is my page of choice and just this evening I read on it that Firefox has just signed Yahoo as its default search engine for the next 5 years.


That's a really odd coincidence. To make the post I did above, I obviously searched for terms which would have unearthed that news had I waited a few hours.

cbpayne

3:40 am on Nov 20, 2014 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



There are a lot of comments in this thread about Google promoting it products above others --- the court case was NOT really about that (though the plaintiff did point that out in their complaint, it was not that which was affecting them).

The case was about a site that ranked first on Bing and Yahoo! and not on Google. The website then tried to sue Google for loss of revenue!

That was absurd and of course Google should have prevailed!

Imagine if Google did not prevail: every site that ranks well on Bing and not on Google could sue Google. Every site that ranks well on Google and not on Bing could then sue Bing! That is absurd

Did you even look at the site in question? Who really wants that in their search results? Google probably got this right and Bing/Yahoo! got it wrong!

If you read the actual complaint, it a nonsensical rant!
The site in question also got removed from Adsense and they wanted to sue over that as well!

Hollywood

10:24 pm on Nov 21, 2014 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



The party for Google will someday end. They are really making many many un-trusting of Google and feeling threatened:

[Europe to vote on Google breakup proposal]

"It's a monopoly. It's killing our technology businesses," said Ramon Tremosa, a member of parliament who's authoring the draft measure.

[money.cnn.com...]
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