Friday, July 17, 2009

Google favored over other search engines

Google favored over other search engines
Web site policy makers who use robots.txt files as gatekeepers to specify what is open and what is off limits to Web crawlers have a bias that favors Google over other search engines, say Penn State scientists whose study of more than 7,500 Web sites revealed Googles advantage.

That finding was surprising, said C. Lee Giles, the David Reese Professor of Information Sciences and Technology who led the research team which developed a new search engineBotSeerfor the study.

We expected that robots.txt files would treat all search engines equally or maybe disfavor certain obnoxious bots, so we were surprised to discover a strong connection between the robots favored and the search engines market share, said Giles of Penn States College of Information Sciences and Technology (IST).

Robots.txt files are not an official standard, but by informal agreement, they regulate Web crawlersalso known as spiders and botswhich mine the Web 24/7 for everything from the latest news to e-mail addresses. Web policy makers use the files found in a Web sites directory to restrict crawler access to non-public information. Robots.txt files also are used to reduce server load which can result in denial of service and shut down Web sites.

But some Web policy makers and administrators are writing robots.txt files which are not uniformly blocking access.........

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