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MSN Search looks to use 'network effects'

As an aside toward the end of a post last week, MSN Web Search GM Ken Moss noted that MSN VP Christopher Payne will be "showing some intriguing improvements" to MSN Search during his address at the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference in San Diego. Payne's speech is Wednesday morning. Moss didn't provide any hints, but here's the advance teaser for Payne's speech, from the conference Web site:


As search continues to grow in scope and complexity (yes, it is getting harder, not easier), search engines will need to make explicit use of network effects between users to help return relevant results from the "tail." The tail of niche information continues to grow and one way to improve the search experience, especially of those niche queries, is to leverage a network or community. Come hear what MSN Search has up its sleeve in regards to the future of search and how search will function in a Windows Live world.
Any guesses as to precisely what that's referring to? Whatever it is, the news may well emerge before Wednesday. Microsoft has scheduled an MSN-related announcement for Tuesday night, Pacific time. Check back for details.


Meanwhile, if you missed this last week, the main point of Moss' post was to state MSN Search's position on reports quoting Neil Holloway, Microsoft's European president, as saying that MSN Search will be "more relevant in the U.S. market place than Google" in six months. In this comment on John Battelle's Searchblog, Holloway wrote that the quotes didn't accurately reflect what he was trying to convey. Moss wrote that MSN "won't forecast when we might take the lead."

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MSN Search looks to use 'network effects' - 8.3.06 -

Click Fraud Gets Smarter

Web consultant Greg Boser has an ingenious method for sending loads of traffic to clients' Internet sites. Last month he began using a software program known as a clickbot to create the impression that users from around the world were visiting sites by way of ads strategically placed alongside Google search results. The trouble is, all the clicks are fake. And because Google charges advertisers on a per-click basis, the extra traffic could mean sky-high bills for Boser's clients.


But Boser's no fraudster. He cleared the procedure with clients beforehand and plans to reimburse any resulting charges. What's he up to? Boser wants to get to the bottom of a blight that's creating growing concern for online advertisers and threatens to wreak havoc across the Internet: click fraud.

BILLION-DOLLAR QUESTION. The practice can wildly skew statistics on the popularity of an ad, drain marketing budgets, and enrich the scam artists behind it. While click fraud isn't new, the methods for carrying it out -- take Boser's clickbot software -- are getting increasingly sophisticated. And some advertisers, analysts and consultants question whether Web companies such as Google and Yahoo are doing enough to nip click fraud in the bud. "No one has any idea how much of this is actually going on," says Boser. "So we're going to see how well [the search engines] actually try to protect advertisers."

One of Boser's biggest challenges is putting a finger on exactly how widespread the practice is. Some search consultants say click fraud accounts for upwards of 20% of all traffic, and may generate more than $1 billion in dubious sales a year. Others say those stats vastly overstate the problem.

more ...
Click Fraud Gets Smarter - 2.3.06 -


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