If You Do A Search Almost No One Does, Google Might Point You To Unauthorized Version Of House Of Cards
from the reporting? dept
We've noted in the past that various copyright maximalists who are hellbent on blaming Google for their own failures to adapt and innovate, like to point to various searches on Google that point to what are likely to be unauthorized sources. They'll use examples like adding "download" or "free" to a search and then point out that the link appears to go to an unauthorized source. But that's silly, because (1) the people doing such searches probably aren't going to pay for the authorized version anyway and (2) very few people do those searches.Chris Crum over at WebProNews has a story that's been getting some attention claiming that Google points to an unauthorized site ahead of Netflix if you do a search for "watch house of cards" on Google. Here's the screenshot he's showing:
You could argue that perhaps Netflix should do a bit more optimizing on searches for shows with "watch" before them, but given the fact that it appears almost no one does that search, why should they bother?
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Filed Under: copyright, house of cards, piracy, search, streaming
Companies: google, netflix
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Because reasons. PIRACY. And terrorism. Also, the children (is it suitable for children?).
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Reason 2: some people just won't pay no matter what. While sad, those people don't represent lost revenue
Reason 3: people are pirating to watch in a situation where they cannot stream, so are supplementing for a service not legally available for them through netflix - who they might already be paying either way
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Let's hold on in regards to the "won't" here.
Remember, Netflix, as you've stated, has to abide by restrictions in availability against what customers may want.
Consider the fact that they compete with areas which have less income to spend on a monthly fee for "all you can eat" streams.
So people "can't" pay for the stream at all times, hence other places become popular.
This doesn't contradict your other reasons and R3 actually picks up on this. Still, in R2, there could be a fact that the pirates tend to spread the news on a show for other people which makes up for their lack of payment through free advertising.
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/riaa logic
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What Google should do...
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Why?
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Re: Why?
At least according to the RIAA, MPAA, SIAA (stupid idiot association of America), and everyone else who doesn't understand the internet or that algorithms are not out to get you.
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Getting the search results off Google won't make the unauthorized content go away, nor will it make it much harder to find.
Talking about Google is counterproductive. Go after the source of the unauthorized content. Leave everyone else alone.
Oh, and while you're dealing with that unauthorized content, please be careful about innocent bystanders who might happen to be on the same server, or the same ISP, or same country, or same planet. Please don't nuke an entire server, ISP, country or planet because one user has unauthorized content located on that planet.
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Re: Why?
Of course this is *always* true for *every* search, regardless of terms. Either the top link is the the one most people doing the search are looking for, in which case there's nothing to fix. Or it's not, in which case Google *already* has every incentive to fix it.
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' "House of Cards" explorers the ruthless underside of british politics '.
That is the BBC 1990 TV series.. not the Netflix one...
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Just curious here - if the Stream-TV link is the one that gets the most clicks (I have no idea if it is or not) when doing this search, then why would it be considered a "poor result"? Isn't that what Google is supposed to do?
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Ok, fair enough. But what about the in real world? Take Techdirt as an example, there are plenty of times where Techdirt does commentary on an article and it gets pushed up higher on Google than the original article because that is where people are clicking.
What about an article from Podunk News that gets picked up by AP and published by a major news outlet? The major outlet will get a higher ranking because that is where people are clicking.
How is this different and why would it be Google's responsibility, if that is where people are clicking?
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Whoa. Dyslexic sentence alert!
That's supposed to be:
But what about in the real world?
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On my ride home from work I had an epiphany and figured out why this whole article is bugging me. It comes down to basic logic and reasoning. There's actually a really good reason why searches for a Netflix show would put Netflix itself at a lower rank.
Most people with Netflix account would not go to Google at all, they would find it the same way they find any Netflix show - through the Netflix interface.
People without a Netflix account who want to watch it legally most likely do a simple search for "Netflix" because the first thing anyone is going to do is get an account, then they would probably use the Netflix interface to find the show.
That leaves those who either want to watch it illegally or those who are blocked because of regional restrictions. So it makes complete sense that the people who actually do searches that were described in the article click on the illegal choices, doesn't it?
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Frankly, I think you're being intellectually dishonest
If more Google users click on the non-Netflix site, then it is the most relevant result. Stop being so dense.
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It also has a picture of Netflix's Kevin Spacey version.
http://stream-tv.me/watch-house-of-cards-online/
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The problem is that you need to be very specific in what you're searching for. While I don't feel this is Google's fault, nor that they could be held liable, why isn't the entertainment industry doing THEIR job and contacting the host providers of these websites or if the host provider info is hidden, sue those services that hide that info.
I think if the entertainment industry actually did its job instead of demanding that search engines remove links (what does that except create more instances where even more links pop up), it just creates a situation where websites simply change their domain name.
Kick Ass Torrents, Pirate Bay, Demonoid and many others have changed their domain name suffix so many timis that it would literally make your head dizzy.
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Huh? I'm not following the logic there...
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Google shill Mike Masnick still thinks people aren't fully aware that Google can change their search function to produce whatever result they wish.
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Oh really? Go tell that to Rap Genius. Dumbass indeed...
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5HOt0ZOcYk
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hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
http://thetrichordist.com/2012/10/30/techdirt-is-a-never- ending-dumb-off/
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MY SIDES!!!
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Hummph. Read that article the other day when I was in a mood to wade into the stupid. (just like I sometimes get a hankering to wade into the crazy on those conspiracy theory sites.)
That article is nothing but ad homs and run-of-the-mill schoolyard bullying. Come back when you can link to something with a real argument, please.
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FTFY, Gwiz. BTW, gotta love the user name. Funny.
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Sorry, mate, but hurricane head currently holds the role of Lowery's shoelicker and cocksucker.
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I wrote it
Glad you pointed this out. I should have checked the trends for frequency of search, and included it to begin with. I've updated the article to note the lack of search volume.
Since I wasn't really going for quite the damning piece that everyone has made it out to be, it really didn't occur to me at the time to even look at search volume. That is to say I wasn't trying to suggest that this is how the majority of people search for these shows. The post was about an observation, and nothing more. I wasn't seeking out the story to begin with. I just happened upon the HoC search, found it odd, and decided to see what happened with similar queries for other Netflix shows, and it became what it became.
Contrary to what people are saying, I wasn't going for "misleading". Again, just observation ("Hey, that's odd that Google is showing these sites ahead of Netflix for this."). This isn't any kind of crusade on my part. I just think it makes sense to point people to the source of the content as a search engine. THE search engine as far as most of the world is concerned.
I came at this from a background of covering Google and its search results in general (which I've done for years). I often write about erroneous information Google shows in the Knowledge Graph, for example. This was an extension of this type of coverage more than anything, not to suggest Google is out to give people pirated material over the source on purpose or for the majority of searches.
You make a good point about Netflix doing some more optimization on their part.
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they'll usually get you there, though you'll need to disinfect afterwards, because the other 90% of the hits are of course cyberaids
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New contributor?
Sorry for being a petulant douche. I just miss my daily Masnick fix. Did I overlook an announcement surrounding a staffing change? Searching did not reveal any useful info. I've even contemplated the horror of establishing a Twitter account to keep up with Mike.
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Am I the only one....
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Trying too hard
Since both of those searches I mentioned also turn up significant pirated results, well...
If you are going to rant (while on vacation, or is it that new owner Karl is letting you still post), at least try to hit a valid target.
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horse with no name just hates it when due process is enforced. DMCAed, Prenda fanboy!
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Using my mouse (and my astonishing Internet P0w0rz) I selected the next search engine in the browser-provided pull-down list and clicked Search. In three mouse clicks and as many seconds I had more download links than I could possibly use.
Forcing Google to filter search results is SO effective because, you know, Google Is The Internet.
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