MSN’s News Aggregator Offers Deduping

Program Manager Todd Colby posted to msnsearch’s WebLog last month on MSN Newsbot’s addition of a ‘similar coverage’ feature [SearchEngineGuide]:

“As you may know, many news sites publish wire service stories, like those from The Associated Press. Since the same story is republished on multiple sites the reader does not gain by having these presented repeatedly. Newsbot now groups these together with a single summary and allows the reader to select the site where they want to read the full version.”

 John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

Yahoo challenge to Google Adsense

The coming launch by Yahoo of YPN—a competitor to Google Adsense, is a bid to break off a chunk of Google’s second largest business.

But the competitive battle could be tempered by click-fraud, a growing problem that threatens both companies.
(See SVW story: Confirmation: Yahoo is testing a Google Adsense competitor.)

At stake are hundreds of millions of dollars of Google’s Adsense revenues from publishing text ads on third party web sites, many of them blogs.

Yahoo has an opportunity to strike a strategic blow against Google. Instead of spending hundreds of millions of dollars marketing Yahoo Search and its other online businesses, Yahoo could choose to offer web site owners a larger share of YPN advertising revenues than Google.

John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

Google improves AdSense with Ad Links

MARCH 18, 2005 (IDG NEWS SERVICE)Google Inc. has introduced a feature into its AdSense advertising program that increases the number of text ads tied to a Web page. The feature, called Ad Links, also improves the relevance between the ads and the Web page’s content.

In the AdSense program, Web site publishers insert Google code into their Web pages, which generates text ads that are relevant to each page’s content. The ads are sold by Google to advertisers and are distributed to publishers who participate in AdSense. When a visitor clicks on an ad, Google pays the publisher.

Google believes Ad Links will benefit Web site visitors, advertisers and publishers, said Shuman Ghosemajumder, Ad Links product manager. “It helps users by giving them a greater choice of ads they can select from. Meanwhile, advertisers benefit from additional distribution they’re gaining. And for publishers there’s a higher likelihood visitors will click on ads,” he said.

Ad Links has been designed as a complement to the contextual ads served through AdSense. Publishers who sign up for Ad Links will still receive the AdSense ads. But with Ad Links, publishers will also get a list of topics that are contextually related to the content of their page. When a visitor clicks on an item on that topic list, he is taken to another Web page with related text ads.

For example, a page about vacationing in Hawaii will feature AdSense text ads about that content. But it’s possible that not all visitors who land on that page are looking specifically for information about vacationing in Hawaii. They may be looking for other type of information about Hawaii or about vacationing in general, he said.

In that case, the visitor is unlikely to click on the AdSense ads. However, with Ad Links, the page could feature a list of topics related to Hawaii and vacationing, which, when clicked upon, would serve up corresponding ads, broadening both the scope and quantity of the ads available to the visitor.

The Ad Links topic list has been designed to be unobtrusive and not clutter the space devoted to ads on a page, Ghosemajumder said. “It integrates very well with the navigation structure of sites,” he said. The Ad Links feature is ready now and is already being implemented by Web site publishers, he said. It is available in the 22 languages AdSense supports.

Another enhancement Mountain View, Calif.-based Google is readying is the ability for publishers to have AdSense payments deposited directly into their bank accounts via Electronic Funds Transfer technology, he said. This feature is currently being tested.

John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

New Yahoo service to feature blogging tool

MARCH 18, 2005 (IDG NEWS SERVICE)Yahoo Inc. is developing a free service designed to let users stay in touch with acquaintances such as friends, family and co-workers via new and existing Yahoo services. The service will include the Sunnyvale, Calif., company’s first blogging tool, according to a company executive.

Called Yahoo 360, the service will enter a restricted beta, or test, period on March 29, when it will be available to select users invited by Yahoo to try it out. Yahoo will expand the scope of the beta testing in coming weeks. Yahoo has set up a waiting list for interested users.

Like similar offerings recently introduced by Yahoo competitors Microsoft Corp. and Lycos Inc., Yahoo 360 provides blogging within a broader service whose main aim is to serve as a communications tool between users and acquaintances.

Similar to Microsoft’s Space and Lycos’ Circles, Yahoo 360 lets users do things such as publish blogs, share content and post pictures, while keeping a tight grip on who is allowed to visit the Web site.

Yahoo 360 has also been designed to let users consolidate a variety of existing Yahoo services and content in one place, with the goal of increasing users’ interaction, said Paul Brody, the company’s director of community products. “It’s about integrating all the great resources across the Yahoo network into this service to deepen the users’ engagement,” he said.

John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

 

MSN Betas Shopping Search

Microsoft’s MSN is joining the shopping search fray, beta testing a site that’s an answer to Google’s Froogle, Yahoo! Shopping and America Online’s inStore.

Though MSN has long had a Shopping area, the new site, at beta.shopping.msn.com, shifts the focus to shopping search, price comparison, and customer ratings. It’s a path tread by the other portal players, along with sites like Shopping.com and Shopzilla.

“Now that the MSN Search engine has launched we can very quickly innovate on top of it and offer more unique features and services, all in an effort to help consumers find precisely what they’re looking for,” said Justin Osmer, an MSN spokesperson, in a statement. “Shopping, as well as a number of other verticals, is certainly an area…we are looking to expand search into.”

Though other shopping search players work with merchants on a pay-per-click basis, charging them when someone clicks through from the engine, MSN wouldn’t discuss opportunities for marketers on the new site. It also wouldn’t comment on how it goes about ranking results. So far, the company is serving 120 x 30 pixel graphic ads on the front page of the site and on results pages.

John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

 

Google Launches New RSS Feeds

The Google Codewebsite (“Google’s place for Open Source software”) indicates the launch on March 17 of two RSS feeds: “the updates feed and the featured program feed, in which we pick a great app that uses some Google tool or api.

John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

Competition comes to the ad market

Google’s website advertising program, Adsense, is about to have some fairly hefty competition. Yahoo is testing a ‘long tail’ ad words scheme. [...] The arrival of Yahoo — and possibly Microsoft — in the adwords market will be good for publishers and advertisers simply by expanding the range of choices and by fostering innovation through competitive pressures.

Competition comes to the ad market

John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

 

Yahoo offers a new toolbar

Yahoo! Toolbar for IE now detects RSS/Atom feeds just like its toolbar sibling for Mozilla Firefox.

Yahoo offers a new toolbar

John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

 

FactBites is a new search engine with a different approach

“The Factbites engine focuses on finding genuine, meaningful content. This makes it very good at filtering out spam sites. If the page doesn’t have anything of substance to tell you, it won’t rank well in a Factbites search.”

FactBites is a new search engine with a different approach

John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

 

Yahoo seeks to expand in Google territory

“Yahoo is poised to launch an ad network for small Web publishers styled on a similar offering from Google, [...], a move that promises to sharpen competition between the search giants.”

Yahoo seeks to expand in Google territory

John Hocking
http://www.lookwhatjohnfound.com

 

WordPress Themes


SEO Powered By SEOPressor