Microsoft Uses Human Computing Game To Tune Bing 119
Al writes "Microsoft researchers have come up with a novel way to fine-tune the algorithms behind the company's new search engine, Bing: a game that harnesses human computing power to improve the results. Called Page Hunt, the game (which of course requires Silverlight to run) shows users a web page and asks them to figure out a search query that should produce the page within the first five results. The idea is to better understand user behavior and expectations and ultimately improve its search algorithms. Other human-computing projects have sought to digitize out-of-print text (reCAPTCHA) and image labeling (Google Image Labeler). Can Microsoft use a similar approach to gain the edge over its rival? Or does Google already have the edge with SearchWiki, which lets searchers re-rank its results?"
So you're anchoring the algorithm... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:So you're anchoring the algorithm... (Score:4, Insightful)
i wouldnt call it a game so much as cleverly disguising crowd sourcing their work. its a really good idea actually.... excuse me, i need to go design a 'points system' where users, er... i mean players get points when they fix their own computer issues and put a basic trouble shooting guide in a flash docume-- er, game.
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Without further refinement, they'll get results meaningful only to Silverlight users. This means that technical terms some of us use aren't going yield the results we'd expect from Google.
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Who knows, that may be what they want. I wouldn't be surprised in the slightest if Microsoft spun this into further marketing and misinformation, with the excuse that the people have spoken.
Re:So you're anchoring the algorithm... (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe they can use the real world data to fix this issue
http://www.bing.com/search?q=why+is+microsoft+word+so+expensive&form=QBLH&qs=n [bing.com]
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=why+is+microsoft+word+so+expensive&aq=f&oq=&aqi=g1 [google.com]
Flooded with blog articles about the same query now, and yes, it looks like there's probably a technological reason (or at least viable excuse) for it, but it still seems pretty shady to me.
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Bing: Why is Manhattan so expensive? Regulation and rise in house prices
Google: Why Is Microsoft Office So Expensive.
Re:So you're anchoring the algorithm... (Score:5, Insightful)
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actually, how are they tuning porn searches? depending on your desired search results, the wrong query, or the system interpreting your query wrong could bring up some truly undesired stuff.
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4chan, or a bunch of Microsoft haters that would pretty much never use Bing anyway. I can't think of anywhere that a bunch of Microsoft haters hang out on the interwebs. It definitely wouldn't happen on slashdot.
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Indeed. Google only fine-tunes search results from more savvy users. It's a tad creepy, but they build a profile and know what you're interested in, and use that to send you the correct links.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Pandora&btnG=Google+Search&meta=&aq=f&oq= [google.com]
What's your top link? Mine is OpenPandora.org
Bing spits out crap that I'm not at all interested in. Now I know why.
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In the case of refining searches that suit me, basically built around and extensive analysis of my nature, I too would feel far more comfortable with a local app that records and analyses my searches and sends more explicit still but anonymised search requests to an external search engine. Not necessarily because they can't be trusted, oh wait yeah, it is because those greedy buggers absolutely can't be trusted.
As for M$ trying to build a search engine around a limited section of a selective group willin
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You assume that the results are incorporated automatically. I doubt that. I think there is a person on the other side tinkering with the algorithm so that it covers more of the search terms.
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Get a group of people together like the /b/ group on 4chan, have them start labeling mundane links with porn terms, and porn links with mundane terms.
how do i search web?
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It's quite amusing seeing MS trying to catch Google's 11+ year-old engine, while Google is probably working flat out to get ahead of sig.ma and the like as web 3.0 takes off.
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I really have to give them credit...the big blue monster has come a long way...
First they weren't going to mess with cloud offerings, now they're banking their future on the cloud (Live Framework, Windows Azure, Mesh, Office Live, etc.). They use-to guard their code like a proprietary pitbull and shun opensource, now they have a site set-up for the sole purpose of facilitating distribution of open source code (codeplex.com). And the difference between the philosophy behind IE6 vs. IE8? Night and day.
Say
Looks like fun (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Looks like fun (Score:4, Funny)
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Hey Anonymous Coward, the 80's called and they want their game back.
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Re:Looks like fun (Score:5, Funny)
yeah, well the jerk store called. they're running out of you.
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What's the difference? You're their all-time best seller!
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Should write a program to play it (Score:2, Funny)
Cheating. (Score:2)
I don't like to lose.
MS silverlight (Score:1)
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Well, I won't be installing Silverlight unless it becomes ubiquitous, but if I were Microsoft I'd be "eating my own dog food" (as they say) too. If they won't use it themselves, why would they expect you to? I'm sure their internal documents are Word.
I wonder, though, if the site could have been done with plain old HTML/CSS. As I'm not installing silverlight I guess I won't find out.
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Is that because you are infected with the deadly Microsoft-Hater Disease that Linus warned about? Sounds like it!
You really should be at home resting your brain back into a more sane state before posting here again.
Sad. Seriously. You have the disease. Seek help.
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Is that because you are infected with the deadly Microsoft-Hater Disease that Linus warned about? Sounds like it!
Strange, to me it sounds as if the poster is doing what little he can as an individual to prevent a proprietary format from dominating the web as Flash have done for too long.
Sad. Seriously. You have contracted Microsoftitis. Seek help.
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I don't hate Microsoft, I just don't like very many of their products, so I doubt Silverlight will be anything but a PITA to me.
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http://xmlvm.sf.net FTW!
I can't wait to win a copy of Windows 7 Ultimate! (Score:1)
...and wait eleven months to receive it. Oh Live Search Club, your spirit will haunt us forever.
That said, Google Image Labeler has already proven the viability of this method of tagging and indexing. I think. Has anything really come of the GIL project?
Finally... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Finally... (Score:5, Funny)
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You forgot to put "slashdot" on the list.
It's a shame... (Score:5, Insightful)
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It doesn't make much sense either- can't they just aggregate the data from the bing website to get practically the same thing?
Spammers... (Score:5, Interesting)
If users have the ability to tailor search results, won't page rank "fixers" (aka spammers) have an easier time? Or am I missing something?
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There are already multiple ways for spammer to tailor search results. You know, the webpages itself, thats why it's search results. You need the algorithms to protect that, so you obviously need algorithms to protect what data is used from this "game" aswell. This is just to give additional information to the search results, but same rules apply.
Wait for it... (Score:3, Funny)
Doomed to fail (Score:4, Insightful)
...the game (which of course requires Silverlight to run) shows users a webpage and asks them to figure out a search query that should produce the page within the first 5 results.
Gee, that sounds SO much more fun than playing the Sims! Not. reCAPTCHA works only because the user wants to get to what's after it, and doesn't require another downloaded plugin or frequent interaction. Guys, learn one of the great rules in IT: Just because it can be done, doesn't mean it should. If you want to investigate user behavior, do what everybody else in the industry has done -- install malware onto the user's machines and track their habits. :\
Re:Doomed to fail (Score:4, Insightful)
Guys, learn one of the great rules in IT: Just because it can be done, doesn't mean it should.
But as long as it has some users, its good info for MS. I wont be using it, and you probably wont be either, but there probably are people who like to try it out of interest. Maybe even now and then just to see random websites or whatever fun it gives them. Anoher great rule of IT: You can just leave it in the background and it doesn't affect your main business in any way. Microsoft and Bing are large enough to do quite random stuff and it will still have its users. And it goes along with Bing's strategy aswell -- Shoot there, shoot here, try out things and be innovative. So far its working great for them (hell, thats what google does too)
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-----------NO CARRIER-----------
Sounds riveting (Score:2, Interesting)
shows users a webpage and asks them to figure out a search query that should produce the page within the first 5 results
How much am I being paid? I suppose it is recession after all..
Live Search? (Score:1)
Gee, but... (Score:5, Funny)
I sure hope no one tells 4chan about this.
Will tune to gamers (Score:4, Interesting)
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In theory, even if the venture is successul, what you will get is a search engine that understands gamers well. Is that going to improve your market share?
Why not? Even if it understands just gamers better, its another win in that market. Its not like this is their only source of information. Both Google and Bing have thousands of factors to count in to deliver search results -- this is just another one in the basket.
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fail? (Score:2, Funny)
Cat got your tongue? (something important seems to (Score:1)
Come up with a search to find the pages shown within 5 seconds?
I'd settle for "lesbian kissing" not turning up 30,000 pages of BJ pictures.
Err... (Score:3, Insightful)
All this made me realise is how terrible Bing's search is. I mean... some of the queries failed to return the correct site, and I was literally "spelling it out" (full name of the page complete with some of the exact sentences/phrases on it).
If anything, this just makes Bing seem like a lost cause - it made the 'game' seem unfair (the engine was failing, not me) and completely pointless
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I hate it when some moron takes it upon themselves to mod down legitimate complaints. Seriously - this was not some substance-less "LOL ITZ BAD" comment: all I noticed from this "game" was how terrible the query -> result relationship worked.
Silverlight at every turn (Score:2)
What a brilliant idea! (Score:1)
Re:What a brilliant idea! (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to get paid for this (Score:1)
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Silverlight, no thanks (Score:3, Funny)
Though without Silverlight, it may have been fun to come up with search queries for innocent things that involve gay animal sex, clown shoes and old people's inability to control their bowels.
Bewildering, pointless, and laborious (Score:3, Insightful)
This "game" is about as much fun to play as those "fun with subtraction" pages in the fourth grade arithmetic book. It's bewildering, pointless, and laborious. And as nearly as I can tell there are no prizes. It's too clever by half.
A straightforward feedback link asking whether an ordinary Bing search got you the results you wanted would surely be more effective. Better yet would be an option to submit failed Bing searches to a human being who would attempt to find the answer and email it to you.
Show of hands ... (Score:4, Funny)
Or does Google already have the edge with SearchWiki, which lets searchers re-rank its results.
Anybody who has used SearchWiki to re-rank Google results, hold you hand up. Up high. Keep 'em up. Anyone? I didn't think so.
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But really, what is the point of doing that when you're the only person that will ever see it?
Phrasing Please! (Score:1)
The director of this department is Alex Trebeck.
When they happen on an AVI or WAV the score is doubled.
The final round consists of a handwritten query and a wager of how many hits the target query will actually manifest.
It is all so exciting. Exciting enough on which to base a TV show!
-----------------
Drive Fast. Take chances.
This can only make Bing worse (Score:4, Insightful)
That last thing I need is "real people" screwing up the tags on a site. I recently got a new PC for home theater, and installed absolutely as little as possible on it (not even firefox - heresy, I know). I used the default search the first couple of times - forgetting that it wasn't google - and was amazed at how poorly the results came back. Even specific text known to be on the page (down to filenames I was trying to find for installing necessary codecs) wouldn't bring up the pages I needed. I can only assume that with (primarily) non-technical people typing in search keywords for pages it will just get worse.
You might say that a decade and a half of old search engine technology has trained me to make computer-based queries, but damnit it works, and I don't look forward to the unwashed masses breaking it.
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You might say that a decade and a half of old search engine technology has trained me to make computer-based queries, but damnit it works, and I don't look forward to the unwashed masses breaking it.
The unwashed masses are the ones who write the web pages. The web pages which Google's PageRank uses to figure out the relationships and rankings. Perhaps Bing can be manipulated in such and such a way, but so can Google. We all know the stories of manipulation of Google results by link spamming, Google Bombin
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Oh, I'm not worried about spam pages - they're pretty easy to identify from the summary blurb in the search engines. I already ignore them almost completely. I realize that Bing is targeting idiots, I just hope that the demographic creep doesn't spread to good search sites. Bing sucks, by my experience, so it's not like it sucking worse - in a vacuum - will affect me. Of course, I thought that Yahoo existed so the people who were clueless could be identified by the rest of us (I will never hire anyone who
I "played" the game... (Score:1)
I get the page to come up #1 in the Bing search, but what have I proven? Only that I know a bunch of the words on the home page. Pretty much exactly the opposite of h
Silverlight again (Score:2)
As if we want Silverlight... Gross! At least I have to hand it to Microsoft.... instead of just ignoring Linux users, or insulting them with "click here for the plugin" and being handed some useless .exe, you get this now:
"Install Silverlight. Experience this in Silverlight Install the free Plug-in. Microsoft Silverlight may not be supported on your computer's hardware or operating system. If you are using a Linux, FreeBSD or SolarisOS operating system, please press the Click to Install button to get th
Just Sayin... (Score:1)
Monkey Magic! (Score:1)
First result: Steve's Chair Caning Service;Full service antique chair caning [steveemma.com]
Options include:
# HAND CANE
# RUSH SEATING
# SPLINT WORK
# HONG KONG GRASS
# FANCY PATTERNS
# PRESS CANE
# DANISH CORD
Curiously, the copyright notice on Steve's page is:
"© BY THE LIGHT OF THE MOON"
Wow... so revolutionary (Score:1)
Aren't games. . . (Score:1)
. . .supposed to be fun?
Bing Bong Gong (Score:1)
Google Methods (Score:1)
While you are off topic... (Score:4, Informative)
Thanks.
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I think you have been listening to too much Metallica are going deaf. The hum is your ear saying goodbye to that frequency, or it could be a medical condition. Check out 'Tinnitus" and "hum".
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