Internet
offers many sites for enterprising cyber-snoops
Sex
sites are a mainstay on the Internet, but according to a recent study
("From E-Sex to E-Commerce: Web Search Changes" Computer, March 2002,
pp.107-109), people using Web search engines are less interested in pornography
and more concerned with business, careers and travel than they were a
few years ago. The study analyzed data culled from more than 1 million
queries submitted by more than 200,000 users of the Excite (http://www.excite.com)
search engine, collected in September 1997, December 1999 and May 2001.
This longitudinal benchmark study reveals that public Web searching is
changingit shows that search topics have shifted from sex and entertainment
to commerce and people.
Despite
the drop indicated by the Computer study, sex-related terms remain quite
popular among Internet searchers. A 2-year study by Alexa Research http://cyberatlas.internet.com/big_picture/traffic_patterns/article/0,,5931_588851,00.html
reveals that the word "sex" is still the most popular term people search
for online. "Porn" (along with "porno" and "pornography") was the fourth
most popular search term. Variations on the words "nude," "erotic" and
"playboy" also placed among the 20 most popular search terms. And even
though jobs and travel are important to people, the Lycos 50 http://50.lycos.com/
shows that titans of entertainment, such as Britney Spears and Jennifer
Lopez, are on a lot of people's minds.
Are
you interested in what people are searching for on the Internet? If so,
there are several sites that offer the cyber-snoop the opportunity to
view search requests being entered by users into Web search-engine boxes.
One such site is MetaCrawler Metaspy http://www.metaspy.com/.
Metaspy offers two views into users' searchesone a filtered service
and the other, called "MetaSpy Exposed," provides a "no-holds-barred"
(unfiltered) look at the search queries of MetaCrawler users; both views
automatically refresh every 15 seconds. Ask Jeeves, a popular question-answering
search engine, also offers a voyeuristic search tool called "Ask Jeeves
Peek Through the Keyhole" http://www.askjeeves.com/docs/peek/.
To see what search topics are hot at Yahoo! go to "Yahoo Buzz Index" http://buzz.yahoo.com/,
and fans of Google should check out "Google Zeitgeist" http://www.google.com/press/zeitgeist.html.
An extensive list of cyber-snooping sites can be found at What People
Search For http://searchenginewatch.com/facts/searches.html.
The
ability to see what people are searching for via popular search engines
can be very enlighteningclearly, people are obsessed with sex, money
and entertainment, but the thing that is revealed most about users of
Internet search engines isthey can't spell!
Gemma
DeVinney and Don Hartman, University Libraries
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