Category Archives: Internet - Page 3

Facebook looks to change the game…again

FacebookSo, I already blogged about Facebook’s Platform and how it will generate new business models and economies on the web. But today brought news of Facebook’s future plans to change the face of the Internet altogether with an online operating system. Facebook, in their first corporate acquisition, bought Parakey, makers of an online OS that is still under wraps.

We’ve been hearing rumors of an “online operating system” for years now, mostly in the context of Google acquisitions, but this is the first time we’ve heard it from a major social network. What exactly is an online operating system, you ask? Well, the definitions vary, but from what is known about Parakey, it looks like they will allow users to do a variety of unique things.

The most important functionality this presents is the ability to directly access files on your hard drive from within a web application. This would let you edit documents, photos, and movies from your hard drive using a web-based application (no more buying and installing software?), and then you can publish your work directly to the web (or your Facebook profile) with a click or two – the software takes care of moving the file from your hard drive to a web server, and it synchronizes the files on your hard drive with your files on the web. It’s possible that the platform would be open as well (it seems like Facebook’s style), allowing other companies to build applications for the online OS, so you could choose which one you wanted to use to write your documents, mix your MP3s, edit your baby videos, etc. etc.

If any upcoming technological development has the capacity to bring user-publishing and user-generated content to the masses, it’s this. Of course its success will depend on the execution and the actual ease of use, but this technology, plugged into a social network that already counts as members a huge number of the people in a demographic that is likely to be interested in publishing their own content, has the potential to revolutionize how we use the web.

For those of us who are already savvy enough to publish our photos and movies to the web, this could offer a different paradigm shift. I blogged a while back about my orgasmic scenario of not having to rely on my home computer and its hard drive, and of keeping all my files online (with automatic backups) so that I could access my MP3s, my movies, and my documents, from any device, at any time. An online OS takes this model one step further – not only can I access my files from anywhere, but I can work with them – I can view them, edit them, and share them – from any device that supports the online OS, be it my computer, a computer in a library, a kiosk at the airport, my Xbox or PS3, or potentially even my phone. Then we would be able to truly unplug. What would be better than that?

The Google Paradox

How do you manage a business when the very thing that makes money for you hurts your profits at the same time? This is the dilemma that Google has been struggling with several years now, and it’s not likely to go away soon.

Imagine if you will that you are a content publisher, say, an online magazine. Now imagine that you have your “A” articles that your writers spent a lot of time on and that are very in-depth, and that your readers love. Now imagine that you have your “C” articles that aren’t so good, but because they suck, your readers are much more likely to click on the ads on those articles. Believe it or not, if a page has lousy content, users are indeed much more likely to click on an ad. I’ve seen seen sites with lousy content get up to a 12% clickthrough as compared to high-quality content that gets 1-2% CTR.

Now imagine that you get paid per click.

Which articles would you promote at the front of your magazine? A article or C articles? The A’s are great, but they just don’t pay the bills, let alone pay for themselves. The C’s pay well, but get no repeat traffic.This is exactly the paradox that Google faces every day. They can send their users to quality sites with great articles like Creating Passionate Users or uncov, or they can send traffic to sites with questionable content where users are more likely to click on ads because there’s nothing else to do like Associated Content or Squidoo.

Google runs their AdSense ads on virtually every content site on the web these days, so they make money when they send their traffic to the sites that have the best clickthrough rates.

So what is Google to do? They should certainly try to avoid any perception of impropriety. Apparently they’ve started penalizing pages on Squidoo in order to do just that. But going forward, how do they draw the line? How do they look impartial? How do they assure us that the brick wall between editorial (in their case, search) and sales that every good publisher must have is still in place? How do we know that they’re sending us to the best sites and not the ones that make the most money for them?

The answer is, we probably won’t know until someone starts giving better search results than Google.

Facebook changes the game

If you’re up-to-date in the tech industry, you’ve surely heard of the new Facebook Platform. It’s already been covered pretty extensively, so I won’t belabor the point except to say that I believe this is a turning point in the evolution of the Internet. It’s a brilliant move by the developers at Facebook. And if you’ve read much of my blog, you know this sort of praise is rare.

I now understand why Facebook didn’t sell to Yahoo for the $1B or $2B pricetags we’ve been hearing about. At the time, I thought they were either fools or arrogant not to sell for such a rich price, but they knew that this Platform was coming. They knew they had something special up their sleeve. Now that I’ve seen the Platform, I realize they would have been fools to sell to Yahoo before releasing it. They’ll surely be worth 5-10 times more in the next year or two, and will pose a real threat to MySpace.

Now that the Platform is public, Facebook has a community of hundreds and soon to be thousands of developers making their site better every day. A new marketplace is going to spring up around Facebook, much the way MySpace ushered in the age of widgets and Everquest popularized the exchange and auction of digital goods. It will give life to companies that create products for them, just like MySpace enabled YouTube to grow exponentially.

It isn’t often a paradigm shift happens overnight, but that’s exactly what the Facebook Platform has done. Most paradigm shifts happen gradually as a phenomenon grows to become dominant (AltaVista, Yahoo, MySpace, Google, Everquest, World of Warcraft), but this one is happening in the blink of an eye. Don’t blink.

Mahalo: No Thank-You

MahaloIf you’re old enough, you may remember a little web directory called Yahoo. Yes, back before it was a search engine in the current sense of the word, and long before you could “google� anything besides your Math 1B T.A. Yahoo’s web directory was assembled by “surfers� who theoretically spent the day scouring the web for new and interesting web pages, and when they found them, they’d add them into an enormous taxonomy Yahoo created, so people could find them easily. It was great, and it made a lot of sense. Back then.

If you were paying attention to your history, you may remember that when Yahoo’s directory and its taxonomy became too big for human editors to maintain and human users to navigate, Yahoo’s search proved to be much more useful than their directory, so people stopped using the directory. Eventually, the directory even disappeared from Yahoo’s home page entirely. If directories were so great, we’d all be using dmoz instead of Google today.

The problem with directories is that they can’t live up to their promise if they’re only maintained by a small set of internal people. A Web Directory promises to be:

  • Comprehensive
  • Authoritative
  • Current

A small set of editors simply cannot keep on top of enough subjects on the web to keep this promise. They will either:

  • Not cover enough topics to satisfy users
  • Not have enough expertise to recommend the best links
  • Not be up-to-date

And most likely, all three of these will be true. It’s the nature of the beast.

And this makes me (and uncov) wonder why Mahalo.com has been brought into existence. Despite describing itself as “human-powered search�, it really is just a directory, just like the old Yahoo directory, like Dmoz, like the old Zeal.com, like the old Looksmart, or a dozen other directories that failed. Note the similarities in the screenshots of Mahalo and Yahoo circa 1997 below. At least Yahoo works in Firefox…

Mahalo will never be really important because it will never be comprehensive enough, it will never be authoritative enough, and it will never be current enough. They claim that their editors will cover tens of thousands of topics in the coming years – 25,000 by 2008 — but what good will that do? How many unique search queries do you think Google gets in a day? I’d bet it’s in the millions, and there’s no way Mahalo will ever cover millions of search queries in an authoritative manner. The long tail is what has made Google successful, and anyone who tries to compete in the search space has to serve the long tail just as faithfully as the most popular search terms, or people just won’t rely on it.

Mahalo claims that they let users suggest links for inclusion in the directory, but unless those links get automatically processed and vetted by the masses, why should we trust their editors to choose which links are useful and which are not? Can their team of 40 editors really know what the best links are for tens of thousands of topics? Despite TechCrunch’s positive spin job, I don’t think so.

Where have the lessons of Web 2.0 gone? While many Web 2.0 sites are just Ajaxy hype, the really good things to come out of this generation of web development are sites that take advantage of collective wisdom, but Mahalo has ignored this lesson and is trying to re-hash a model that failed a decade ago.

I mean Mahalo no ill will, but good luck, guys. And very smart move partnering with Techcrunch on the TechCrunch20 conference.


Yahoo Directory

 

Mahalo directory

The Future of Search is Social

Over the past ten years we have witnessed an evolution in web search. The first-generation search engines like AltaVista, Excite, and Yahoo all indexed the web and gave back results primarily based on the words that were on a web page. If you searched for “lemurs�, these engines would look for pages that had the word “lemur� on them, and return those to you.

This was all well and good until the spammers came. It wasn’t long before the spammers figured out that if they stuffed a page full of the phrase “lemur�, the search engines would send people who searched for lemurs to that page. So, if these spammers happened to be selling lemurs, they could use this method to drive a lot of people to their store even if that store had no information about lemurs or the lemurs they sold weren’t very good. They could get traffic if they just had the word “lemur� on their page enough times (this example is simplified for illustrative purposes.)

Then along came second-generation search: Google. Google’s search was smarter because it looked at pages that linked to pages. If you owned a site about lemurs, Google would scan your site and know that it was about lemurs, but it would also look at other sites, and if they linked to your site with the word “lemurs� in the link, Google would figure that your site about lemurs was pretty important, so it should show up high in a Google search for lemurs.

Again, this was fine and dandy until the spammers figured it out. The early spammers just set up a lot of cheap sites with links to their main site, and built authority in Google’s index that way. Over time, they had to get smarter, so they set up link exchanges among reputable sites, or started buying text links on reputable sites.

Then the spammers set up companies like PayPerPost.com that pay people to write something (anything) about lemurs and link to discountlemurs.com in their blogs. While any human would read these blogs and dismiss them as marketing hooey, to Google’s algorithm these blogs look perfectly valid and they lend authority to discountlemurs.com. Of course, these ersatz bloggers are actually just shills, writing marketing copy for a living – their blogs don’t get much traffic (or they’d have real advertisers), but by posting articles that look real, Google’s algorithm is fooled into thinking the sites they point to (discountlemurs.com) have some authority.

What people outside of the Search industry don’t realize is that Search is hitting a brick wall. The second-generation algorithms, including Google, are constantly struggling to stay one step ahead of the spammers. Just read through a few of the Search Industry sites Webmasterworld.com, SearchEngineRoundup, SearchEngineWatch, SearchEngineLand, and you’ll see the trends soon enough. Google has to update their algorithm all the time to combat spammers, and it’s hard to say who’s winning.

My bet is on the spammers for one simple reason: people are still smarter than computers. If someone can program a search engine to give authority to webpages that match a certain criteria, someone else can figure out how to simulate those criteria. Only recently have computers started to beat the chess masters, and that’s a game with simple rules; the search optimization industry has no rules, so it will be a long time before computers can surpass human judgment when it comes to determining which sites are really important..

This is why I believe it is just a matter of time until Search becomes social, and Google Search starts to fade away. Some may argue that Google’s weighting of links from other sites is already social because those links are placed by people, but we’ve seen that this linking can easily be gamed and/or automated. A truly social search is one that takes user trends and preferences and uses those to tailor its results. It can look at user click behavior, or it can look at the ratings that users give to various sites, or even better a combination of the two. It is true that this can be gamed, but if one puts the proper requirements and safeguards in place, abuse should be relatively easy to detect. If done correctly, it will be too costly for marketers to pay enough people to promote a site, or for someone to create enough bogus accounts to sway the indexing in their favor, and if a site somehow does promote itself artificially, the masses will vote it down immediately, promoting the sites they think are truly important. This is the only way for Search to evolve.

We’re already seeing versions of social search in smaller applications like Digg, Flickr, Delicious, Yelp, and other sites. It’s just a matter of time until someone adapts these techniques to Search itself, and unseats the Google’s algorithm. Ask.com sure isn’t going to do it – who will?

Why Google doesn’t care about Search

GoogleOver the past couple of years, it has become increasingly clear that Google is no longer in the search business. Sure, Google.com is a search engine, but the real business at Google is no longer to provide the best search engine. Its mission is no longer “to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.â€? Google has become a pure advertising network.

First, let’s look at their history. Google search was extremely innovative for its time and there’s little argument that it delivered the best results. But Sergey and Larry just couldn’t make any money with search until they plugged in a brilliant system to display ads alongside their search results. In a world that had been dominated by “CPM� ads that gave advertisers no guarantees of a return on their advertising dollar, AdWords required that advertisers only pay for clicks, and it weighted ads based on their performance so users saw the most relevant ads. AdWords revolutionized online advertising just as Google had revolutionized online search.

So what does a company do when they have such a brilliant ad serving tool? They syndicate it. Google released AdSense to let other websites benefit from the performance-based ads that were already doing so well on Google.com, and they took a cut of every click purchased through their system. Another brilliant move.

The ads then spread to Gmail. A few paranoids complained of privacy invasion, but eventually everyone got used to ads next to their (free) email, and everything went back to normal. Google had yet another channel in which to deliver their ads, and the cash flowed in faster than their Money-Counting department could keep track of it.

So what do you do when you have more money than you know what to do with, and your founders are true tech geeks? You develop or acquire companies that do anything you consider “cool.� Have you seen the list of products that Google offers lately? If not, check it out here. Item after item, most of these make no money and have no plans of making money. Gtalk, reader, catalog search, notebook, co-op, code, calendar, docs & spreadsheets… and don’t get me started on YouTube.

But what a lot of people don’t see through the plethora of product releases and purchases is that Google’s only real business is ad serving, and they’re aggressively moving to dominate (I stop short of the word “monopolize� here) online advertising and expand their control of ad delivery into other mediums. Google is adding pay-per-action ads to AdWords which is surely devastating news to other CPA affiliate programs like Commission Junction. With their recent purchase of display advertising market leader DoubleClick, Google has gobbled up even more territory in the online advertising landscape, and now they’re moving to do the same thing by extending their AdWords architecture offline to TV ads, radio ads, and newspaper ads (so far with little success.)

One might ask, “Why is a search engine getting into TV, radio, and newspaper ads?� The answer is this: Google is no longer a search engine. They are an advertising network. Google search is simply a distribution channel for their advertising platform, just like the thousands of other sites that use AdSense. The other Google projects like Gmail, Reader, Maps, and the rest, are all either channels for Google advertising or tools to build brand loyalty.

Is this a Bad Thing? No, of course not. There’s nothing more American than trailblazing and profiting from it. But Google’s mission simply is no longer to organize the world’s information. Selling ads on TV networks, in papers, and on the radio surely has little to do with organizing information. Google’s real, updated mission is to provide the best value to advertisers and the best experience to consumers. This is a noble or at least honorable mission in itself, if not as philanthropic is their original one.

And yes, this means that all those brilliant MBAs and PhDs they’ve shipped in to Sunnyvale are pretty much just working either on new ways to deliver advertising or new venues on which to serve it. If you could figure out a way to make PhDs return 100x their salary as revenue, you’d hire them, too.

It’s a very smart move, really. Google surely realizes that their search may not always dominate. For the past few years it seems that their only updates have been to defeat Google-spammers and aggressive SEO techniques. They know someone will beat their search eventually, particularly as social search gets better. But Google knows that it doesn’t matter. They aren’t in the Search business. As long as they control the delivery of advertising, they make money. Every company they buy and every technology they develop, is either directly tied to creating ad inventory or just building loyalty to Google.

Mind you, I don’t fault Google for any of this. A company has to make money, particularly a public one. But let’s just call an ad network an ad network.

Why everyone should use Tag Clouds

There are lots of ways to help people navigate a website. My all-time favorite has to be the “tag cloud.”

If you’re not familiar with the tag cloud, it is a navigation tool that has gained prevalence with Web 2.0 and the abundance of user-generated content sites. Many of these sites realize that people are too lazy to categorize their pictures, movies, links, whatever, into a sensible set of categories, so they allow their users to just type any old word in to describe their content. Perfect for today’s ADD crowd. Then, these sites take the most popular words, and throw them in a big, steaming heap, and bump up the font size of the most popular ones, giving you the “tag cloud”. Examples from Flickr and Technorati:

Technorati TagcloudFlickr Tagcloud

Spend a minute browsing these images. Aren’t they beautiful? They give the user a visual workout, forcing them to scan line by line, looking for the big, important tags that are of interest. They help the user practice basic size-recognition as they try to figure out which word is in a larger font than the next, and they help them build those left-to-right reading reflexes that we all so desperately need to hone.

If there’s one thing we don’t see enough of these days, it’s navigation that really makes people use their head. There are far too many of these “ordered lists” that make it easy to distinguish which items are most important. If you want to do your users a favor, help them hone their visual recognition skills by presenting them with new and different navigation techniques that don’t follow traditional practices. Users love that.

Let’s say you’re Technorati, and you have the choice of showing your users a tagcloud or this:

Most popular topics:

  1. Life
  2. Blogging
  3. Weblog
  4. News
  5. Music
  6. Entertainment
  7. Personal
  8. Books
  9. Friends
  10. Religion and Philosophy
  11. Blog
  12. Writing and Poetry
  13. Travel
  14. Diary
  15. Sports
  16. Survey
  17. Quiz
  18. New and politics
  19. Romance and Relationships
  20. Jobs

Now wouldn’t any self-respecting user find this “list” patronizing? “Oh look, this site thinks I’m so simple-minded that I need my lists ordered by importance. Maybe they think I need a way to get back to the homepage from anywhere, too.” Never underestimate your audience’s intelligence or their desire to be challenged.

Let’s take a look at a site that needs a tag cloud: Billboard’s Top 40 Singles. Now, if these guys had any sense or knew what users liked, they’d show their Top 40 like this:

Akon Augustana Baby Boy Da Prince Beyonce Daughtry Diddy Dixie Chicks Fall Out Boy Fat Joe Fergie The Fray Gwen Stefani Gym Class Heroes Hellogoodbye Jim Jones Jon Mayer Jonas Brothers Justin Timberlake Lloyd Ludacris Mims My Chemical Romance Nelly Furtado Nickelback Omarion Paula DeAnda Pretty Ricky Red Hot Chili Peppers The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus Rihanna Robin Thicke T.I. Unk Young Jeezy

Much better. Billboard: this time the design advice is free; next time I charge you for it.

So keep using those tagclouds, guys. After all, they’re cool, they’re trendy, they’re so Web 2.0, and there’s nothing users appreciate more than a website that isn’t afraid to challenge their sense of logic and order!

When computers try to do too much

You may have seen my previous post about Yedda‘s interest-matching engine. Well, Yedda’s at it again, and this time they seem to think that I’m an expert of some sort on Toilet Paper Rolls.

Be the first to answer

This is an example of computer software trying to be too smart. Computers, no matter how smart they get, will never be able to comprehend context as well as a person, and this is why Yedda has so much trouble figuring out what I actually am an expert in, and what I am most likely to answer questions about.

Last time I brought this up (Yedda said I was an expert on “What’s that smell?”), Yaniv from Yedda stopped by and pointed out:

As for why you received this one, I guess that the Yedda active distribution system figured out on its own that it’s a pretty good match for “tool, basketball, and (?) perfect circle�. Perhaps we should change our slogan to “Interested in silly topics? Get silly questions!�

Gee, thanks, Yaniv. Even if I was just entering “silly topics”, I’d say the “active distribution system” doesn’t seem too smart if it thinks that “tool”, “basketball”, or “perfect circle” had anything to do with “What’s that smell”, or the latest question I got on toilet paper rolls, eh?

The crew at Yedda is asking a computer program to determine the actual meaning of things, and computers aren’t very good at that yet, so this is what happens. The technology just isn’t ready. This is why on Answerbag we ask users to tell us what categories they want to answer questions in using a full hierarchical category structure to give context, and we only send them questions in that category.

Yaniv, my interests may sound silly to you, being based in Israel, but someone from the US in my rough demographic would probably recognize Tool and Perfect Circle as popular American bands. A good categorization system would be able to differentiate a tool that you hammer with, and a Tool whose CD you can buy. Answerbag uses a full category hierarchy to achieve this, so “Tool” is a category under “Musical artists” giving us the proper context to know what the user is really interested in. Yedda’s system tries to figure out what “tool” and “perfect circle” are with no context, and, being a computer system, it just can’t figure out that these are bands. It probably thinks I’m interested in tools and geometry.

A common theme in interaction design these days is to make the system smarter, so the user doesn’t have to think, but this assumes that the system can be made to be smart. However, in order to make certain systems work correctly (like context-determination), we still need to rely on our users to do a little thinking of their own.

MIT Tech Review: Worst review of the Best Q&A Sites

When someone writes for a publication like MIT’s Technology Review, they have an obligation to write articles that are objective and scientifcally sound. To represent a brand like MIT, they have to observe the standards of review journalism such as creating measurable comparison criteria, applying those standards consistently, and giving consistent, even-handed treatment to their subjects. However, Wade Roush of Tech Review last month ignored all of these rules in his article What’s the Best Q&A Site?

Perhaps it was Roush’s objective to take a light-hearted look at the Social Q&A space and therefore was lax in his editorial rigor, but if that’s the case, his review should have been published on a blog somewhere, not on Tech Review, and it should have had the appropriate disclaimers. When MIT Tech Review publishes an articles with hard numbers comparing websites, that review becomes gospel for the hordes of other sites that reference it, so it had better be accurate.

I will show here why that article never should have been published by the MIT Technology Review.

Before we begin, here’s my big, fat disclaimer: I founded Answerbag, one of the subjects of the review, so I’m hardly unbiased. However, to be thorough, I will show here that Roush’s review of all of the QnA sites — not just mine — were cursory, unbalanced, and inaccurate.

I’ll start with Roush’s description of his test:

I also devised a diabolically difficult, two-part test. First, I searched each site’s archive for existing answers to the question “Is there any truth to the five-second rule?” (I meant the rule about not eating food after it’s been on the floor for more than five seconds, not the basketball rule about holding.) Second, I posted the same two original questions at each site: “Why did the Mormons settle in Utah?” and “What is the best way to make a grilled cheese sandwich?” The first question called for factual, historical answers, while the second simply invited people to share their favorite sandwich-making methods and recipes.

The five-second rule in basketball actually has nothing to do with holding, but I’ll let that one go.

I awarded each site up to three points for the richness and originality of its features, and up to three points for the quality of the answers to my three questions, for a total of 12 possible points.

Okay, so here’s the fun part: three points for “richness” and “originality” of its features – these seem like awfully vague terms to use, but it’s only 3 points out of a total 12, so I suppose it’s not that big a deal. He finishes by awarding up to 3 points for answers to each of his three questions, based on the quality of the answer. That seems fair.

Since his review starts with my site, Answerbag, I’ll dig into his review of Answerbag first.

Members get points for asking and answering questions as well as for rating other members’ questions and answers.

Somewhat true. Members can receive points for their questions and answers from other members, but they do not automatically receive points (as they do on some other Q&A systems, a difference that is key to the quality of the answers.) Also, members do not receive points for rating other members’ Q&A. But hey, he says he only had a few days to write this review, so I can’t expect him to get all the details.

He goes on to talk about our Levels system and our Widgets, but never discusses the core differences between Answerbag and other sites, such as the fact that we never close our questions to new answers or ratings on our answers. We also get no credit for pioneering video answers or image answers. We get no credit for allowing our users to sort the questions in a category by popularity so they can easily learn about a topic like “PlayStation 2 troubleshooting” or “foreclosures.” No credit for a unique profile page that lets users see all of the latest activity on the site that involves them (answers to their questions, ratings on their answers, comments on their answers, etc.) No credit for giving more power to users who have earned a lot of points on the site. Then he gives us 1 point out of 3, apparently for not having “rich” and “original” features. Ouch. Well, it’s a subjective measure, so I’ll let it go.

Is there any truth to the five-second rule? All of AnswerBag’s answers about the five-second rule pertained to basketball. Points: 0

Busted. But then, to our answer for why the Mormons settled in Utah, he has this to say:

That’s more or less in line with the best answers to this question at other sites. Points: 1

So…you’re telling me that for an answer that was just as good as the best answers on other sites, we got 1 point out of 3? Is that fair in the review guidelines set forth by MIT’s Tech Review?

To his question on “What’s the best way to make a grilled cheese sandwich?”, he says “I rated the answers to this question purely according to their mouthwateringness.” Very scientific. He received six answers, and gave Answerbag 2 points out of 3 with no explanation whatsoever. I guess they just weren’t mouthwatering enough to get the full 3 points.

Amazon’s Askville

3 points for features – he liked the mechanics of the site. Fair enough, since it was established as a subjective measure.

0/3 points for having no answers to the “five-second rule” question. Bummer.

On the Mormon question, Roush cites a couple of the answers, and then gives 2 points out of 3, with no explanation of what was wrong with the answer, or what a correct answer is.

On the grilled cheese question, he got a couple answers that “provided just the basics” as well as some that were taken from “grilledcheese-contest.com” but complains they were “not very original.” Perhaps if he wanted people to submit their own personal, original grilled cheese recipes, he should have asked for that. Poor Askville only got 1 point out of 3 here thanks to Roush not asking for what he wanted.

Live QnA

For a QnA system that is virtually identical to Yahoo’s, Askville’s, or Yedda’s, MSN gets 1 point from Roush. He complains that as users earn points for their answers on the site, they can raise up in levels but “there are no other rewards.” This was his only criticism, and Yahoo’s point system works virtually the same way. But, MS only scores 1 point from Roush. Maybe he thinks Windows crashes too much.

2/3 points for answers about the “five second rule.” No explanation of what the answers were missing to keep them from getting 3/3.

2/3 points for answers to the Mormon question, again with no explanation of what’s wrong with them.

For the grilled-cheese question, he got three answers, including one he says “sounded delicious,” but I guess it didn’t sound delicious enough. 2/3 points.

Wondir

Roush must have been approaching his deadline. He gave an overview of Wondir’s features, and then gave them 1/3 points with no explanation of what he didn’t like about it at all.

Five second rule: 0/3 points because it was very hard to find answers. Fair enough.

Mormons settling: He got “six answers, 3 of which were useful.” No explanation of what was missing. 2/3 points.

This one is great: for the grilled cheese question, he changed his question (for no apparent reason) to ask how to make a healthy grilled cheese sandwich. He got answers he considered “brief and obvious” like using wheat bread, lowfat cheese, and margarine. I have no clue what he would have considered a good answer. Those answers are the best things I could think of to make a healthy grilled-cheese sandwich; if you’re cooking something with bread, cheese, and butter, what else can you do? Yet, Roush was not satisfied, and this answer got 1/3 points. Brutal.

Yahoo Answers

Roush starts by explaining how Y!Answers has similar features to other sites. He praises their “My QnA” page, but doesn’t acknowledge that almost every other site in the comparison has a similar page. Then he seems to get excited:

One fun twist: users can choose and customize their own cartoon self-portraits, which appear alongside their questions and answers and give the site a surprisingly jaunty feel.

How much is that worth? 3/3 points. THREE POINTS. For an avatar system that anyone who’s used Yahoo (particularly Yahoo Games or Yahoo Instant Messenger) knows has been a feature of Yahoo (not Yahoo Answers) for several years. Somehow their avatars added so much to the experience that he thought Yahoo had the BEST FEATURES out of any of the other QnA sites in the review (tied with Askville.) Perhaps it’s his first time using the web?

Five second rule: This question had been asked 11 times and had 160 answers. It seems that the time it took him to find a good answer under the 11 iterations of the same question was not a hindrance – after reading through the 160 answers (yawn), he apparently liked one that referenced a show from the Discovery Channel as a source. 3/3 points. Alright.

Mormons settling in Utah: Again, Roush inexplicably changed the wording of his question, adding a bit about “why didn’t they go on to California or someplace more desolate.” (Rule #1 of doing experiements: perform the SAME experiment on every subject, Wade.) He got one “offensive” answer, four “cursory” answers, and one he considered good enough for a 2/3, again with no explanation.

Grilled cheese sandwich: This time he just searched for existing answers, giving no word on why he didn’t do this on other services, or why it was good enough to look at existing answers on Yahoo rather than testing how quickly he could get answers to a new question as he had done on other sites. He seemed to be pleased that he had to look at over 100 copies of the same question to get a recipe. Something in there must have sounded yummy to him, but he doesn’t tell us much besides the fact that he found thousands of answers. Yahoo Search returns millions of results to many queries, but that doesn’t make it the best search. Roush gives Y!Answers 3/3 points regardless.

Yedda

His evaluations of Yedda’s features culimates in “In practice, however, I couldn’t see much difference between the answers at Yedda and those at Live QnA, Yahoo Answers, or the other sites.” For being the same as those sites, Yedda only gets a 2/3. No futher explanation offered.

Five second rule: Nothing. 0/3.

Mormons: One answer that didn’t ad dress the question. He’s nice and gives Yedda a 1/3 anyway. How generous.

Grilled-cheese: He got one answer that focused on the cheese used in the sandwich. 1/3 points.

Conclusion

How this article got through MIT Tech Review’s editors is beyond me. Time and time again Roush gives random points to these sites without even saying what he liked or didn’t like about them. He never even established the “correct” answer for the five-second rule or why the Mormons settled in Utah, so we, his readers, have no basis of evaluating the answers he received. At the very least, he could have told us what was wrong with the wrong answers.

Here’s what a good review would look like: come up with a set of real, measurable criteria like: question answering time, accuracy of answers, and intuitiveness. For certain types of questions that are looking for a variety of answers, the number of answers received may be a useful metric (such as grilled-cheese recipes.) It might be nice to see a feature comparison chart of the sites in question, as well as a discussion of why those features are important. You could, perhaps, give one point per useful feature out of a fixed set of features.

Most importantly, apply these measurable standards even-handedly to every subject, and explain why they receive or don’t receive points. These are the basics.

Am I upset just because Yahoo won? No. I’m upset because the review was cursory and didn’t do justice to any of the sites involved. Maybe it was meant to be fun, to be a “jaunty” exploration of Social Q&A, but is Tech Review really the right forum for that? I’m not going to pretend I’m unbiased in the matter, but Roush’s review should not have been represented as a measure of The Best Q&A Site by a well-respected publication.

Payperpost.com to challenge Google

PayperpostJust when you thought the Internet couldn’t become any more cynical, along comes Payperpost.com, a site that pays “professional bloggers” to pimp products and services. Here’s the deal: if you have a blog, you can pick from a list of products and services to write about, and each one has a bounty that you will earn once your article is posted and approved by the company that’s paying for it.

For those of you who don’t have a background in journalism, there is supposed to be a huge, big, massive, ginormous brick wall between Editorial and Sales. That means that editorial should never be influenced by the people who pay the publication, but Payperpost flies right in the face of convention and does exactly that.

After running along completely without ethics for their first few months, they have now added a disclosure requirement thanks to FTC regulations, so their bloggers have to disclose that they were paid to post their articles. Okay, so it’s okay to be a slut as long as you disclose that you’re a slut, I suppose.

What really interests me, however, is the possible implications for search engines, and in particular, Google, who put a lot of weight on inbound links. A key point to think about here is that despite their happy, shiny marketing copy Payperpost will not be used by professional bloggers. A real blogger lives and dies by her reputation for honesty and impartiality, so they could never afford to put a disclosure on their site saying that they were paid for an article – their reputation would be shot, and it would be all over. Payperpost isn’t hiring professional bloggers, they’re hiring paid bloggers.

Sluts

So, what good does it do to hire someone to write about your product if their blog isn’t a big, popular one? I’ll tell you: if you hire enough of them, the collective weight of their links to your site will give you more weight in Google. Although it isn’t written anywhere on their site, Payperpost’s purpose seems to be to help companies increase their Google rankings, so they can drive cost-effective traffic to their sites.

With dozens or hundreds of bloggers writing about your product, it shouldn’t be too hard to build a high relevancy rating at Google. Just tell the bloggers to link to your site using the text “Green widgets” and to talk about green widgets in their articles a lot, and before long you’ll show up on Google when people search for “green widgets.”

So what is a search engine to do? Google can try to give less weight to these paid blogs, but it’s essentially impossible for a machine-driven search engine to tell which blogs are paid and which aren’t, so Google will doubtlessly be fooled, and may end up full of spammy links thanks to little old Payperpost.

The only definite solution is to go social. People (as a whole) know what’s good and what isn’t, and will filter out the garbage that’s being linked to from a hundred paid blogs. Jimmy Wales is apparently working on a new social search, but it’s quite a ways off from being relevant. Perhaps Social Q&A will step up to fill the void?