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New
Engine to beat Google and Yahoo
JIMMY WALES, THE co-founder
of Wikipedia, is placing a fairly large bet that people can trump
technology in the search engine game. According to a recent report
in Yahoo, he's putting $4 million (of other people's money) plus
an undisclosed "large amount" from Amazon on the line,
betting that he can steal 5% of the total search market away from
Google with his new project, Wikia.
Wales has called both Google and Yahoo the "black
boxes" of the internet, criticizing them for the secrecy maintained
around their ranking algorithms, but details on exactly how Wikia
will work have been equally scarce. All we've heard so far is that
an online community with "a distinct and clear purpose -- a
moral purpose -- that unites people and brings them together to
do something useful" will work to make Web search a better
experience for us all. The "how" of how Wikia will work
has been lacking to this point. But it's likely to follow a similar
path as Wikipedia. The online community will act as an army of human
editors, ensuring the quality of the results by collectively agreeing
on them in some fashion. The theory here is that there is no better
filter for results aimed at humans than those same humans.
Human "Signal Noise"
But the minute you put people into the equation,
you introduce "signal noise": in engineering parlance,
you add friction between the end user and the desired content. Automated
algorithms are relatively friction-free. Results are ranked with
mathematical objectivity, based on universally applicable principles.
Queries flow through this channel to connect with the content as
determined by the algorithms.
People are smarter and more intuitive than the smartest algorithm,
but they're also political. And the reality is, the very segment
that Wikia (and Wikipedia) depends most on are those most prone
to politics.
Anytime you depend on people to do things out of
the "goodness of their hearts" you attract a certain kind
of person. They're community-minded, true, but it's very much their
definition of community. They can also be elitist, obstinate, territorial
and dismissive of those "outside the circle." These people
tend to show up in the same places: condo strata councils, nonprofit
organizations, PTAs, church groups, and, online, in forums and on
wikis. They have the time to contribute, probably because no one
can stand them, so they don't have an active social life outside
their chosen cause.
I'm not saying everyone that contributes falls into
this category, but come on, admit it, everyone reading this now
has someone firmly in mind that fits the above description. They
get possessive about their online community, which is both a good
and a bad thing. With possessiveness comes politics, and signal
noise.
Good Intentions, Bad Results
If you need more evidence, look at what is currently
happening in the best-known communities that depend on online "Good
Samaritans." On Digg, the Bury Brigade has been publicly acknowledged
by Digg founder Kevin Rose: Any story that doesn't meet their criteria
for what is interesting gets quickly buried, never to rise to the
surface again. That's censorship, and it's just some of the signal
noise you can expect when you introduce people to the equation.
Wikipedia has come under frequent criticism for
the same issue, a handful of community elite (with a decidedly left-wing
bent) dictating what should and shouldn't be included as entries.
A Growth Bottleneck
But perhaps the biggest challenge for Wikia is scalability.
If you put your faith in people as your competitive advantage, you
have to be prepared to accept the restrictions that come with that.
If Wales is counting on people to help compile the index and rank
it, that introduces a potentially significant bottleneck.
Search engines are different than encyclopedias.
Encyclopedias are much less dynamic, even when you have an encyclopedia
as fluid and ever-growing as Wikipedia. Search engines have to be
much more sensitive to new content. A lower-traffic entry on Wikipedia
could probably go untouched for months at a time and it wouldn't
significantly impact the value of that entry. But users of a search
engine expect even long-tail queries to bring back fresh and timely
results. Given this factor, it would be likely that Wikia would
have to have a two-stage approach to including new content. They
would need an automated spider and simple index, to be later augmented
and edited by humans. This would create a significant divide in
the quality of the results, between the edited and unedited entries,
especially in newer, less popular segments of the index. And, as
Wales himself admits, if the algorithms that power the automated
portion are open source, the door is wide open to spammers.
What's In It For Me?
Finally, we have to look at the motivation on why
people contribute to Wikipedia, and ask ourselves if this would
translate to a search engine. When you contribute to Wikipedia,
you've staked your claim in online intellectual territory. You've
left a mark, speaking to your expertise in a particular area, on
a place on the Web where you can point and say, "See, that's
me. I did that!" It may not have your name on it, but it's
visible.
In a search engine, your contribution would be lost
in a background process that would leave virtually no trace that
you ever trod there. There are no bragging rights. And that's essential
to appeal to the segment of the online community that Wikia needs
to survive. If we're going to take even a few seconds out of our
busy days to tag, vote, nominate or whatever else Wales needs us
to do, there'd better be something in it for us, or it just won't
fly.
I applaud Jimmy Wales's ideal of open access to
technology and unlocking the "black box" for the masses,
but I just can't see how it will work for search. Much as I love
humans, having been one on occasion, I'm not sure they're the competitive
advantage a search engine needs.
This quite a daring claim trying to take on two
of the biggest companies of the world. If MSN can't gain more traction
what does Jimmy Wales think he can do? With Panana being rolled
out across the world and Google entering the TV and radio networks
Jimmy needs to get on his horse to make an impact.
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