Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

by Mike Masnick




Yahoo To Search Behind The Password

from the deep-web-fishing dept

While many are focused on how the various "portal" sites are starting to act more like broadcasters, it seems like that's unlikely to be where their real value lies in the future. The core of all of these offerings is usually search -- which is about finding exactly what the user wants, not handing them some broadcast item that millions of others are getting at the same time. There's no real value in that. However, what could be much more interesting is how the various search properties are digging deeper and deeper. We keep seeing that with efforts such as Google and Amazon's scanning of books or Google, Amazon and Microsoft's real-world mapping efforts. In the past, we noted that as these search engines get better at searching outside the basic internet the more powerful they become as the interface to everything, going beyond the simplistic concept like the operating system for the internet. The latest attempt to search the "deep web" or the "dark web" is that Yahoo will be searching behind the password wall for a number of publications, including the Wall Street Journal, Forrester Research and the IEEE. Of course, to actually read any of the content, you'll need the appropriate subscription -- but it does make these offerings a bit more relevant in making them findable. However, they'll still be mainly outside of the interactive discussion that makes up the internet, because they won't be linkable for others to look at.

2 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
 

Reader Comments

(Flattened / Threaded)

    Jun 16th, 2005 @ 1:29am
  • No Subject Given

    by brendan

    awesome. google scholar currently archives preprint articles, but this could do away with database subscriptions (~AUD$20k/yr for libraries) altogether.

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

  • Jun 16th, 2005 @ 6:20pm
  • No Subject Given

    by jeff

    This strategy will serve to advertise the paid sites and increase subscriptions because if you find it in a search you may be inclined to get the subscription. Good strategy. If it works, the disincentive to go to a pay site - that the site will irrelevant - will no longer be disincentive.

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

Add Your Comment

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now.
Get Techdirt’s Daily Email
Plain Text HTML
Save me a cookie
  • Plain Text: A CRLF will be replaced by break <br> tag, all other allowable HTML is intact
  • HTML: No formatting of any kind is done without explicitly being written in
  • Allowed HTML Tags: <b> <i> <p> <a> <em> <br> <strong> <blockquote> <hr> <tt>
Close
Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now.
Get Techdirt’s Daily Email
Plain Text HTML Save me a cookie

Search Techdirt
And now, a word from our Sponsors..



Subscribe to Techdirt's Daily Email Newsletter

Techdirt's Daily Email Newsletter

Related Stories
Close
E-mail It