Ask Jeeves drops paid listingsMarch 3, 2004 Ask Jeeves said on Tuesday that after 18 months, the Internet search company will cease Index Connect, its paid inclusion program. AskJeeves will stop accepting advertiser payments for inclusion in its searchable Web database, in a move to draw competitive lines between it and Yahoo's new search engine. Paid inclusion allows advertisers to pay fees to have large numbers of Web addresses indexed more regularly in search engines -- a service that Yahoo just re-launched and that No. 1 search site Google denounces. After much testing of paid inclusion the company found that it can negatively sway search results -- producing more commercial and irrelevant lists of Web sites, Lanzone said. Ultimately, that hampers the search experience, he said. "We're never going to mix church and state again," Lanzone said. AskJeeves' move comes on the same day that Yahoo unveiled its own for-fee search-inclusion service. It also helps back up suspicion in the industry that such services can sully query results that many Web surfers look to as unbiased guidance to the Web. Placement in search engines has become a coveted thing many advertisers are willing to pay for, given that Web search is a prime means of finding products and services online. That has fuelled the popularity of auction services from Overture Services and Google, which pair text ads with keyword-related search results. Advertisers bid for top placement in search results related to specific keywords and pay only when Web surfers click on their text ads. (Ads appear adjacent to or on top of results.) Once the dot-com bubble burst, many struggling search providers turned to yet another means for making money from Web search: paid inclusion. But such programmes drew fire from consumer advocates and the Federal Trade Commission, which called for better public disclosure of the commercial relationship between search engine providers and advertisers when it comes to serving algorithmic or noncommercial results. The FTC said late last year that it is still watching the industry closely for proper disclosure when it comes to paid inclusion. Just weeks ago, Yahoo introduced a new search engine and replaced Google, its 4-year technology partner and chief rival in the booming search-marketing industry. To fuel revenue from Web search, Yahoo lets advertisers bid for placement in keyword-related searches through its recently acquired subsidiary Overture Services. On Monday, it also re-launched its paid-inclusion program, combining three such programs from recent acquisitions of Inktomi, AltaVista and Fast Web search. Yahoo's vice president of Web search, Tim Cadogan, said the company's commercial relationships with paid inclusion customers will not influence its search results. Rather, it will keep an "iron wall" between those relationships and the billions of Web documents it indexes regularly, governed by its relevancy ranking and quality controls in place. For its part, Google does not let advertisers pay to be in its index, and company executives have criticised such programmes as having the ability to compromise the credibility of search. Lanzone was careful not to put down Yahoo. He said that AskJeeves had been winding down the paid-inclusion program in the past two months and that Yahoo's re-branded programme, called Site Match, precipitated its final closure. To be clear, Lanzone said that the company will still allow site operators to pay to submit their sites to its index, but that that payment would not guarantee inclusion in the database. Source: ZD Net Read Serge Thibodeau's daily blogs on search engines at Serge Thibodeau Live. We strongly suggest you bookmark our web site by clicking here. Tired of receiving unwanted spam in your in box? Get SpamArrest™ and put a stop to all that SPAM. Click here and get rid of SPAM forever! Get your business or company listed in the Global Business Listing directory and increase your business. It takes less then 24 hours to get a premium listing in the most powerful business search engine there is. Click here to find out all about it. Rank for $ales strongly recommends the use of WordTracker to effectively identify all your right industry keywords. Accurate identification of the right keywords and key phrases used in your industry is the first basic step in any serious search engine optimization program. Click here to start your keyword and key phrase research. You can link to the Rank for Sales web site as much as you like. Read our section on how your company can participate in our reciprocal link exchange program and increase your rankings in all the major search engines such as Google, AltaVista, Yahoo and all the others. Powered by W.W.H. Protected by Proxy Sentinel™ Traffic stats by Site Clicks™Site design by Mtl. Web D. SEO enhanced by Pagina+™ Online sales by Web Store™ Call Rank for Sales toll free from anywhere in the US or Canada: 1-800-631-3221
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