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Fighting Duplication: Adding more arrows to your quiver

3:29 pm - February 12, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

Avoiding duplicates in the search engine index has consistently been a key concern we’ve heard from webmasters and site owners. Over the last few years, we have made significant strides in finding duplicates in our crawler and index algorithmically and provided webmasters with better tools for controlling these. Today we are announcing our support for a new HTML tag, the <link> tag, which helps reduce duplicates by documenting the preferred URL form to access each page.

When you use the <link> tag, you can indicate the canonical URL form for crawlers to use for each page of content, no matter how it was retrieved. This puts the preferred URL form with the content so that it is always available to the crawler, no matter which session id, link parameter, sort parameter, parameter order, or other source of variance is present in the URL form used to access the page.

To do this, specify a <link> tag in the <head> section of your page content:

<link rel=”canonical” href=”http://www.example.com/products” />

The above tag indicates to the crawler that the URL it is present on should be represented canonically as http://www.example.com/products. This would eliminate the following duplicates:

http://www.example.com/products?trackingid=feed
http://www.example.com/products?sessionid=hgjkeor2
http://www.example.com/products?printable=yes&trackingid=footer

A few technical details:

• The URL paths in the <link> tag can be absolute or relative, though we recommend using absolute paths to avoid any chance of errors.

• A <link> tag can only point to a canonical URL form within the same domain and not across domains. For example, a tag on http://test.example.com can point to a URL on http://www.example.com but not on http://yahoo.com or any other domain.

• The <link> tag will be treated similarly to a 301 redirect, in terms of transferring link references and other effects to the canonical form of the page.

• We will use the tag information as provided, but we’ll also use algorithmic mechanisms to avoid situations where we think the tag was not used as intended. For example, if the canonical form is non-existent, returns an error or a 404, or if the content on the source and target was substantially distinct and unique, the canonical link may be considered erroneous and deferred.

• The tag is transitive. That is, if URL A marks B as canonical, and B marks C as canonical, we’ll treat C as canonical for both A and B, though we will break infinite chains and other issues.

For several years, we have had a clear policy on handling redirects that allows you to take control of how crawlers and browsers relate between pages on your site. Another useful tool for eliminating spurious dynamic URLs and avoiding content duplication is the Rewrite Dynamic URLs feature of Site Explorer. All you need to do is authenticate your site in Site Explorer, which can now be done instantly, and then create a URL Rewriting rule. The benefit of this approach is that Yahoo! does not need to crawl your duplicate pages to discover the canonical relationships. The <link> tag provides you with another resource to use, and is also being supported by our other partners in the Sitemaps effort, Google and Microsoft.

We recommend that you structure your site with normalized URLs and minimum duplication, or use 301s if need be. If those don’t work for you, try Site Explorer and/or the <link> tag. Our support for the <link> tag will be implemented over the coming months. Let us know if you have any questions on our Site Explorer Suggestion Board.

Priyank Garg
Director Product Management
Yahoo! Search

 

Time to Say Goodbye to Yahoo! MyWeb

12:00 pm - February 13, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

Back in 2005, we launched Yahoo! MyWeb with the goal to help our users save valuable information they discover on the Web. As we have continued to innovate with the 2.0 release of Delicious and the upgraded Yahoo! Bookmarks, we saw that MyWeb users’ needs are being served by our newer products. To streamline our bookmarking services, we will discontinue the MyWeb service starting March 18, 2009 and focus our efforts on improving Delicious for social bookmarking. We are working on many Delicious product enhancements for 2009 – in the meantime, we’ll make the transition for our MyWeb users in the least disruptive manner possible. MyWeb users have three choices to migrate their bookmarks:

1. Yahoo! Bookmarks. For users primarily interested in private bookmarking, the switch is simple – all MyWeb bookmarks are already available in Yahoo! Bookmarks.

2. Delicious . For users who enjoy sharing their bookmarks and exploring the bookmarks of other users, we recommend migrating to Delicious. The migration is a three-step process – see details here.

3. Export. For users who choose to use other bookmarking services, we recommend using our export tools, which will provide an archive of your bookmarks that is easily readable by 3rd party services and browsers such as Firefox and Microsoft Internet Explorer.

For publishers using the MyWeb Bookmark button or the MyWeb badge, we recommend migrating these to the Delicious button or badge.

If you have any questions about the migration, please contact us at the MyWeb Feedback page.

Ariel Seidman and Craig Taylor

 

Five Years of Yahoo! Search

1:02 pm - February 18, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

Five years ago today, Yahoo! launched its own search engine. Since then, we’ve introduced a host of new features, vastly improved the relevance of both our algorithmic and sponsored results, and learned some important lessons. Search technology is still in its infancy, and there are limitless opportunities for innovation. Since big anniversaries only come so often, we wanted to reflect on what we’ve done and examine our focus for the years ahead.

In the last five years, we’ve reached some important milestones:

• Opened our search infrastructure and index to outside developers with BOSS.
• Opened our search results page to outside innovation with SearchMonkey.
• Launched Search Assist, still the most sophisticated query assistance technology on the Web.
• Launched a suite of mobile search products including Yahoo! oneSearchTM.
• Acquired, grew, and improved Delicious, a top social bookmarking tool.
• Launched Site Explorer to help site owners to manage their presence on Yahoo! Search.
• Protected users from potential viruses, spyware, and spam with SearchScan.
• Integrated musicand video players directly on the search results page.

And while it’s fun to look back, we’re continuing to innovate for the future by:

• Continuing to open our search results page and infrastructure to improve Yahoo! Search and encourage innovation in the industry.
• Focusing on detecting and responding better to query intent.
• Breaking the ten-blue-links paradigm by developing a richer, more adaptive search results page.
• Making it easier to conduct and share online research with Search Pad.
• Delivering a new and better advertising experience that improves relevance for our users and ROI for our advertisers.

Making tens of billions of Web pages instantly searchable is a huge task, but we also had a lot of fun along the way. To celebrate our fifth anniversary, the folks at the Food Network show Dinner Impossible came to tape an episode at our campus last month. Chef Robert Irvine had one tough challenge – cook a multi-course dinner for our hungry engineers and search geeks. The show won’t air until April, so our lips are sealed on how it all turned out. However, we can tell you two things – it wasn’t easy and we had a great time, which is exactly how we’d characterize the last five years at Yahoo! Search.

We’d like to extend a huge thanks to our users. Your support and feedback keep us focused on building the best search engine on the Web.

Tuoc Luong
SVP, Search Engineering, Yahoo! Search
Larry Cornett
Vice President, Consumer Products, Yahoo! Search

 

Get Ready for the Oscars with Yahoo! Image Search

3:17 pm - February 20, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

The Oscars are one of our favorite times of year at Yahoo! Image Search. Our fascination with movies, celebrities, and red carpet fashion actually can be passed off as work! For the 81st Academy Awards, we are rolling out a new image carousel in Yahoo! Image Search so you can find some of the newest, most popular pictures from Yahoo!’s news and entertainment portals when you search for your favorite stars and Oscar moments.

To see the Oscars image carousel, search for the name of any nominated film or actor in Yahoo! Image Search. You’ll see a rolling gallery of the newest photos above the regular search results, with arrows to toggle through the images. And if you happen to miss any of the key moments on Sunday night, try searching for Oscars or Academy Awards after the show.

oscars-image-carousel-text1

If you’ve got your own favorite nominees, check out Yahoo! Movies’ complete coverage of the Oscars, where you can follow the buzz and see what Yahoo! users have predicted for this year’s winners. So far, Yahoo! users have picked “Slumdog Millionaire” for best picture, Brad Pitt for best actor (in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button), and Kate Winslet for best actress (in “The Reader”). You can download a printable ballot and make your own bets too.

Join us as we prepare for the fun on Sunday night and enjoy the Oscars!

Yahoo! Image Search Team

 

Let SearchMonkey Feed Your Facebook Addiction

11:00 am - February 26, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

Starting today, Facebook enhanced results will automatically appear in search results. This means users can add a friend, poke, send a message, and view a person’s friends from the deep links on the search results page. Facebook shared the structured data for this SearchMonkey app by adding semantic markup to their public profile pages.

Here’s an example of the Facebook enhanced result with Alex Moskalyuk, a key Facebook engineer on this project.

Facebook Enhanced Result - Alex Moskalyuk

See the SearchMonkey app for Facebook in action yourself and try a search for your friends. Here at the Yahoo! Search Blog, we had fun checking out the Facebook profiles of marketing VP Raj Gossain and senior product marketing manager Graham Mudd.

We care about privacy as much as you do, so you’ll only see results for Facebook users who have enabled their profiles to be publicly searched and viewed. If you’re interested in “social-izing” your search results page further, check out other SearchMonkey apps for social networking sites such as StumbleUpon, Delicious, and MyBlogLog.

We hope the SearchMonkey app for Facebook and our other social apps make finding and connecting with friends on the Web easier than ever. Let us know what you think.

SearchMonkey Team

 

Weather Report: Yahoo! Search Index Update

7:31 pm - February 27, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

We’ve rolled out some changes to our index with fresh web data and updates to our crawling, indexing, and ranking algorithms over the last few days. We have had two updates since last November: one in December, 2008, and another in late January this year. We expect the update will be completed very soon. Throughout this process you may see some changes in ranking as well as some shuffling of the pages in the index.

While we didn’t do Weather Reports for the December and January updates, we heard loud and clear that the community still finds them helpful, so we’ll continue to provide these reports.

To share your thoughts or check in with other Yahoo! Search users, please visit the Site Explorer Suggestion Board.

Sharad Verma
Yahoo! Search

 

Inquisitor: Now on iPhone

11:59 am - March 5, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

Today Inquisitor goes mobile for the iPhone, making the application ubiquitous across platforms. Searching on-the-go should be quick and easy – that’s why we focused on making the design of the Inquisitor application simple and seamless so you can get your answers quickly.

Inquisitor Mobile Search auto-completes your search and gives suggestions as you type to refine your search. When you type in your query, websites and suggestions appear immediately below the search box. Inquisitor also speeds up your search by quickly loading site summaries and allowing you to navigate between results and the browser with just one click.

Inquisitor iPhone App

Give the Inquisitor iPhone app a try (download it here at the Apple App store) and let us know what you think.

Ariel Seidman and David Watanabe
Yahoo! Search

 

SearchMonkey and BOSS Take on ETech

5:12 pm - March 6, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

Yahoo! Search, Yahoo! BOSS, and Yahoo! Developer Network will be at ETech, O’Reilly’s flagship Emerging Technology conference, in San Jose, CA, next week. Stop by and visit us at Booth Four on March 10 to 11 to talk about the latest trends and technologies in search.

We’re also hosting a session on March 10, where our “Chief Technical Monkey” Paul Tarjan will present and lead a discussion about SearchMonkey and the Semantic Web. The session is being held in the Crystal Room at 7:30 p.m.

Hope to see you there!

Yahoo! Search

 

Embed Videos, Games, and Docs the Easy Way with SearchMonkey

11:03 am - March 12, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

Creating enhanced results just got a lot easier with a new SearchMonkey feature that allows site owners and developers to embed flash video, games, and documents directly in Yahoo! Search results.

The premise is simple: if you have a flash video, game, or document (like a presentation or spreadsheet) embedded on a page, adding a few lines of code will make it appear as an enhanced result after we recrawl your page. Very little semantic markup knowledge is required, and you don’t have to build your own application. SearchMonkey does the heavy lifting, taking your markup and extracting the necessary structured data to display it as an enhanced result.

For example, check out the code that Hulu added to create an enhanced result for a clip from The Simpsons. Just the first two lines of code are required to generate an enhanced result. The other four lines are optional and assist with the display.

<link rel="image_src" href="http://thumbnails.hulu.com/9/967/32912_145×80_generated__VfWxSNY3rESG1ntOzexNRQ.jpg" />
<link rel="video_src" href="http://www.hulu.com/embed/GREW9Qw0P7KjIyjJydQYRw" />
<meta name="video_height" content="296"/>
<meta name="video_width" content="512"/>
<meta name="description" content="Video description: Homer gets upset at a vending machine filled with apples."/>
<meta name="video_type" content="application/x-shockwave-flash"/>

By adding this markup, Hulu enabled enhanced results for their page in the Yahoo! search results for the query “The Simpsons Apples.”

Hulu Video Enhanced Result with Yahoo! SearchMonkey

When users click on the thumbnail image, an expanded video drops down so they can watch the video clip directly on the search results page.

Hulu Video Enhanced Result with Yahoo! SearchMonkey - Expanded

As Yahoo! Search continues to promote the use of open and de facto formats, we are supporting the use of RDFa and Facebook Share markup (an existing format currently deployed on many sites) to power such enhanced results. Code for site owners is currently available for flash video, games, and documents. We encourage you to add markup to your sites now so our crawlers can start indexing them right away. Users can already see the enhanced result for video on their search results, and we’ll begin to support documents and games in the next month or so.

In order to provide the best search experience for Yahoo! users, we’ll be reviewing sites that want to display rich media content before they can appear in search results. We’re currently supporting a number of popular video players including Hulu, YouTube, and MetaCafe. Learn how to participate and submit other players for consideration from our overview page.

We think enabling users to preview rich content right on the search results page will help them find what they’re looking for faster than ever. By allowing participation using simple markup, site owners can make their content easier to find while taking another step toward a more structured Web.

We welcome feedback as we continue to roll out improvements and new features for SearchMonkey. Please let us know what you think in the comments section below or on the SearchMonkey forum.

Yahoo! SearchMonkey Team

P.S. We want to wish a Happy Birthday to Hulu. Congratulations!

 

Find Images Fast with New Filters on Image Search

10:43 am - March 19, 2009 in Yahoo! Search Blog

The array of images available on the Web can be both a great resource and a daunting challenge. So, based on recent user tests, The Yahoo! Image Search team built new filters to make searching for images on the Web easier and faster.

This new set of filters helps you find what you want quickly, whether you are looking for black and white photographs of flowers, a sunset wallpaper, or images on Flickr. With the new Image Search filters, you can narrow down image results by color or black and white, by size, or even by specifying dimensions for the image results. You can also choose whether the images come from Flickr.

Yahoo! Image Search Filters

These filters are just the first improvements we will be rolling out in the coming months for Image Search. Stay tuned for more features that will make finding what you’re looking for a breeze.

Anuj Sahai and Ramu Adapala
Yahoo! Image Search

 
 
 
 
 
 
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