The French government is on the verge of passing a law that would punish Web users for downloading illegal content: after your third violation you will be banned from the Internet for a year. Some argue that this violates our fundamental human rights.
Yet another search engine, Cuil (Gaelic for ‘knowledge’), is taking aim at Google. In true Freudian fashion, the upstart is the brainchild of former Google engineers who claim that Cuil will offer broader, faster searches, without recording information about what you search and when.
Google is changing the way it ranks websites in search results, by changing its famous, mysterious algorithm so that sites deemed “intuitively low quality” get lower rankings. Takeaway digital editor Jim Colgan looks at what’s changing and why Google is doing it now. Google introduced that change last Thursday and we spoke to the head of […]