Microsoft strikes search deals with Twitter, Facebook
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IDG News Service - Microsoft has reached collaboration agreements with Twitter and Facebook to get members' public status updates and messages indexed and presented in useful ways on the Bing search engine.
Yusuf Mehdi, senior vice president of Microsoft's Online Audience Business, made the announcement on stage at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco.
Microsoft's partnership with Twitter has the companies working together to optimize how Bing crawls and indexes "tweets." Microsoft will apply search algorithms to the Twitter messages, so that Bing users will not only be able to see a real-time feed of "tweets" but also rank them by how relevant they are to their query, Mehdi said.
"This is a big deal we've been working on for a long time," Mehdi said.
To rank "tweets" by relevance, a feature Microsoft calls "Best Match," Bing will take into consideration a number of factors, such as who the authors of the messages are based on a "social relevance" score Bing will assign to them, Mehdi said.
Bing will also evaluate the message's quality, noticing, for example, if it contains a link to an online article or Web page. It will also take into consideration how popular the message is by calculating how many times it has been "re-tweeted" by others.
In addition to providing links to Twitter messages, Bing will extract the URLs of the pages that the messages are making reference to, so that users can go directly to that source of the information.
When providing links to "tweets" that contain a shortened URL, Bing will put in parenthesis the main Web domain of the link, so that users know, before clicking, whether it's a reputable site and thus avoid landing in a malicious phishing or malware-laden site.
Bing will also display a tag cloud of the most popular Twitter topics so users can click on and dive deeper into them.
The Twitter deal is nonexclusive, and hours later rival Google announced its own agreement with the social networking site.
"The 'tweets' will be integrated universal-search style, ranked alongside the other [different types of] results, and you'll be able to click on those results and go to a page that shows only 'tweets' and real-time updates," said Marissa Mayer, Google's vice president of search products and user experience, in an interview after her appearance on stage at the Web 2.0 Summit to announce the news. Users will also be able to restrict results to Twitter posts from the get-go using the engine's filtering controls.
Google has been crawling Twitter posts on its own, but the subset of content available in this manner has been very small, she said. With this Twitter partnership, Google will get access to what Twitter calls its "firehose" API (application programming interface), which was recently released, she said.
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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