Facebook’s Zuckerberg: Sluggish Google indexing drove us to Bing

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has blamed Google’s reactiveness to privacy concerns for negotiations between the two companies breaking down, pushing the social site into the arms of Microsoft’s rival Bing engine. “Microsoft was more willing to do things that were specific to Facebook” Zuckerberg said at the launch of Facebook Graph Search yesterday, the Guardian reports, citing the speed and willingness to remove personal content that had previously been public, but which Facebook users subsequently made private, as key to the deal.

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“I think the main thing is about when people share something on Facebook, we want to give them not only the ability to broadcast something out but also change their privacy settings later and take the content down” Zuckerberg explained. “That requires incredibly quick updating … We need that content to be gone immediately … You need infrastructure that can support that and that takes a lot of commitment from the partner.”

Zuckerberg’s concern appears to be sudden changes – such as where people realize they want to alter the granular privacy settings on photos or other content – and the possibility that public searching could continue to turn up results that users might not want included. Facebook has been criticized in the past for confusing privacy controls as well as taking perceived liberties with user-data, and this reluctance to compromise on indexing accuracy appears to be a move by the social site to avoid any complaints further down the line that relate to speed of indexing.

“Google has a system that works really well for them about how they treat information across their company,” Zuckerberg said, “and I think that our system was different in ways that people share information and want to give them flexibility after the fact – that was the biggest stumbling block.”

Despite the Facebook CEO’s explanations, insiders within the company claim that there were no renewed negotiations between it and Google prior to Graph Search’s development. Instead, he is supposedly referring to earlier talks, which broke down when the two companies disagreed over exporting and ownership of personal data.

There’s more on Facebook Graph Search in our full run-down of the service.


Facebook’s Zuckerberg: Sluggish Google indexing drove us to Bing is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

These People Are Now Sharing Horrible Things About Themselves Thanks to Facebook Search

FB’s glistening new search engine makes finding interesting things about yourself, your past, and all of your friends excitingly easy. It also makes it a cinch to find strangers who are openly racist, sexist, and generally embarrassing. This is fun! More »

Facebook Graph Search: A Great Strategic Move

facebook search graph screen Facebook Graph Search: A Great Strategic MoveEarlier today, we laid out the basic functionality of the new Graph Search live from the Facebook HQ in Menlo Park. Beyond the new features, it is interesting to look at how this will help Facebook going forward, including monetization. The “business” question was raised during the Q&A sessions and it is completely legitimate, especially when you think about the potential infrastructure cost of running this resource-intensive, 100% personalized, feature. Facebook is known to be a great engineering company, so there is little to worry about how much computing resources will be spent as Facebook will undoubtedly run it efficiently. What’s more interesting is that while Facebook wants to project an image of humility around Graph Search, this is definitely a key launch in the company’s history – here’s why in five points: (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Ubergizmo Launches its Social Reader for Facebook, Samsung Series 5 550 Chromebook Review,

Google web search reveals English letter frequency, helps our Scrabble hustle

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Wordsmiths go to great lengths to master a game of Scrabble or Words With Friends. Rarely are their efforts quite so calculated, however, as what we’re seeing today. After Google research director Peter Norvig used his company’s search engine to determine letter frequency in the English language, Deadspin and developer Kyle Rimkus compared it against Scrabble’s point system and available words to determine which letters generate the most value relative to how often they can play. In short: H, Y and Z produce the most bang for the alphabetic buck, while J and Q are plagues on the rack that are seldom worth saving for a special moment. We can’t guarantee that following the Google-derived tips will have serious opponents begging for mercy — a wide vocabulary is often the real clincher — but they may help a few of us wondering what to play on that triple word score.

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Source: Peter Norvig, Deadspin

Here’s What Using the New Facebook Search Looks Like

Facebook Graph Search is an amazing feature with a terrible name. It takes the massive, inordinate amount of personal information and experiences you’ve charted over the years, and pulls them up with a few keystrokes. Watch it in action. More »

SlashGear 101: What is Facebook Graph Search?

The system known as Graph Search is Facebook’s way of allowing you to search through the massive amount of connections that exist between you and your friends. This search system is in Beta mode when the article you’re reading now is being published, but it’ll be in full swing by the Spring or Summer of 2013. This release is a relatively important addition to the Facebook ecosystem because before now, only the titles of people, places, and things could be searched – and photos were all but buried hopelessly under piles of galleries with no search connections at all.

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In a Nutshell

The Facebook Graph Search bar will be appearing (or already exists) at the top of your Facebook page and works with instant suggestions based on what you type. You can search for people, photos, places, and interests – that’s what Facebook suggests – but your imagination can run wild with keywords. Example searches include the following:

• Photos of my friends in Minnesota
• People who like SlashGear and live nearby
• Tourist attractions in England visited by my friends
• Photos before 2005
• Italian restaurants in Montana my friends have liked
• My Friends who work at SlashGear

Use Cases

Those of you who just started using Facebook in the last few years – or even the last few days – probably have been frustrated that there’s not a single search bar that’s been able to do what Graph Search is suggesting here this week. With such a massive treasure trove of information in Facebook, it was only a matter of time before the developers on Facebook’s team revealed something such as this.

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You’ll be able to use this tool to discover restaurants – search for restaurants in your area that your friends have liked (or have just been to). Use this tool to find friends who may want to go cycling with you in the Spring (friends of friends or friends you never knew liked their bike!) If you’re heading to a new city you’ve never been to before, search for photos of your friends in that city and ask those friends for advice on what to see!

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This is an exploration tool as Facebook presents it. We’ll have to see later this year what it’ll become in the hands of the public.

Privacy

Your privacy in all of this remains the same, or so Facebook notes – this being true so far as your privacy settings are still in place, and nothing you’ve made private is able to be searched for or seen. If you’d rather not have someone realizing you’ve been to Italy 20 times over the course of 10 years and are only able to hide this fact due to the difficulty someone would have putting together all your albums at once before Graph Search exists, you might want to do something about it.

Facebook took the time (above) to show you how Privacy works with Graph Search, publishing the video you see here before the special event revealing Graph Search was even complete. Make sure you watch the whole thing and put your mind at ease! For those of you that want to go through your history piece by piece to take out the old connections you’re not proud of or otherwise want to destroy, hit up your [Activity Log] and chop away!

When Graph Search will be available to you

At the time of this article’s publishing, there’s a website at http://www.facebook.com/about/graphsearch where you can hit a button that’ll add you to a waiting list. This waiting list will be addressed person by person, giving each of them an invite to Graph Search beta. Zuckerberg himself noted that the service would be rolled out to users over the coming weeks and months at a speed relative to the interest they see in its use and any problems they encounter as it rolls out.

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Be sure to check our our full collection of SlashGear 101 posts in our lovely SlashGear 101 tag portal right this minute – get educated!


SlashGear 101: What is Facebook Graph Search? is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook partners up with Bing to provide search results in Graph Search

Facebook just introduced its newest feature, Graph Search, where you’re provided with specific, catered searches of friends on Facebook and their respective interests and likes. However, CEO Mark Zuckerberg just pulled a “one more thing” trick on us and announced that Facebook is partnering up with Bing to bring web search results to Graph Search.

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Zuckerberg already described the difference between Facebook’s Graph Search and traditional web search, noting that the two are completely different as far as what kind of results appear, but to cover all bases, Facebook is partnering up with Microsoft’s Bing, which will provide web search results for search queries that aren’t in Graph Search.

Essentially, the Bing partnership will allow Facebook to slightly jump into the web search realm without fully committing itself. So, for queries about the local weather, users will get relevant results in Graph Search thanks to Bing. Zuckerberg says he doesn’t see Facebook as an exclusive web search tool for users, but the company wants to “provide good search results in Graph Search.”

The beta version of Graph Search is rolling out today, and it’ll start slow. Then, as more info is indexed, the feature will roll out more widely and quickly. As of right now, there’s no word on how slowly or quickly the beta will roll out — execs say that it all depends how well the beta program is going. For now, there don’t seem to be any plans for an API, but Zuckerberg didn’t completely rule it out.


Facebook partners up with Bing to provide search results in Graph Search is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook partners with Bing to deliver web results in Graph Search

Facebook partners with Bing to deliver web results in Graph Search

Social media giant Facebook just announced that its new Graph Search tool will also incorporate results from the wider web thanks to a partnership with Microsoft and Bing. Obviously, people won’t flock to Graph Search if it’s capabilities are limited to where your friends live and the restaurants they like. Zuckerberg and crew will have to provide some way to find information that Facebook simply can’t provide (for now…). That’s where Bing comes in, with its ability to pull data like current weather conditions — something your old frat buddies are probably useless to provide. This is hardly the first time Redmond has gotten cozy with Facebook. The social network is integrated rather closely with the search engine and Bing has been providing web search results on Facebook for sometime. Now there’es just less of a wall between the two when looking at results. With Graph Search, Bing results are put front and center, with some social context. For a bit more information from Microsoft’s perspective hit up the more coverage link.

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Zuckerberg describes difference between Graph Search and Web Search

Remember Facebook’s “come and see what we’re building” event? Yeah, that’s today. And the first thing that CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled was a new feature called Graph Search. It essentially will give people the power and tools to take a cut of the graph to form any query they want. However, Zuckerberg was adamant that Graph Search was not the same thing as traditional web search.

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Currently, there are 1 billion people, 240 billion photos, and 1 trillion connections in the Social Graph, and indexing all that content to make it easily searchable is obviously quite a challenge. Zuckerberg says that most of the content on Facebook isn’t public, so users want a way to search for things that have been shared with them. This is where Graph Search comes into play.

Plus, Graph Search will be “privacy aware”, and the platform was built with privacy in mind. Currently, 10% of Facebook’s computing power is spent on privacy, and we’re guessing that will only increase once Graph Search goes live. The biggest difference that Zuckerberg mentions between Graph Search and general web search is that web search just searches for anything and everything related to the search term, while Graph Search is very specific and catered towards the user.

Graph Search is meant to answer very specific questions, like “Who are my friends in Chicago?”, and you can search for other things, like the music your friends listen to, restaurants your friends like, or the movies and TV shows your friends enjoy watching. You can also combine searches, like “friends who live in Chicago and like Breaking Bad.”

In the end, Graph Search is essentially a very-specific way of searching that involves the people who you’re connected with on Facebook, and makes it easy to find friends who share similar interests as you do. The new tool will even let you find a friend of a friend that you met at a party, and Graph Search will let you connect with them right away.


Zuckerberg describes difference between Graph Search and Web Search is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook Graph Search revealed at special live event

This week the folks at Facebook have revealed a third of three pillars the describe as the “Three Pillars of the Facebook ecosystem”, that being Graph Search. Mark Zuckerberg himself described this new area of excellence for the Facebook universe, showing the first two as being the Facebook News Feed and the Facebook Timeline. Zuckerberg let it be known that Graph Search is anything if not “web search” – its just a bit different than that.

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According to Zuckerberg at the special event held this week surrounding this new Graph Search (and so much more), he made it clear that Facebook is “not indexing the web” and that they’re instead “indexing our map of the graph, which is really big and constantly changing. Almost a million new people every day. 240 billion photos, 1 billion people, 1 trillion connections.” The connections that tie each Facebook user to one another is what you’ll be working with now.

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With Graph Search, each Facebook user is still private. Each piece of content – connections included, has “it’s own audience” and, according to the presentation made this week: “most content is not public.” The only content that can be searched by any Facebook user is content that has been shared with that particular person. Some search terms you’ll be able to work with in the near future are:

Music my friends like.
Restaurants in Chicago.
Photos of my friends in 2009.
Friends who like Fencing in my home state.
Photos of me and my wife.
People who have been product managers and who have been founders.
Friends of friends who are single men in San Francisco.
Photos of my friends taken in Paris.

And a whole heck of a lot more. Stick around in our big Facebook tag portal to see all the rest of the action coming down from Palo Alto, California today, and get ready for the Graph, Graph Search, and everything in-between rather soon!


Facebook Graph Search revealed at special live event is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.