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GetMo UK - Google Launches a Mobile Website Optimisation Campaign in the UK

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GetMo UK – Google Launches a Mobile Website Optimisation Campaign in the UK

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

Google has launched a new campaign designed to help businesses optimise their websites for mobile devices, its called GetMo. Yet again showing the level of importance Google is placing on Mobile and how imperative it is for new sites to be Mobile accessible and discoverable.

The New Google initiative is based on a recent Google HowToGoMo U.S. Campaign, and features an online test environment, developer guides and resources and case studies to help webmasters and developers optimise their sites for mobile platforms.
By helping its users to improve mobile compatibility Google will be able to improve the quality and diversity of its mobile search results, providing its users with a higher quality service. This in turn will increase the advertising potential of mobile search and increase the Google’s Mobile Market Share.

“As the smart phone explosion continues, more consumers are looking to engage with brands by searching for them on their mobile phone,” said Ian Carrington, head of European mobile advertising at Google. “Yet the majority of businesses don’t have mobile sites or a mobile strategy for connecting with them.”

Google have acknowledged the importance of mobile search and has noted a 400 percent increase in the past two years. With over 84% of UK consumers claiming to have used there mobile device to research local information, the Mobile marketplace just cannot be ignored. With an increase in the quality of search results Google is set to dramatically improve the user experience, delivering more refined and trusted result, which will increase mobile usage on both tablet and handset.

Article by Creative SEO

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Google not responsible for defamatory search results rules a UK court

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

A UK judges has ruled that Google cannot be held responsible for defamatory words appearing in keyword based search results within the Google Search Engine.

Justice David Eaby explained that Google cannot be classified as a publisher as keyword searched are carried out by the end user and Google does not choose the terms to be searched.

The UK has extremely strict libel laws and as a result the case between Google and Metropolitan International Schools Limited (MIS) has been watched extremely closely from all over the world. MIS are a British company offering distance learning courses trading under the names SkillsTrain, Train2Game and Scheidegger MIS.

MIS attempted to Sue Google UK, Google Inc and a forum and bulletin board company called Designtechnica Corp. Incorporated which is based in Oregon. The company hosts a bulletin board service which has allegedly hosted defamatory comments and complaints about MIS.

“When a snippet is thrown up on the user’s screen in response to his search, it points him in the direction of an entry somewhere on the Web that corresponds, to a greater or lesser extent, to the search terms he has typed in,” Eady said. “It is for him to access or not, as he chooses.”

In a statement Google said that the verdict reinforces the principle that search engines are not responsible for third party published content.

The judge “made clear that if someone feels they have been defamed by material on a Web site then they should address their complaint to the person who actually wrote and published the material, and not a search engine, which simply provides a searchable index of content on the Internet,” it said.

A full copy of the judgement can be viewed here: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/1765.html

Article by Creative SEO – Search Engine Optimisation

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Google removes UK pages button from search during a new phase of Testing.

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Google UK Search seems to be undergoing a new period of testing. It has become apparent that the “pages from the UK” radio button, under the Google search bar, has been disappearing for periods of time. This has lead to wide speculation from within the Search Marketing community. Does this mean the end of UK Serps or are Google going to remove the radio button and focus on providing location based results using user IP addresses?

Earlier in the month Google were reported to have been integrating international search results into UK Serps as part of a testing process, it’s looking more and more likely that this was part of an initial test into the use of IP specific results. Although this is not new technology it does seem the most logical explanation and subsequently you can understand why the radio button would become obsolete and be removed. 

 Google UK Pages From

 If Google was to take this route it would still need to offer its users a way of being able to search Google internationally for products or services, unless international results were given less weight and UK results were served ahead of international on generic keywords. If this was possible it could potentially offer a much more relevant user experience while still allowing users to find international products by using country specific keywords.

We will just have to wait and see what happens, but one thing is for sure, something big is coming!

Article Writen By Creative SEO

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Google Use Search Trends to Track Flu Outbreak in the U.S.A.

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

As soon as the leaves fall from the trees the inevitable flu virus starts to spread. The symptoms are often the same, head-aches, coughs, fevers, sore throats and muscular pains. Google noticed an increase in the use of search terms for flu related symptoms. The data directly related to known outbreak areas and the results were in real time as the searches were taking place while someone was ill. This has given rise to Google creating an early warning system which actually tracks the spread of flu outbreaks across the USA. The system is called Google Flu Trends and it can be found at www.google.org/flutrends .

Tests of the new system by the company’s philanthropic unit have so far suggested that the system may be able to detect regional outbreaks 7 to 10 days before they are reported by the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

It’s being reported that this amazing tool could help public health experts increase their response time to a potential flu outbreak, allowing the vulnerable and weak to be inoculated before the levels of risk become too high. This could really save lives and stop the spread of disease.

“The earlier the warning, the earlier prevention and control measures can be put in place, and this could prevent cases of influenza,” said Lyn Finelli, lead for surveillance at the influenza division of the CDC.

“In theory, we could use this stream of information to learn about other disease trends as well,” said Philip M. Polgreen, assistant professor of medicine and epidemiology at the University of Iowa and a co-author of the study based on Yahoo’s data.

A website called www.whoissick.org has been trying to do this very same thing by inviting people to report about their ailments. The results are superimposed on a map. The problem is that they do not have the levels of online exposure that Google receives and as a result they have a very small level of visitor traffic.

Google.org has also backed the HealthMap project which is affiliated with the Children’s Hospital in Boston and Harvard Medical School. The system scour the web for news, articles, blog posts and electronic newsletter to a worldwide create map of new diseases.

Google Flu Trends uses the world’s largest source of user generated data in order to track and map Flu trends. As with all things Google, if this pilot project is successful it could see the start of a new age of preventative medicine, allowing information to fight the spread of disease.

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