Google disabled its Programmable Search Engine (ProSE) product on several adult sites on Tuesday, after ad industry trade publications sensationalized a report claiming that ads for major mainstream brands were appearing alongside pornographic and other controversial content.
In an unusually candid disclosure of their behind-the-scene activities to “eradicate all pornography,” leading U.S. anti-porn organization NCOSE (formerly known as Morality in Media) admitted yesterday in an official press statement that they have been holding “ongoing conversations with Google about search engine results.”
PIMPROLL's investment in .xxx domain Porn.xxx appears to be paying off. Porn.xxx just landed on the first Google search page in the U.S. for the keyword "porn."
Google has announced a change to its search algorithm that reduces rankings for “low-quality” websites impacting about 11.8 percent of its U.S. user queries.
Privacy advocates are worried that My Google Search, a new service that keeps a detailed history of a surfer’s search activities, will make users’ online behavior available to too many prying eyes.
As the Internet's most important search engine and one of the few remaining viable indexes of adult content, Google is now the number one target for adult webmasters everywhere.