Google: Sting proves Bing copied search results

Bing Microsoft search engine is a copy of the results of Google, the dominant search engine on the Internet, claimed responsibility.

Suspicious new competitor, Google's engineers on random results on their website a series of unlikely search terms such as "hiybbprqag. (Google has taken a nonsense word refers to the Los Angeles theater seating for its search engine.)

"In a few weeks of this experience, the results began to appear attached to Bing," Google said in a statement posted on its official blog on Tuesday.


Google has said it welcomes fair competition, but Bing made fun of "hits recycling of a competitor."

Bing does not deny that Google has taken into account when developing its own research findings, but suggested they were only one factor among others. They have also accused Google of turning a "quick-spy novel" that only affect the very unusual search terms.

"We use more than 1,000 different signals and functions in our ranking algorithm," Bing, vice-president Harry Shum said Tuesday, referring to the mathematical code that search engines use to make their results.

Each society develops its own search algorithms and the quality of results depends on them, making them the key to the effectiveness of a search engine.

Bing gets "a little piece" of data for the algorithm "some of our customers who opt to share anonymous data when they surf the Internet to help us improve the experience for all users," said Shum said many Internet companies used a "collective intelligence" gathered online in the same way.

He shrugged off sting of Google as "creative tactics of a competitor, and we compliment her hand again."

Google had more than 70% of U.S. search engine market by the end of August, when he ran second at Experian Hitwise, which controls the network traffic. Bing was just under 10%.

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