Google Search will no longer tell you that the Holocaust didn’t happen
After weeks of criticism, Google’s search engine will no longer suggest to visitors that the Holocaust never happened. As Digital Trends reports,
it appears to have removed a result for the query “did the Holocaust
happen” from white supremacist site Stormfront, which previously
appeared at the top of the first page. The removal follows a smaller
change that simply ranked the page a bit lower.
“Google was built on providing people with high-quality
and authoritative results for their search queries,” the company said in
a statement to multiple outlets. “We strive to give users a breadth of
diverse content from variety of sources and we’re committed to the
principle of a free and open web. Judging which pages on the web best
answer a query is a challenging problem and we don’t always get it
right.” Initially, Google had said the results would stay as they were,
although the Stormfront page was not endorsed by Google. “We do not
remove content from our search results, except in very limited cases
such as illegal content, malware and violations of our webmaster
guidelines,” a spokesperson told Forbes at
the time. Those exceptions didn’t apply to “Top 10 reasons why the
Holocaust didn’t happen,” as the top-ranked page was called.
The controversy over these results has highlighted the
gap between Google’s dual existence as a neutral web index and a
comprehensive repository for facts. The more Google emphasizes its digital assistant role,
the more these kind of results feel like surfacing dangerously
inaccurate answers to literal questions, not simply listing pages with
objectionable content in response to searches about them. Unfortunately,
as Gizmodo points out,
it’s still willing to spit out some ugly results for other loaded
queries about race and religion — although some of them seem to have
been cleaned up as well.
The article was published on : theverge
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