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Comment by gkbrk

2 years ago

When I do a Google search in an Incognito tab for "how to download youtube videos", the first two results I get are the following.

- https://msunduziassociation.online/perfect-online-videos/

- https://gssaction.org/program-all-in-one-media-solutions/

I would certainly put those in the "Terrible" category like the author.

My top 2 (incognito) are blog posts from pcmag.com and zdnet.com listing 5 ways to download YT videos. Maybe it's blogspam, but the listed services seem valid at first glance.

savefrom.net is the 5th result (2nd page underneath 5 youtube videos)

Edit: This is from the US. If i had to guess, these are regional differences. What country are you in?

I'm curious: what is the rationale for "in an incognito tab" being part of the test harness?

It seems pretty arbitrary to me to disable one of the key features - in this case personalization - of the software being evaluated.

Or is the evaluation not between "search engines" but rather "search engines without personalization"? If so, then this restriction does make sense. But that is not the evaluation that "normal users" are interested in.

  • > I'm curious: what is the rationale for "in an incognito tab" being part of the test harness?

    It's the closest we can easily get to the 'average user experience'. Someone who has a long account/cookie history with Google has plausibly trained the site to return more relevant results through implicit user-curation of avoiding obvious-to-them SEO-spam on other queries.

    If we posit that every user eventually trains Google to avoid SEO spam, then this begs the question of why Google(/Bing) don't eliminate the SEO spam in the first place.

    Besides that, it's not obvious why search engine personalization should dramatically change the basic utility of search results. We should expect personalization to mostly address ambiguities: is 'the best way to set up tables' asking about furniture assembly/carpentry or SQL? None of the author's queries for this article supported such ambiguities, and besides that the results returned (see the final appendix) aren't[†] valid answers to a different interpretation of the question.

    [†] -- I think I'd quibble about the 'adblock' question, since a reasonable person might still find an adblocker that works but participates in the 'acceptable ads program' to be sufficient.

    • > It's the closest we can easily get to the 'average user experience'.

      Maybe it's the closest we can get (though I doubt it), but it definitely isn't close enough to tell us anything about the "average user experience".

      The average user has been using google for years, without taking any steps to avoid personalization. An incognito session (on a browser / machine / network that is probably fingerprinted...) is pretty much the opposite of that typical usage pattern.

      I recognize that just writing a blog post or comment on HN is not a research project so needs to do something quick, but I think it mostly invalidates the experiment. What would get closer would be to devise a few user personas and attempt to search and browse for awhile within those personas before trying the experiment. Or much better yet, put together a focus group comprised of real people within the personas you're interested in, and run the experiment using their real accounts.

      > If we posit that every user eventually trains Google to avoid SEO spam

      I don't think it's that, I think it's that every user trains it to return results more likely to improve the metric of "more likely to click one of the links", and I think that makes it more, not less, likely that they see what most of us here consider to be spam.

      But I don't know! Maybe that's not what this experimental setup would show. But it would be a lot more enlightening than a setup using a fresh incognito window, which reflects the usage pattern of a proportion of search queries that is a tiny rounding error above zero.

      3 replies →

    • > It's the closest we can easily get to the 'average user experience'

      You wouldn’t be really taking the average here though would you? You would be capture the experience someone might have if they were in incognito, using google for the very first time, or using google on another device for the every first time, but not the “average experience”.

  • Google gets paid when you click on an ad. It's reasonable to guess you're not going to click on too many scam software ads with your software engineer profile. So naturally you'll be showed less of them.

    In this thread we can see people both using incognito tabs seeing different results, it will only become worse to compare if they are using personalized results.

I get savefrom.net in both Incognito and normal tabs, uBlock or not. I have no idea why you get crap results that are somehow different. uBlock doesn't change google results in Firefox for me at all. It seems you get crap added, not removed.

  • I searched with Chrome, perhaps that's the difference. Firefox also blocks some ads out-of-the-box even without uBlock, so maybe it was already blocked.

    It could also be related to targeting, like time zone, location, IP address, age group etc.

    • I get the same search result in Edge as in Firefox. Can't test in Chrome, but something seems strange.

Did you click either of those links?

Both seem to do the job of downloading a youtube link to mp4 for free.

  • Did you click either of those links? They are not YouTube video downloaders, they just link to another downloader. There is nowhere on those links to even put a YouTube URL.

    Are you seriously suggesting that a website with the following "About us" with only a link to another YouTube video downloader is itself a good YouTube video downloader?

    > Good Samaritan Support Action is to reawaken the Body of Christ to receiving the extravagant love of The Father, as well as our call to respond to this love by loving God with all of our hearts, souls, strengths, and minds. In order for people’s hearts to be linked to the heart of our Heavenly Father, we want to foster and facilitate the establishment of a culture of love in our churches and ministries.