He Said and She Said and They Said
He Said and She Said and They Said
Google patent looks for quotations from entities and the people mentioned in the quotes.
H/T Bill Slawski
Originally shared by Bill Slawski
Google was recently granted a patent that talks about quotation search at Google based upon the entities being quoted, and the entities that are the subject matter of those quotes. The patent also tells us about the ranking signals involving how quotes would be ranked in search results.
https://gofishdigital.com/searching-quotes/
Google patent looks for quotations from entities and the people mentioned in the quotes.
H/T Bill Slawski
Originally shared by Bill Slawski
Google was recently granted a patent that talks about quotation search at Google based upon the entities being quoted, and the entities that are the subject matter of those quotes. The patent also tells us about the ranking signals involving how quotes would be ranked in search results.
https://gofishdigital.com/searching-quotes/
I thought this already been done for "exact match" search years ago?
ReplyDeleteArthur Morehead Check with Bill Slawski
ReplyDeleteNot sure what you mean, Arthur. This is a search for people's quotations, without anything to do with exact match domain names, if that is what you are referring to. The two things are different, very much so.
ReplyDeleteNot for domains but for phrases and keywords Like "oil paintings" "acrylic paintings" i.e. Obviously I have this confused with the article/patent, regardless it all pretty much the same
ReplyDeleteTrying to Keep it all separated will drive you mad, I just need to keep painting lmao
ReplyDeleteIt sounds a little like you are talking about phrase-based indexing, which describes how phrases might appear upon pages that predict the presence of other terms and phrases. A quotation search would be one that actually allows people to search for something that specific people have actually said about specific topics. They are very different things.
ReplyDelete