Unstoppable Domains — Expired Auctions

Interesting experiment and got a chuckle from the last line

SpaceshipSpaceship
Watch

timmaay

Established Member
Impact
22
Brrreeeport: Scovel's Keyword Experiment by Jason L. Miller of WebProNews

What started out as an apparent debunking of an A-list blogger conspiracy has evolved into a made-up word shedding light on the search world. Microsoft's controversial employee blogger, Robert Scoble, invited readers to use the word ‘brrreeeport" on their blogs as a way to get "Z-list" blogs noticed, while testing the reach of the various search engines.

Scoble's snarky experiment was in response to the notion of the supposed Blog Club, where A-list bloggers only link to each other and thereby keeping lesser-known bloggers out of the loop of recognition in typical Critical Theory style.

The invention of the word "brrreeeport" and the invitation to put on a person's blog created a vacuum to Technorati's blog listings and popular tags. Very soon, the term was listed at the top of Technorati's most searched word. Two days later, "brrreeeport" is out ranking searches for information on the Dick Cheney hunting accident, and is third on the list of tags.

The original purpose of the experiment worked. Technorati returns some 487 results for the word, leading searchers to blogs they may have never encountered. But the memetic results led to another exploration of the efficacy of various search engines.

At the time this article was written, a search on Technorati returns 487 results; Google's Blog Search: 452; Feedster: 569. On that information alone, it would appear that Google Blog search is missing an element the other blog engines aren't. But the more interesting question Scoble brings up on Wednesday, when he compares results of Google, MSN, and Yahoo!

Google's main page (as of present) says it found 22,400 results for the word. Scrolling through, however, there are only 353 results after similar entries are omitted. Re-searching with omitted results included returns only 979 results, as the other 21,000 are apparently inaccessible.

Scoble calls this an example of "lies that are going on on search engines." Scoble reports that MSN returns over 1, 369 entries (though my results continue to say 221), and Yahoo! returns over 1,010. The varying numbers does bring up an interesting question as to the veracity of any given search engine's reach.

One thing's for certain, many are taking advantage of the memetic appeal of the word, "brrreeeport." Bloggers have committed to throwing the word onto their blog posts. Even the famous New York City gay and lesbian publication The Village Voice has thrown it into a headline for an unrelated music review.

There are even sponsored links for the word on Google and Yahoo!'s SERPs. On Yahoo!'s system though, it's not the exact word, but ads served up based on similar keywords.

Whatever the deeper implications, the immediate benefit was for Z-list bloggers who otherwise may have never been found. Someone's even reserved the brrreeeport domain.

About the Author:
Jason is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business.
 
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Unstoppable Domains — AI StorefrontUnstoppable Domains — AI Storefront
I don't quite get it, should I create any new word so that I can be indexed better?


timmaay said:
Brrreeeport: Scovel's Keyword Experiment by Jason L. Miller of WebProNews

What started out as an apparent debunking of an A-list blogger conspiracy has evolved into a made-up word shedding light on the search world. Microsoft's controversial employee blogger, Robert Scoble, invited readers to use the word ‘brrreeeport" on their blogs as a way to get "Z-list" blogs noticed, while testing the reach of the various search engines.

Scoble's snarky experiment was in response to the notion of the supposed Blog Club, where A-list bloggers only link to each other and thereby keeping lesser-known bloggers out of the loop of recognition in typical Critical Theory style.

The invention of the word "brrreeeport" and the invitation to put on a person's blog created a vacuum to Technorati's blog listings and popular tags. Very soon, the term was listed at the top of Technorati's most searched word. Two days later, "brrreeeport" is out ranking searches for information on the Dick Cheney hunting accident, and is third on the list of tags.

The original purpose of the experiment worked. Technorati returns some 487 results for the word, leading searchers to blogs they may have never encountered. But the memetic results led to another exploration of the efficacy of various search engines.

At the time this article was written, a search on Technorati returns 487 results; Google's Blog Search: 452; Feedster: 569. On that information alone, it would appear that Google Blog search is missing an element the other blog engines aren't. But the more interesting question Scoble brings up on Wednesday, when he compares results of Google, MSN, and Yahoo!

Google's main page (as of present) says it found 22,400 results for the word. Scrolling through, however, there are only 353 results after similar entries are omitted. Re-searching with omitted results included returns only 979 results, as the other 21,000 are apparently inaccessible.

Scoble calls this an example of "lies that are going on on search engines." Scoble reports that MSN returns over 1, 369 entries (though my results continue to say 221), and Yahoo! returns over 1,010. The varying numbers does bring up an interesting question as to the veracity of any given search engine's reach.

One thing's for certain, many are taking advantage of the memetic appeal of the word, "brrreeeport." Bloggers have committed to throwing the word onto their blog posts. Even the famous New York City gay and lesbian publication The Village Voice has thrown it into a headline for an unrelated music review.

There are even sponsored links for the word on Google and Yahoo!'s SERPs. On Yahoo!'s system though, it's not the exact word, but ads served up based on similar keywords.

Whatever the deeper implications, the immediate benefit was for Z-list bloggers who otherwise may have never been found. Someone's even reserved the brrreeeport domain.

About the Author:
Jason is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business.
 
0
•••
0
•••
..great piece of research, roflmao

..1650 on Yahoo, 0 on Google philippines, wonder if he's tracking it's world tour ...stillroflmao
 
0
•••
timmaay said:
Someone's even reserved the brrreeeport domain.

About the Author:
Jason is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business.
People will register anything.
I have a site www.hiqformmail.com which I use to distribute and support my (Open source, free) php formmail script. The site gets around 30 or so uniques/day and I discovered someone reg'd typos of the name. I doubt they are making much.

Also, there is a local credit union with a very strange name (Mazuma) using the .org. All other ext are parked. I can understand the .com but the others ?????
 
0
•••
..still 0 returns on google philippines, forgive this turning into a little sub-experiment as i always suspected the engines didn't have common data-bases

..however it's hit the BBC, 19,000 returns now...still roflmao
 
0
•••
Barefoottech said:
And someone also registered the .info

Intersting article! - ^^ Out of curiosity Barefoottech do you get much traffic?
 
0
•••
I think all major tlds are gone... Hehe. Some really have too much $$$.
 
0
•••
On whois.sc it only shows the .com, .net, and .org are taken
http://whois.sc/brrreeeport.com

I better get the .info, .biz, and .us befoer they are snatched up. :hehe:
 
0
•••
EbookLover said:
On whois.sc it only shows the .com, .net, and .org are taken
http://whois.sc/brrreeeport.com

I better get the .info, .biz, and .us befoer they are snatched up. :hehe:

.info is not only registered but also eveloped: http://brrreeeport.info

.biz is gone early today (registered probably by some kid at Yahoo): http://whois.sc/brrreeeport.biz

.us is gone late yesterday: http://whois.sc/brrreeeport.us

Too bad, eh? Nowhere to spend your hard-earned cash? :)

Joking, joking... One of the worst domains, imho.
 
0
•••
That microsoft guy probably got the .com so that they can say that in the article.

ps. don't ever trust anyone from microsoft.
 
0
•••
Hi Timmaay
I had to respond to this post. It was the last line that got me "Someone's even reserved the brrreeeport domain." Yep, thad be me. It was the first thought that entered my mind when I read the news story of this invented word. I purchased brrreeeport.biz within a few minutes of absorbing what significance it could have in terms of web traffic. My only regret is that I didn't get to the registrar quick enough to buy brrreeeport.com. I've owned this domain name for 4 days now, the adds revenue generated from it has already paid for it. I've decided that I am going to donate the adds revenue and domain name sale revenue profits (if the sale happens) to the Katrina relief fund.
 
0
•••
Dynadot — .com TransferDynadot — .com Transfer

We're social

Spaceship
Domain Recover
CatchDoms
DomainEasy — Payment Flexibility
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back