A US web firm is preparing to launch an ambitious Internet search
engine that it hopes will eventually track down the names of the
world's six billion people.
Spock.com says it has already indexed 100 million people and is adding
a million names per day on the invitation-only, beta version of its
website, which will be made available to the public in mid-August.
The emergence of people search engines has sparked concerns over
privacy rights. The sites Wink.com and Zoominfo.com already have
200,000 and 37,000 profiles, respectively.
These websites seek to carve their own territory in the search engine
world dominated by Internet giant Google, which already has the
distinction of becoming a verb, as anyone who has "googled" information
would know.
"We are a search engine organizing information about people," Spock.com
co-founder Jay Bhatti told AFP.
"How Google allows you to type anything and gives you a web document
result, we give you results around people," he said. "That's how we
differentiate ourselves from other search applications, because we are
solely focused on people."
The founders of Spock.com, which has been under development since 2006
in Redwood City, California, hope the website will eventually provide a
search result for everyone in the world.
To index individuals, Spock.com scours through social networking
websites such as MySpace, Friendster and Bebo.
But it also allows web surfers to add information about individuals to
help Spock.com compile full profiles.
"We try to index people, but the machine is not enough to understand
all the data," Bhatti said. "That's where the community comes in. As an
user of Spock, you will be able to add keywords, pictures, and to
upload pages about people."
Spock.com website has a system to filter out false information that
could destroy the website's credibility, Bhatti said.
"Your profile will go through a strict process based on quality
insurance to make sure it's not a fake profile," he said.
Each Spock.com user will have an "authority ranking" that can go down
if the information provided for a profile is rejected.
"If you start bad behavior, of if people start to pull down what you
put on Spock, that authority ranking will go lower, and it might get
deleted over time," Bhatti said.
Spock.com, which has secured seven million dollars in financing by
venture capital firms, will be available for free and will make money
through advertising.
Amid concerns over privacy rights on the Internet, Bhatti said
Spock.com allows a person to have his or her profile removed and ask
the website to determine where the information came from.
Internet privacy rights groups are concerned about the possibility of
abuse with these websites,
"More and more of our lives appear online, or are being organized
online, said Derek Slater, an activism coordinator at Electronic
Frontier Foundation, a privacy rights group.
"It can be very annoying to see so much of someone online, potentially
without putting that (information) online oneself," Slater said.
People search engines have little to worry about legally. As third
parties, they are not held accountable under US law for putting on
their websites information provided by others.
"People are posting information about themselves, so they should expect
it can be found," Slater said. "They have to be aware that it's more
and more easy to store and retain information for a long period of
time."
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Search engine revs up to look for billions of names
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