Google is helping the entertainment industry fight online piracy by preventing users from seeing "piracy related" keywords in their autocomplete list.
This change is part of a series of measures designed to appease the entertainment industry, measures which include more promotion of legal YouTube content, a more streamlined DMCA takedown process that will also extend DMCA complaints to other Google products such as Blogger, and a crackdown on infringing websites on their AdSense advertising network.
The autocomplete changes will add key terms such as "torrent" to Google's existing "naughty words" list, which already removed controversial terms (such as sex related terms, as well as possible defaming terms) from the autocomplete function. The autocomplete function is now more important than ever due to Google's new Instant search feature, which produces and refreshes search results as you type, the results shown as you're typing are based on popular autocomplete matches.
Users can still search for torrents on Google, and autocomplete may still show search phrases with "torrent" and other piracy related terms if the users types enough characters (for example, typing "megamind torr" may bring up "megamind torrent" as a possible autocomplete choice).
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This change is part of a series of measures designed to appease the entertainment industry, measures which include more promotion of legal YouTube content, a more streamlined DMCA takedown process that will also extend DMCA complaints to other Google products such as Blogger, and a crackdown on infringing websites on their AdSense advertising network.
The autocomplete changes will add key terms such as "torrent" to Google's existing "naughty words" list, which already removed controversial terms (such as sex related terms, as well as possible defaming terms) from the autocomplete function. The autocomplete function is now more important than ever due to Google's new Instant search feature, which produces and refreshes search results as you type, the results shown as you're typing are based on popular autocomplete matches.
Users can still search for torrents on Google, and autocomplete may still show search phrases with "torrent" and other piracy related terms if the users types enough characters (for example, typing "megamind torr" may bring up "megamind torrent" as a possible autocomplete choice).
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