Cuil, a new search engine, opened for business on Monday,
boasting an index of 120 billion Web pages, "three times more than
any other search engine."
Google as if pre-briefed on today's announcement, on Friday
said that its index had reached 1 trillion URLs, though not all of
them lead to unique Web pages.
Founded by husband-and-wife team Tom Costello and Anna Patterson, a
search-engine researcher from Stanford University and a Google
technical lead, respectively, Cuil aims to rank the relevance of
search results by content analysis rather than by popularity. It's
an obvious swipe at Google, which treats Web links as popular votes
in weighing Web page relevance for a given query.
"Our team approaches search differently," said Patterson, president
and COO of Cuil, in a statement. "By leveraging our expertise in
search architecture and relevance methods, we've built a more
efficient yet richer search engine from the ground up. The Internet
has grown and we think it's time search did, too."
For Cuil, pronounced "Cool" rather than "Quill," there's a
separation between search and surveillance. Whereas Google records
information about its users and their searches to improve the user
experience and to deliver more relevant search results and ads,
Cuil remembers nothing.
Cuil's privacy policy actually promises privacy: "When you search
with Cuil, we do not collect any personally identifiable
information, period. We have no idea who sends queries: not by
name, not by IP address, and not by cookies (more on this later).
Your search history is your business, not ours."
Cuil is not the first search engine to offer search privacy;
Ixquick has done so since June 2006. Ixquick, as a metasearch
engine, gets results from other search engines. Cuil, however,
offers new search technology and a column-based search results
interface.
It remains to be seen whether computer users care about privacy
enough to alter their search habits.
In terms of performance, Cuil is responsive and looks good, at
least when the service is up. The search startup was down at least
twice on Monday. "Due to overwhelming interest, our Cuil servers
are running a bit hot right now," a Cuil error message said just
before noon Pacific time on Monday. "The search engine is
momentarily unavailable as we add more capacity."
But Cuil leaves something to be desired in terms of the relevance
of the images it places beside search results. "We do our best to
take images from Web pages that accurately reflect the content of
the Web site," Cuil's FAQs document explains. "Many Web sites are
full of images, so we use advanced algorithms to determine the best
image to show the user."
Advanced though they may be, Cuil's algorithms aren't yet accurate
when it comes to placing images with links to related content. An
ego-search for my name, for example, used a CNNMoney.com graphic to
link to a blog that published a review of a book I wrote.
Google News has had similar issues, associating unrelated text and
images. But such inaccuracies seem to be increasingly rare.
Though Cuil may aspire to challenge Google, it has some basic
service and accuracy issues to deal with first. After that, it can
join Exalead, Hakia, Mahalo, Powerset, and Wikia in their quests to
challenge the big-league search engines.