The Denver Post

An explanatio­n of how Google search results work

- By Ryan Nakashima

Political leanings don’t factor into Google’s search algorithm. But the authoritat­iveness of page links that the algorithm spits out and the perception of thousands of human raters do.

In a tweet early Tuesday, President Donald Trump called Google’s search results “rigged,” claiming that searches of “Trump news” only showed reporting by what he called the “Fake News Media.”

Google responded, saying in a statement: “We don’t bias our results toward any political ideology.”

Here’s a look at how Google returns results when you search for things, such as general news and even news about Trump.

What Google’s bots do

At its core, Google indexes the entire web — some hundreds of billions of pages — using programs called web crawlers. These bots collect descriptio­ns of pages and their incoming links and save this informatio­n in Google’s data centers. When you search on Google, it scans this index — which is more than 100 million gigabytes large — to quickly provide what it thinks are the most relevant results.

What humans do

Search results are created by an algorithm that has been fine-tuned to incorporat­e the reviews of some 10,000-plus employees commonly known as search quality raters.

These individual­s follow a set of guidelines to judge the quality of search results, particular­ly when Google engineers are considerin­g changes to the search algorithm.

Last year, Google engineers tweaked the search algorithm 2,400 times based on the results of more than 270,000 experiment­s, rater reviews and live user tests.

When it comes to judging the quality of the top news stories that Google displays, three major issues come into play, according to Google: Freshness, relevancy and authoritat­iveness. Google’s crawlers scan pages more frequently if they change regularly.

What is authority?

Raters measure the authoritat­iveness, expertise and the trustworth­iness of the sources that appear in search results. Google suggests that raters consider recommenda­tions from profession­al societies and experts to determine a page’s authority.

Examples of high-quality news sources include ones that have won Pulitzer Prizes, that clearly label advertisin­g as such, and that garner positive reviews from users. Pages that spread hate, cause harm or misinform or deceive users are given low ratings, Google says.

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