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Interestingly, you do see it on the first page in Bing and DuckDuckGo.

And while I did initially think that might be deliberate (because hey, why bother showing a link to your search engine on the first page of results in your search engine?), Bing and DuckDuckGo are listed when you search 'search engine' in those search engines.

Makes me wonder why Google doesn't list themself here.

I would assume results rankings are based on how many people click the link after searching the given terms. Probably no one searches "search engine" on Google then clicks on a link to google.com .
You're right: they all search "Google" and click Google.

Source: my mom.

Because google isn't really a search engine anymore.

Search engines just do dumb scraping of web pages. Google understands the webpage, so that when I look up "pancake recipe" it will just show me the steps to making pancakes rather than pointing me to websites with pancake recipes.

It's more like an "internet integrator".

Because that's how they're known, search engine is the colloquial term for them. It just seems disingenuous to call them that when their version of "search engine" is space-age while everyone else is palaeolithic era.

I thought it would spark an interesting discussion...

I'll vote for "contextual ad engine". I suspect the r&d dollars are mostly spent there now that there's little incentive to improve the organic results.

My definition of ad is broader than Google's though. I would include all their various widgets that are displacing organic search.

Whether or not that's right or wrong, when you use that word "because" you're saying those pancake recipes and similar features are causally related to the search results. So in particular, if Google removed those advanced features, Google would show up in the results of this query after the next reindexing.

Can you confirm that you're not just making a claim, but arguing that it affects the Google search results?

I hadn't intended to make that point with my comment, but I kinda like it - that google has advanced themselves so much that their own algorithms don't recognize them as a search engine any more.
Because google isn't really a search engine anymore

I think you might say Google isn't /just/ a search engine anymore. That said, it still very much returns results I search for. How it processes and indexes web content or displays those results doesn't seem restricted by the name "search engine".

That's got to be intentional, either as an amusing Easter egg, or to try and provide an example of their unbiased approach.

It certainly doesn't jive with the page rank approach.

I thnk it makes sense - probably not many people are linking to Google wth the anchor text "search engine". Or rather, they would be more likely to do so with ant other search engine.
Supposedly, Google got smarter some time back and relied more on contextual meaning of the linking page, as a whole, vs literal anchor text.
Say goodbye to Google: 14 alternative search engines is 3rd :)
Anti-trust probably...Google doesn't want to be seen as a monopoly even though it has a monopoly on search. One less lawsuit. No ads at the top also. Since the user is looking for a search engine on Google, it could mean they're looking for an alternative to Google.
if i was google's lawyers i'd argue search isn't an industry. they make money via ads so its in the ad industry. itsmy chief problem with thiels 0 to 1.
Software is the industry. Search is the subcategory. Ads are a part of the business implementation of the search product. You can't say every product is automatically in the ad industry because it generates revenue with ads. If you used this logic here, what of all the other products in different industries that generate their revenue with ads?
If you were Google's lawyer, then you would be a lawyer. From the content of your post, it seems clear you aren't one.
google, facebook, twitter all eating from the same pie: ad dollars.
What relevance does that statement have to anything here?
Actually, this comment reminded me of the following:

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2014-03-03/advertisi...

TLDR;: But in one sense, the advertising business is about as static and boring as they come. The industry has never grown in scale. Looking at data since the 1920s, the U.S. advertising industry has always been about 1 percent of U.S. GDP. It’s surprisingly consistent, mostly tracking between 1 percent and 1.4 percent—and averaging 1.29 percent.

So when you said, "...eating from the same pie", according to the linked article, they actually are.

tangentially related: thats why i love amazon's upside. retail means theyre swimming in way bigger pond than facebook/google (at least with their core products)
Considering how the US GDP grew in the 20th century, I would say holding on to 1% of that requires quite a lot of growth.
>Anti-trust probably...

What is the legal expertise that leads you to feel you know what the motivation for a massive corporation "probably" is? And why do you think that what we are seeing is deliberate?

You don't need legal expertise to make an educated guess, it's not like the parent said "This is obviously due to anti-trust regulations." Chill out.
If it's an educated guess, then what is it based on?
Even if I had legal expertise, I would include a disclaimer to take it as my opinion/guess...Google's lawyers could easily come at me with 'Hey how do you know this?' That's why I said 'probably'. Read Peter Thiel's "Zero to one" also. He explains it very well.
Speculation only, but this might be as much to prevent user confusion as for any other reason. Lots of people, especially lots of people who need to research the term "search engine", don't understand the difference between Google and an empty address bar. (That is, they haven't learned about addresses.) If they click a link and just go back to the same page, they'll be confused and frustrated.
Your suggestion implies that Google manually modifies the results it gives to some search queries.
They do. https://www.google.com/search?q=recursion Plenty of other examples.
Adding a "Did you mean..." is not modifying search results.
Could it be argued that spelling suggestions are still a search result in and of themselves?
No.
And even if it is, doesn't qualify for "manually modifies the result."
It's specific to that search term, and has absolutely nothing to do with the Google's general functionality. How is it not "manual"?

They clearly are able to create result sets crafted by their employees for specific search terms.

Google's general functionality includes suggestions. Spellcheck, even of more obscure search terms, doesn't require manual intervention. The system could easily determine that people who search for "pancales" follow up that search immediately with "pancakes".
Did you miss OP's example? Why would spellcheck give you the same word you just typed in? It's manual intervention.

They are clearly able to modify search results based on a rule system.

Why not? It may not be searching the web, but it certainly is still doing a search of possibly related words that you had intended to spell.
Yeah, but the easter eggs have to be manually curated. - Do a barrel roll - askew - anagram ... (the list is over at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Google_Easter_eggs)

These have to be manual. This does suggest that effects and probably the search results for specific terms can be manually modified

They plainly do one-off manipulations in some cases e.g. recursion.
No search results are being modified in the case you mentioned.
That depends on what you consider to be 'results'. If you consider the "Did you mean..." portion to be part of the results, then I think saying it was modified is a fair guess, since other search terms do not include themselves in the "Did you mean..." portion.
It's not obvious to me what the difference is between "manual" modification as opposed to "automated" modification. Surely all of them rely on looking at the search terms in an automated fashion and then deciding (or rather, weighing) what to return?
It's obvious to me. If Google changes the results of a search for "bounce" to include all the letters bouncing on the page, I can be pretty certain this was the one-time decision of a human being rather than something that was automated and, for lack of a better term, accidental.
I didn't say obvious cases are nonexistent. I merely said not all cases are obvious (and the non-obvious fraction is not negligible).
1. Yes obviously Google does "manually" modify results. Most often, for legal reasons.

2. Manual modification isn't necessary in this scenario. Confused and frustrated people like those I describe above are likely to hit the back button, and that's a strong signal that this result wasn't what they wanted.

Query "search engine set default". It figures that you mean business, drops the cool guy act, and is quick to point out ways to come home from IE.
The other comments claim it's deliberate. I'm not sure. Google are pretty adamant that they don't manually edit results. And it's at least possible that most references to search engines in news articles and the like reference alternatives to Google. Google is the kleenex of search engines - it's so synonymous that people forget that kleenex is a kind of tissue.
Can confirm: kleenex is not on the first two pages for 'tissues'.
But they can control the content of the page. I looked at the source page and there is 0 mention of "search engine" on Google.com source page.

I'm pretty sure Google works contextually to know "search engine" means searching the web. Gogoduck does have the reference 5 times in the source code but Bing doesn't. Gogoduck can take the chance with their content to be the first, but if the leading search engines were to sue or act against Gogoduck, then it would be in Gogoduck's favor to get the spotlight.

If you go to Google to find Gogoduck then Google is of course the more valuable.

Does Google still use PageRank at all? If so it would make sense that not many people actually link to "google.com"
Surprised to see Dogpile still around (and near the top of results). I remember using it as my main search engine in the early 2000s.
Why would you? You're already there. It's effectively a synonym for "different search engine".
I don't know about the specifics of how this is related to their algorithm, but it makes perfect sense from a philosophical standpoint.

You are using Google (the world's most well-known search engine) to search for other search engines. So either you are clueless about what a search engine is (in which case they win, since you're using them without knowing the term), or you're explicitly looking for alternatives (in which case, according to their philosophy, the way to serve you best is to give you a great list of all the other search engines out there).

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I think it's very good relevancy-wise. If you look on google for search engine, it's more likely that link to google.com is not helpful, since you already know of google.com, supposedly. How that is achieved though might be an interesting question.

OTOH, DDG is the second result for "search engine" on DDG :)