Available Formats
Investigating Googles Search Engine: Ethics, Algorithms, and the Machines Built to Read Us
By (Author) Rosie Graham
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
1st May 2023
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Communication studies
Internet searching
025.04252
Paperback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
What do search engines do And what should they do These questions seem relatively simple but are actually urgent social and ethical issues. The influence of Googles search engine is enormous. It does not only shape how Internet users find pages on the World Wide Web, but how we think as individuals, how we collectively remember the past, and how we communicate with one another. This book explores the impact of search engines within contemporary digital culture, focusing on the social, cultural, and philosophical influence of Google. Using case studies like Googles role in the rise of fake news, instances of sexist and misogynistic Autocomplete suggestions, and search queries relating to LGBTQ+ values, it offers original evidence to intervene practically in existing debates. It also addresses other understudied aspects of Googles influence, including the profound implications of its revenue generation for wider society. In doing this, this important book helps to evaluate the real cost of search engines on an individual and global scale.
Revisits and pushes forward Google critique in significant ways, providing not just methods and techniques to unearth how Google shapes our memory but a firm foundation for considering how it steers what we ultimately come to know. * Richard Rogers, Chair in New Media and Digital Culture, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands *
Graham offers us a forensic and clearly articulated exploration of Google as a company and a search engine painting a lucid and unsettling picture of how search shapes our world. * Kylie Jarrett, Senior Lecturer, Department of Media Studies, The National University of Ireland, Maynooth *
Rosie Graham is Lecturer in Contemporary Literature and the Digital at the University of Birmingham, UK and co-director of its Digital Cultures Research Centre.