Hi, awesome to see thid move forward.  This is solving a major namespace style problem (for the namespace of queries) and I fully support it.  Good luck with the work and I would love to help test the beta. 

Sam.

On Aug 4, 2013 12:24 AM, "Emilio J. Rodríguez-Posada" <emijrp@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi all again;

After some months, we have the domain for LibreFind[1] and some usable results[2][3] (the bot is running). Also, there is a mailing list[4] and a Google Code project[5].

I would like you can join the brainstorm. We need to establish some policies about how to sort results, bots to check dead links, crawlers to improve the results, and many more. You can request an account for the closed beta.

Thanks for your time,
emijrp

[1] http://www.librefind.org
[2] http://www.librefind.org/wiki/Spain
[3] http://www.librefind.org/wiki/Edgar_Allan_Poe
[4] http://groups.google.com/group/librefind
[5] https://code.google.com/p/librefind/

2012/10/27 emijrp <emijrp@gmail.com>
After some tests and usability improvements, I'm going to launch an English alpha version.

I still need a cool name for the project, any idea?

Stay tunned.


2012/10/23 emijrp <emijrp@gmail.com>
Yes, there are some options: (semi)protections, blocks, spam black lists, flaggedrevs, abuse filter and some more. All them are well known MediaWiki features and extensions.

Thanks for your interest.


2012/10/23 ENWP Pine <deyntestiss@hotmail.com>
 
I agree that this sounds like an interesting experiment. I hope that you get good faith editors. I worry that you’ll get COI editors playing with the search rankings. Do you have a way in mind to deal with that issue?
 
Pine
 
From: emijrp
Sent: Monday, 22 October, 2012 08:29
Subject: [Wiki-research-l] A wiki search engine
 
Hi all;

I'm starting a new project, a wiki search engine. It uses MediaWiki, Semantic MediaWiki and other minor extensions, and some tricky templates and bots.

I remember Wikia Search and how it failed. It had the mini-article thingy for the introduction, and then a lot of links compiled by a crawler. Also something similar to a social network.

My project idea (which still needs a cool name) is different. Althought it uses an introduction and images copied from Wikipedia, and some links from the "External links" sections, it is only a start. The purpose is that community adds, removes and orders the results for each term, and creates redirects for similar terms to avoid duplicates.

Why this? I think that Google PageRank isn't enough. It is frequently abused by farmlinks, SEOs and other people trying to put their websites above.

Search "Shakira" in Google for example. You see 1) Official site, 2) Wikipedia 3) Twitter 4) Facebook, then some videos, some news, some images, Myspace. It wastes 3 or more results in obvious nice sites (WP, TW, FB). The wiki search engine puts these sites in the top, and an introduction and related terms, leaving all the space below to not so obvious but interesting websites. Also, if you search for "semantic queries" like "right-wing newspapers" in Google, you won't find real newspapers but "people and sites discussing about ring-wing newspapers". Or latex and LaTeX being shown in the same results pages. These issues can be resolved with disambiguation result pages.

How we choose which results are above or below? The rules are not fully designed yet, but we can put official sites in the first place, then .gov or .edu domains which are important ones, and later unofficial websites, blogs, giving priority to local language, etc. And reaching consensus.

We can control aggresive spam with spam blacklists, semi-protect or protect highly visible pages, and use bots or tools to check changes.

It obviously has a CC BY-SA license and results can be exported. I think that this approach is the opposite to Google today.

For weird queries like "Albert Einstein birthplace" we can redirect to the most obvious results page (in this case Albert Einstein) using a hand-made redirect or by software (some little change in MediaWiki).

You can check a pretty alpha version here http://www.todogratix.es (only Spanish by now sorry) which I'm feeding with some bots.

I think that it is an interesting experiment. I'm open to your questions and feedback.

Regards,
emijrp

--
Emilio J. Rodríguez-Posada. E-mail: emijrp AT gmail DOT com
Pre-doctoral student at the University of Cádiz (Spain)


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--
Emilio J. Rodríguez-Posada. E-mail: emijrp AT gmail DOT com
Pre-doctoral student at the University of Cádiz (Spain)




--
Emilio J. Rodríguez-Posada. E-mail: emijrp AT gmail DOT com
Pre-doctoral student at the University of Cádiz (Spain)



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