As you already know, I am now living in Columbus. And by living I mean staying with some friends until my lease begins in September. When that time comes, I’ll be living with the same people I am staying with now, plus my old roommate from Kent and another friend.

I really haven’t made my new position “too terribly public.” So lets just get that out of the way now. I started working at Manta as a Search Analyst in July. Lets just say this job is nothing short of fantastic. Manta’s site gets more traffic than the Washington Post! And we’re creeping up on The New York Times. It’s not often that you get to work SEO magic on a site of this caliber with as many pages as Manta.

I am learning A LOT and really enjoying myself here. And to all my friends, let me know if you’re ever in the Columbus area. I’d love to get coffee or a beer with you. And I’m buying.

On Tuesday I will be starting my new job as a SEO Analyst. I am extremely happy to be getting out of the agency setting and back into an in-house SEO position. I feel this decision will be best for me in the long run, as the agency setting was not the best fit for me. I’d much rather be able to focus all my attention on one website rather than over 30. I am excited to have the opportunity to work with an enterprise level company with millions of web pages. SEO is smoke and mirrors without testing and this job will most certainly allow for testing.

As a result of me taking this position, I will also be moving out of Kent and down to Ohio’s capital, Columbus.

Overall, I am very happy to be moving to a new city to start a new job. The next month or so I will be busy, so I will apologize ahead of time as the updates to this site may get a little scarce. I’m going underground for a while.

There has been a lot of talk on the Internets about how Google and its search technology should be regulated by the government. The New York Times had an editorial on why it should be regulated. Danny Sullivan wrote a great piece about how The New York Times should have its own editorial policy regulated as well. His piece really does a great job of summing things up.

Google’s Marissa Mayer also did a follow-up piece to all this ridiculous talk about the need for “search neutrality” and government regulation.

I cannot help but give my own thoughts on this. This is far too important of an issue to sit back and let other people who do not understand how Google works make comments on how things “should be.” Danny Sullivan understands the issue. Marissa Mayer understands the issue as well and yes, I understand she may be biased as well because she works for Google and most certainly has her own money tied up in Google’s stock.

People Trust Google
Google is the most used search engine because people trust it. Google is not the most used search engine because they are so powerful that they own the Internet. For anyone to say that Google is somehow limiting peoples access to the Internet is plain stupid. One can go to any website they want to. They may have trouble finding it without using Google or another search engine for that matter, but you are still free to go anywhere you want and use any search engine you want. Google does not control where you can and can’t go. Google does, however have a lot of where you can and can’t go from its own properties. You do not have to start your browsing experience on Google. You can start it anywhere. You can start on Yahoo! or Bing. Here in the United States, we have the freedom to go to nearly any website we want without any interference. That is why it is important the United States continues to control the Internets backbone and naming system (ICANN). In China, you are not free to go where you want on the Internet. They censor what you can and can’t see. That is simply NOT the case in the U.S.

The people that have proposed solutions to how Google should rank websites should take their own suggestions and create their own search engine. If you have such a good idea on how websites should be ranked, by all means try. Quit giving suggestions to how things should be ranked by Google if you have absolutely no idea on HOW they are ranked by Google.

Google is number one because people have come to trust its results. For most searchers (at least the intelligent ones), if they can’t find what they’re looking for, they’ll start over and try another set of terms to search. They think they are the ones in the wrong and almost never fault Google. If you can’t find something in Google, chances are you are searching for the wrong thing or it doesn’t exist. Chances are it is you who isn’t searching for the right thing. Not the latter.

Government Regulation of Google Search Results Spells Disaster
I surely hope the government never steps in and starts regulating the Internet or Google for that matter. The Internet is such an amazing form of speech that is only as great as it is because it isn’t regulated. The Internet is in a constant flux of change. It is truly remarkable that Google is able to find what you’re looking for every time you look for something. It is truly remarkable that they have been able to improve the Internet as much as they have. The Internet would not be as great of a place it is today without Google’s contribution. Prior to Google’s arrival on the scene, it was hard to find relevant results. It was so hard that back when Google was first launched, I had to use a site named Dogpile that aggregated results from all the search engines.

The government has far more important things to worry about than how Google ranks things. Liberals and conservatives can agree politicians can’t get anything right. For anyone to think they should have any say in how Google’s ranking algorithm works, well, that is plain silly.

 

This is Mike Halvorsen

Mike Halvorsen is a 20-something Internet enthusiast who immerses himself in all aspects of the web.