What Can Yahoo Do To Compete with Google? 218
ryanjensen writes "Jay Currie over at Tech Central Station has an article up about Yahoo's pending entrance into the AdSense advertising market, and outlines some things Yahoo (and MSN for that matter) can do to compete, including: Paypal payouts, revenue share transparency, rewarding quality (but small) publishers, and offering an alternative to "keyword bids" for advertisers." It should be noted that Yahoo has already been fighting Google on this front - Overture, owned by Yahoo!, has been running an Ad-Sense like program for a while.
A few thoughts... (Score:5, Interesting)
To quote a few of their policies:
Yahoo! automatically receives and records information on our server logs from your browser, including your IP address, Yahoo! cookie information, and the page you request.
Yahoo! uses information for the following general purposes: to customize the advertising and content you see, fulfill your requests for products and services, improve our services, contact you, conduct research, and provide anonymous reporting for internal and external clients. aka "Sell your habits as an anonymous client to advertisers
These companies may use your personal information to help Yahoo! communicate with you about offers from Yahoo! and our marketing partners.
The list goes on and on. That is the main reason I try to stay away from Yahoo!.
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:3, Interesting)
2. Dunno about this, I've never noticed it/found it a problem. Log out and turn cookies off maybe?
3. Sending where now?
4. I've never noticed this, I only get stuff I've signed up for legitametly, in my non-spam folder, as I expect it to be. If bigger commercial companies are honest (and they usually are) there's no problem here.
5. You think Google is all that different? A little better but still not saintly.
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:5, Informative)
you mean this? http://search.yahoo.com/ [yahoo.com]
Admitedly the front page is messy, but I know lots of people who would complain if they have to navigate through a couple of sub menus to get to what they want. I Wouldn't mind the cookies and ads if it knew extacly what I wanted. (finace yes, fashion no)
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:2)
Then why don't you tell them so [yahoo.com]? I think some constructive feedback would help. Believe you me, I totally agree with what you're saying.. and it'd be nice if Google had some competent competition (MSN Search? hahahah) that mirror Google's minimalist approach.
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:3, Informative)
I Wouldn't mind the cookies and ads if it knew extacly what I wanted. (finace yes, fashion no)
You mean like this?
http://my.yahoo.com [yahoo.com]
Only been aorund for 3+ years...
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:2)
too many ads on groups.yahoo.com (email lists) (Score:2)
The original egroups customers, and customers who find their time valuable enough not to sit through interstitial ads to get to list archives detest yahoo, and I think I speak for many of them when I say that we avoid Yahoo when possible because of such obtrusiveness.
You would think that someone in Yahoo would have the basic common sense to know that mailing lists are exactly the worst place to put the most obtrusive ads. No wo
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:5, Informative)
This is a standard Apache feature. Virtually every website logs all requests - Yahoo is normal here, not the exception.
Clean search site? Done. [yahoo.com]
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:2)
That is generally a normal operation for any webserver. I know my log I'll generally look it over and then delete it after a couple of weeks. What do they do with theirs? Sell it? Delete it? Use it just for research?
Giving their other policies on ads it wouldn't suprise me if they sold it.
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:2)
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously though, has anyone read their privacy page? It's worse than AOL's AIM TOS.
To quote a few of their policies:
Yahoo! automatically receives and records information on our server logs from your browser, including your IP address, Yahoo! cookie information, and the page you request./b>
... exactly the same as apache does by default, except the cookies - oh boy...
Yahoo! uses information for the following general purposes: to customize the advertising and content you see, fulfill your requests for products and services, improve our services, contact you, conduct research, and provide anonymous reporting for internal and external clients. aka "Sell your habits as an anonymous client to advertisers
So far no real privacy issues here; they are merely analysing the behaviour of anonymous clients, and/or target advertisements based on behaviour of clients; for example, never show an advertisement more than 5 times to each user (cookies) or try to find out how often certain links are clicked from certain pages inside their site...
... still pretty normal website administration here.
These companies may use your personal information to help Yahoo! communicate with you about offers from Yahoo! and our marketing partners.
Ah, and here you do have a little point; this is probably based on your personal account information. Most likely this allows them to target for example German advertisers to German visitors...
And please, don't say I don't have any solid proof that they are not doing this; there is just as little proof that says they do do bad stuff with your privacy...
I'm merely illustrating here that this shouldn't mean all terror and shouldn't be a sole reason to stay away from Yahoo!.
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:4, Insightful)
What they can really do: (Score:5, Interesting)
1) Innovate. While this might seem like a no brainer, yahoo hasn't fixed what is already broken on their own service for some time now. A good example of this would be their stock message boards, which fill with spam and garbage immediately.
Try CSCO [yahoo.com] for example. It looks like a circus in that message board. Google will walk into this market because people are simply dying for something usable. Yahoo has dominance right now but they will lose that easily because they are satisfied with "good enough".
2) Make all services open and extensible. Mainly, this means that they should stop requiring someone to open yet another unused email account in order to use their services. I already have half a dozen unused email accounts and I don't need another. It would be great if I could use my existing email account for access to IM, Yahoo auctions, etc. But I don't use these services because I don't want to bother with another email account.
3) Promote an open web. VoIP is just now taking off. The world could use, for example, a free, standards based VoIP client for Windows, Linux, etc. Yahoo could gain many friends if they released a non-yahoo specific client. Certainly, they'll have to make money on it some how but I think that they could make more by keeping it open and not bundled with a service. Perhaps offer their own as a default, or whatever.
The bottom line is that they need to adopt google's "do no evil" plan. I could go on all morning with examples.
Re:What they can really do: (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's Google
-AdWords
-AdSense
-search appliances
-Google News - generates no revenue
-Gmail - generates no revenue
-Google Labs - generates no revenue, includes sets, maps, video, suggest, answers, sms
Here's Yahoo and all these things generate revenue
-Overture ContentMatch
-Overture Paid Search
-Auctions
-Mail
-Travel
-Personals
-R
-Finance
-Autos
-Music
-Fantasy Sports
-DSL
-etc
If anyone needs to catch up, it's Google. For all Google's technological greatness, they are extremely dependent on AdSense in order to survive. MSN is coming out with contextual advertising. Yahoo already has Overture and will be releasing Yahoo's version of an AdSense competitor. AdSense was a surprising success for Google that put them in the leagues with the big boys but that's still one product. Google needs to pull another rabbit out of the hat if they expect to keep up with Yahoo.
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:2)
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:2)
I too have a Yahoo account since 1994. I'm a webmaster. Every site that I have ever built did collect information just as Yahoo does. I'm pretty sure most webmasters also collect that information, and use that information to better select advertising or push offers to the visitor.
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:2)
Making a profit through ads or subscriptions I have no problem with what-so-ever.
Make a profit by monitoring where I go, how long I'm there, keeping a record of what I search for, and then selling that to who ever will pay your price I have a slight problem with.
This isn't about making a profit but selling my interests and habits.
Re:A few thoughts... (Score:2, Insightful)
This poster hits it on the head. Everyone I know cannot stand "portals" like Yahoo! just because of all the home page clutter, ads, and crap that is displayed both on the main page and on the subsequent results.
Honestly, I'm surprised that after Google's success, other engines didn't catch on...
Because in the end it's not about being nice and make your pages pretty, but about earning money...
Last time I heard [orb6.com], Yahoo! was still doing a pretty good job in that area, so I don't think they really w
What they can really do... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What they can really do... (Score:3, Informative)
Personally I do not mind the Yahoo home page. They do have a search page [yahoo.com] which is clean and used only for searching (like Google, really) while the main home page is the portal page, offering links to everywhere else.
Also I do not think it is cluttered; full of information and links, maybe, but everything does seem to be in a nice neat order instead of strewn throughout the page.
Re:What they can really do... (Score:2, Insightful)
http://search.yahoo.com (Score:3, Informative)
It's about the directory (Score:4, Interesting)
I used to use Yahoo all the time, but at some point they forgot that the reason everyone used them was the search directory. They started getting obstructive towards the people trying to get listed in the directory, and dmoz.org was launched as a result, pulling away a lot of users.
Then the default was changed for the Yahoo home page, so that when you entered a search term, instead of getting a nice useful list of annotated directory entries, you just got a typical search engine response--except not as good as Google's. Away went thousands more users. I gave up too, as it wasn't at all obvious to me how to find the directory that used to be there, but I could easily find dmoz.org.
Now it seems as if they've un-hidden the directory via "tabs" on the home page. Unfortunately, it's still crippled. You enter a term in directory search and it gives you a page of search results you didn't want, and at the top a couple of links saying there are "related" directory entries you might be interested in. Call me picky, but if I request to search X, the site shouldn't respond with Y and say "Oh, and by the way, you can also search X".
So you click the links to go through to the directory, at which point you discover that it's pretty puny compared to dmoz.org (compare [yahoo.com] and contrast [dmoz.org] searches for a random topic).
If you try to add a link, you discover why the Yahoo directory now sucks [yahoo.com]: they basically offer no ability to add links in a timely fashion unless you pay them money. In other words, they want to charge you money for the privilege of helping them improve their product and compete with Google and dmoz.
Google have never forgotten why people go to them. They're picky about what new features they add, and they keep the interface clean so that existing users don't suddenly find themselves lost. They're also careful not to remove functionality simply because it no longer fits the corporate strategy of the month.
Re:It's about the directory (Score:2)
At this exact moment in time, Yahoo! returns an admittedly puny set of 8 matches:
On the other hand, dmoz just bluescreened:
I think I'd have to give the
Yahoogle (Score:1)
*sigh*
Yahoo's VOIP service is big in Japan (Score:2, Informative)
I know that Yahoo were the first to start VOIP in Japan and they have established market leadership dwarfing all other VOIP services there, it's called Yahoo BB Phone.
Depending on whom you believe it's got either over 1 million or over 3 million paying customers [recent articles returned by google bring up both these numbers, so I don't know which one is correct].
The way this works is you get a set top box from Yahoo which plugs into your DSL and your phone line. Your telephone
Google? (Score:1)
My thoughts... (Score:4, Insightful)
how about... (Score:4, Interesting)
If I spend more than twenty seconds on a site without finding what I'm looking for - I leave the site. My time is worth more than navigating some stupid portal.
Seriously, it's 2005 now. Stop with the portal-crap in order to keep visitors there and start with some content.
Bad advice... (Score:5, Funny)
That's a bad advice... It costed me a boyfriend.
Wow (Score:2)
Hey babe, you left some crap of yours in my basement.
Re: (Score:2)
What are you smoking? (Score:2, Insightful)
If your doing research it is much easier to find what you are looking for on yahoo than anywhere else.
Need a new car? Yahoo Autos, Need a new Job? Yahoo HotJobs, need to do some research? Education.yahoo.com
Want to follow business, stocks, rss feeds, news, local weather, auctions, bank accounts, investments? My.yahoo.com.
Want raw search? http://search.yahoo.com
I'm not sure you even know what easy to use and customer friendly means. I can contact Yahoo
Re:how about... (Score:2)
Searching for anything will just get you EBay affiliate ads claiming to sell it, regardless of whether EBay does
Re:how about... (Score:2)
Iraq War
Huge selection, great deals on
Iraq War. Aff
eBay.com
What really annoys me more than the link is the fact that this ad was obviously generated by a computer and never proofread by a human. It contains no useful information about what is being advertised. If the same ad said "Iraq War Merchan
My thoughts (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:My thoughts (Score:4, Informative)
I got a check from AdSense and I haven't made $100 the whole time I've been using it
That's because up until a few months ago Google paid out AdSense balances whenever the balance reached $100 or at the end of the calendar year. They've dropped the year-end payout option, so now you have to wait.
EricTips for using AdSense [ericgiguere.com]
concern. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:concern. (Score:2)
My experience with their customer service has been positive, not negative. I've sent questions to them and I always get a reply back in short order. They've come to me politely with problems they wanted fixed on my sites and they've always given me reasonable time to fix things.
EricSee me mentioned in USA Today [usatoday.com]
Yahoo vs. Google (Score:5, Interesting)
The costs per click used to be very high but as more and more scammers jump on board using various anonymous proxy servers to initiate fake clicks, the costs per click are plummeting pretty rapidly.
To see various costs per click on Overture (you can't see Google's AdSense exact amounts) go to Overture Cost Per Click [overture.com].
Re:Yahoo vs. Google (Score:2)
however, they got no idea how to do that to only those abusing the system(so they'll end up with disgruntled webmasters who get shafted).
Re:Yahoo vs. Google (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem is detecting the fraud. If you have access to thousands of open proxy servers throughout the world, it's fairly easy to write a program to maximize your clicks while keeping your click-through-rate below 1.7. If the proxy servers (or spyware'd computers) can't be detected as such then you can't tell if it's a real user or not.
Just imagine what's going to happen when botnet owners that have access to 20,000 computers realize they can profit from their botnet by scamming AdSense rather than blackmailing online Casinos?
Re:Yahoo vs. Google (Score:2)
so that you don't get busted for fraud.
you see, google can't by any means EVER fix this problem(so having hundres phd's working on it can't fix it, ever) so they're combatting it by only guessing that you're frauding if you got too good click through rates.
so.. the real problem is that the whole model is built so that they can't ever know if it's abuse or normal users, and even in case of blatant clear abuse they CAN'T know a
Re:Yahoo vs. Google (Score:2)
Well, they seem to be doing it. See my analysis of the Yahoo! ad program [ericgiguere.com] for more details.
EricYahoo's Web Developer Kit (Score:5, Informative)
User chosen keyword targetting (Score:3, Insightful)
There are lots of sites that generate pages on the fly, but Google can't serve up an ad until its parsed the page, so the first showing of that page (the most important) shows no adverts.
Same with general news site, context analysis is terrible for general news, it would be better to let the new site specify the keyphrases on a per-page basis.
Google's more likely to become like Yahoo (Score:4, Insightful)
Obviously, no user of Google wants that to happen. But now that Google is a public company, you can expect them to wring every last drop of shareholder value out of their various and many properties:
local.google.com
maps.google.com
images.google.com
scholar.google.com
answers.google.com
catalogs.google.com
www.froogle.com
www.keyhole.com
etc, etc, etc.
In other words, expect the Google start page at some point in the future to look even more cluttered than Yahoo's.
Re:Not (Score:2)
Content Aggregaters - horrible Marketroid talk (Score:2)
Make me WANT, not HAVE to view ads. (Score:5, Interesting)
Frankly, I find Yahoo's ad presentation to be annoying at best. I visit pages for the intended content, not the ads, and yes, ads often pay for the content. But, present them in a way that insults my intelligence, and I'll walk. Instead, present them in a way that makes me want (not have) to view the ads, and you have me at hello...
Are you sure your looking at Yahoo.com? (Score:2)
1. Searches are sponsored ads, just like google.
2. Portal content is much more organized, familiar and standardized - much better than Google.
3. The ads aren't just garbage. If your looking for hot dates in the singles section you see singles ads. If your looking for cars in the auto section you see auto ads.
I find it laughable that Yahoo light years ahead of Google in content & design & integration & features & ease
Re:Are you sure your looking at Yahoo.com? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Are you sure your looking at Yahoo.com? (Score:2)
That gmail interface makes 0 sense for google groups . I would rather deal with the banner ad on yahoo groups or use firefox to block them out.
It's funny how you portray "intrusive" and use something that is less usefull based on that interpreation.
You can always buy you way out of the ads if you are so inclined as to use the service.
Re:Make me WANT, not HAVE to view ads. (Score:2)
Simplify (Score:2)
They need to reduce the adverts, simplify their main page so they offer more service and less junk.
Selfish request: Usenet (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately, not many people care about newsgroups, so this probably doesn't make business sense.
Re:Selfish request: Usenet (Score:2)
Google has therefore "embraced and extended" Usenet. Is that good thing?
Re:Selfish request: Usenet (Score:2)
Re:Selfish request: Usenet (Score:2)
Valid HTML for everything (Score:4, Interesting)
o make damn sure that all their pages are valid HTML and make them small and LOAD FAST
o the mail and calendar services are better than google dont worry about this
o yahoo already have IM now they just need to offer VoIP gateways to countries (might be a problem but investigate)
o better I mean much BETTER shopping sites in terms of the service they offer to shopkeeper's to publish wares (dont brand them as much in terms of yahoo domain)
o look at offering flickr like service NOW ( build inside and look at buying at the same time whatever is faster )
o For Publishers better feedback serve 3 differant kinds of targeted ads
1/ html only (valid html no javascript)
2/ non animated pictures (only jpg png gif)
3/ animated flash or gif (kitchen sink)
o For Advertisers make it easy to log in and better stats
o remember for all pages even the tools make damn sure that all their pages are valid HTML and make them small and LOAD FAST remember 56k modem
regards
John Jones
Re:Valid HTML for everything (Score:2)
http://validator.w3.org/docs/help.html#icon
when I see that yahoo will cease to be evil
COMPETE abide by the rules and WIN
regards
John Jones
Re:Valid HTML for everything (Score:2)
However...I think Yahoo is much more suited to look at acquiring FotoFlix [fotoflix.com]...it fits into their services much more.
How about fixing bugs? (Score:2)
From "SpamGuard" to RDF/RSS syndicating to "message boards" there are bugs and no place to complain about them...
It's very simple for a start (Score:3, Informative)
For a start, focus on the user experience. A small but very significant example for me; google has its sponsored search results listed vertically on a semi-bar on the right out of the way of my eyes, whereas Yahoo has its sponsored search results right at the top and every time I do a search there's a mental effort, however brief, that requires me to check where the first unsponsored search result is in space on the page, and whether what my eyes landed on first is a sponsonred of unsponsored result. As such, Google is considerate and Yahoo is rudely intrusive to an extent that I loathe using it for simply this reason, no matter what else they do.
Other examples abound; when it comes to search, Google seems to focus on the users, Yahoo seems to keep on the overture approach of focusing more on those who pay it, the advertisers, and annoying the users.
Obivous (Score:3, Insightful)
Sometimes Adwords ads get thrown off by content on a particular page. I was running a personal blog running google ads as more of an experiment than anything (I got like 100 hits a week, nothing huge). Once I posted that I had purchased my first home, all of the Google ads turning into cheesy mortgage broker ads, even though none of the other stories had anything to do with mortgages.
Weighting website category classification & keywords would yield better results.
Yahoo already rules (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.03/yahoo.htm l?pg=2&topic=yahoo&topic_set=# Check the graphics with the article as they give the details on this.
I'm not surprised that techies would think Yahoo has to "compete" as they all love Google but it's akin to asking how Windows will be able to compete with Linux.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Just what I was thinking (Score:2)
Perhaps they could add an option to suggest new categories.
Then vote on new categories.
Then when a category hits a threshold, put some personal attention into it so it improves rapidly. That boost in topical focused quality of information could buy muchomany new clicks.
That should be all tightly integrated with instant feedb
Well... (Score:4, Funny)
MUTP (Score:2)
Simply (Score:2)
get rid of the bloat.
Remove the barrier of enforced logon.
Widen the support beyond IE with no security.
Yahoo vs. Google stats (Score:5, Informative)
Yahoo spent $339 on research vs. Google's $139 (where it all went is a mystery though)
Yahoo has 5,500 employees vs. Google's 1,907
Each user spent 4.8 hours on Yahoo per month vs. Google's 0.6
Yahoo gets 119 million unique visitors per month vs. Google's 72 million.
(Data represents four quarters ending Sept. 2004).
Although Yahoo may not be as geek friendly (and therefore Slashdot friendly I guess) as Google, it has a lot of customers and is the starting point for a large part of the web-surfing population.
To me, this seems like very good leverage to squeeze into Google's main revenue source, targeded ads.
Re:Yahoo vs. Google stats (Score:2)
I'd hardly describe this as an indicator of anything good. This is likely the case because Yahoos interface is convoluted and annoying to trap you on there site for long stretches of time. Now google has the right idea, its not the quantity of time but the quality of time. Googles ads always seem relevant to what I'm looking for/at but yahoos doesnt really and I never feel like clicking on yahoo ads as they are way too intrusive. google makes
Yahoo? (Score:2)
my.yahoo.com (Score:4, Interesting)
It's nice.
Re:my.yahoo.com (Score:2)
I haven't used Yahoo!-the-search-engine since I discovered Google, but Yahoo!-the-portal is actually one of my favorite sites.
Re:my.yahoo.com (Score:2)
Interesting... (Score:2)
So basically this is not a story at all - why was this posted on Slashdot?
Clean up Yahoo (Score:3, Informative)
- Better Search Results
- Clean up your directory - If the content hasn't been updated in a year, removed it from the directory or moved it to an archived listing.
- Cleaner Interface - To much junk on the front page.
- Better-directed advertising
- Less intrusive advertising - I hate those pop-overs
- Make it easier to add your site to Yahoo - I can get spider by Google in a matter of days; it takes months to get considered by Yahoo.
Pay FireFox Developers (Score:3, Funny)
Allow me to choose keywords for pages - no sense (Score:2)
Just for example, say I have a page that is a mortgage rate calculator. Google will probably show ads for other mortgage rate calculators rather than for the more lucrative ads for mortgages themse
Negative ad blocking (Score:2)
market research (Score:2)
Why I use Google:
I've had an account on Yahoo since the days when you had to bang two rocks together to get ones. Everything I use google for now I used to use on Yahoo. IMHO, google has just done a better job (except email) with these services. I briefly used Yahoo to host a website b
Re:market research (Score:2)
You had to bang one rock against the earth to get zeroes, and in this way you slowly filled out your account information.
They should keep fighting the good fight (Score:2)
Re:They should keep fighting the good fight (Score:2)
a HUGE thing YAHOO! could do to make itself better (Score:2)
Make a better product (Score:2)
An obvious enhancement to search engines would be to add a form of Wiki's disambiguation. For example, if I type "reading" into a search engine, am I after information on books or about the settlement of Reading? Further, if the latter, is that Reading, England or one of several American locations? A good example of something that should be complet
Do No Good (Score:2, Funny)
Nothing (Score:2)
If they just wouldnt do the dam redirects. (Score:2, Interesting)
Here is the link that google handed me:
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
Perfectly correct.
Here is the link that yahoo handed me:
http://rds.yahoo.com/S=2766679/K=audacity/v=2/SID = w/l=WS1/R=1/SS=95832193/IPC=us/SHE=0/H=0/SIG=11kie a20m/EXP=1110912050/*-http%3A//audacity.sourceforg e.net/
If yahoo thinks Im going to click on that they can shove it. A$$holes.
Yahoo should break-out of the BrowserBox (Score:2, Interesting)
Yahoo, Google, MSN, etc... mean different things to different people depending upon *how* they have chosen to use these free-portals of information/communication.
Yahoo should tightly couple their systems to users by leveraging differing user's contexts in client-side interfaces. My personal *entry* point into Yahoo is at mail.yahoo.com. Many enter at search.yahoo.com. By
AdSense was not the first contextual ad server (Score:2)
Overture has been running an AdSense like program long before AdSense was around. Overture began prior to 2001. Google AdSense began March 2003. Yahoo purchased Overture in Oct 2003.
Speaking of Google... (Score:2)
I realize that it's still in beta but I hope this is not a sign of things to come now that it has such a huge userbase, not to mention that people are using hacks to do things like run filesystems on it....
Re:Search Engines Spiders Crawling (Score:2)
You just have evidence that the MSN spider is running around in circles; endlessly re-spidering sites it has already spidered - maybe google's spiders are:
A - spidering more different sites than MSN's
B - better at realising they've already spidered a site recently
Re:Overture (Score:2)
Yes, but Google automated the process enough to open it up to small-time web publishers and bloggers. That's been the important difference so far.
EricHow to detect Internet Explorer [ericgiguere.com]
Re:For starters... (Score:2)
Overloaded Network Appliance files vs. distributed Google File System
Re:This is an easy question. (Score:2)
Fair enough. If they changed the front page to what's on http://search.yahoo.com/ [yahoo.com] now, would you be satisfied?
2. Search results are too cluttered. Put your advertisements on the side in a single color. No image advertisements ever. It should be easy to tell the difference between paid search results, and real results...
When was the last time you used Yahoo! Search? I just checked today, and I couldn't make a popup or image ad come up. Sponsored results are clearly separ