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Bing Search Will Plaster Twitter Tweets All Over the Web

By Diane Mermigas | Oct 22, 2009

Warning: Your next Twitter exchange or Facebook update could instantly appear in a subject-related search on Microsoft’s Bing and become a permanent part of the Web’s boundless data base.

While there are plenty of creative ways marketers will capitalize on widespread social networking search to sell their goods and services, this phenomenon may be more than Twitter and Facebook fans bargained for.

Microsoft clearly is euphoric about beating Google to the punch with plans to integrate real-time tweets and Facebook posts into its Bing generated searches.  Google, which has more than 65 percent of the search market, will soon follow with a similar service that could provide new ways to generate social network revenue.

Microsoft, Twitter and Facebook have not revealed the economic model for their new arrangement which could involve sharing search advertising revenues. But that will eventually beg the question of whether users — as the original producers of the comment content — should also be compensated.

Microsoft’s Bing will sort tweets and public Facebook updates in different ways (such as most recent or best match) and provide a real-time index of to match them to individual queries. Microsoft digital chief Qi Lu said at this week’s Web 2.0 conference in Orlando, FL.  It’s all about “user intent” and thinking about search “”holistically”, he said.

Widespread social network search could alter the spontaneous nature of otherwise private or semi-private text exchanges on Twitter and Facebook, even though they provide users with tools to limit outside access to their comments and personal posts.

Once a public Facebook update or a 140-character tweet becomes part of a vast viral distribution system, it becomes content or a marketing device for the masses in perpetuity.

This is just the tip of the iceberg in what promises to be a tangle of social network, search and commercial endeavors.  Lost in the shuffle this week was news about Google’s new social search tool that provides search results from across multiple social networks including Gmail.

Google and Facebook also said they will begin integrating music into their search and social services. Facebook’s 10-cent or 90-cent song gifts will add yet another dimension to the updates carried over into Bing or Google searches.

The broader implications of such rapid-fire social network developments are suggested by the findings of a new Pew Internet & American Life Project study revealing that one in five Internet users rely on Twitter or other social services to exchange personal or business information and status updates. That is an increase to 19 percent from just 11 percent last spring.

Twitter is becoming the communications shorthand “default mode” for smart phones and other mobile devices that are the universal screen of choice for personal and professional use, according to Pew. More than half of domestic Internet users have a wireless Web connection,and more than one quarter of them rely on Twitter or other social networks to communicate.

At the same Web 2.0 conference, Comcast CEO Brian Roberts (who is negotiating to acquire NBC Universal) conceded that Twitter has changed his company’s culture. Google CEO Eric Schmidt predicted that in five years, the lines of distinction will blur between texting, video and audio.

“The next time you search for something that can be aided by a real-time observation, say, snow conditions at your favorite ski resort, you’ll find tweets from other users who are there,” Google vice president Marissa Mayer said in explaining the new social networking search service.

Then again, you might find a whole lot more than that.

Diane Mermigas has been a contributing editor and columnist at Mediapost, The Hollywood Reporter and Crain Communications as well as writing for such sites as Seeking Alpha, TrueSlant and BNET. In addition to speaking and television appearances, Diane consults with companies in digital transition, and is completing a book on the future of media.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Looks Like Bing Will Strike a Deal with Both Twitter and Facebook

    Search Engine Journal - 33 days 8 hours 2 minutes ago

    How about about this, all your Facebook public updates and Twitter tweets becoming searchable on Bing search engine? Or another way at looking at it is a real-time search engine finally coming into a realization. Well, believe it or not that might happen soon as an annonucement it about to be made  about the Bing-Twitter-Facebook...

  • Bing, Bing, Bing: We Have a Winner!

    The Big Money - 32 days 7 hours 58 minutes ago

    And Microsoft (MSFT) got there first. At the Web 2.0 conference this week, company execs announced that they had cut a deal with both Facebook and Twitter to start searching tweets and Facebook status updates, incorporating them into Bing's search results. PC World reports that you can already try Bing's new all-Twitter search service by...

  • Microsoft signs Facebook and Twitter data deals

    Strategy Eye - 32 days 22 hours 57 minutes ago

    Microsoft is teaming up with Twitter and Facebook to incorporate tweets and status updates into its Bing search engine. The incorporation of real-time results into Bing makes Microsoft the first major search engine to embrace what many consider the next leap forward in search. Google has also announced a deal with Twitter, but is yet to secure a...

  • Bing Readies Sharing Feature for Search Results

    WebProNews - 81 days 13 hours 18 minutes ago

    Microsoft is working on a new feature for Bing called "Bing and Ping." This is a means to share your search results with friends. Bing's "decision engine" nature provides plenty of content that users may actually want to share. Nicholas Kerr of the Bing Team explains:Let’s break this down with an example: say you use Bing’s Instant Answers...

  • MSN homepage gets a slick makeover

    Adotas - 19 days 9 hours 37 minutes ago

    ADOTAS - Maybe it was jealous after Yahoo!’s homepage changed up its look this summer, but now MSN.com is rolling out a sleek, modern-looking homepage with a lot of goodies. Your first reaction is bound to be that it’s light — the hompage effectively uses whitespace to appear welcoming. A big Bing search box is prominently featured next to...

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