Mitch Perkins wrote:MovieStuff wrote:Mitch Perkins wrote:... I'm not talking about "most hits on any subject", but rather this subject and these pages specifically.
What's in question is your apparent belief that the number of hits in google somehow quantifies the scope of a given issue.
For the third time, not "a given issue", but rather this issue specifically.
MovieStuff wrote:I was speaking generally because my point applies to all subjects, including this one. You've presented nothing that would suggest this subject is unique or has been filtered through google so that the number of hits is relevant to their guilt.
I presented this -
"Clicking through the pages of hits will provide specific knowledge that the hits are not in fact "nothing more than repetitions of the same information".
This in answer to your claim that it is "pretty common knowledge" (insinuating my lack of said knowledge), that "the google entries are nothing more than repetitions of the same information."
Well, in this case they are not - you don't have to read every hit, just look at the titles and urls on every tenth page.
As to paypal's guilt, that's your strawman - I simply posted the search as a matter of interest...
MovieStuff wrote: You just know there are X number of hits talking about PayPal's lawsuits. You've never even mentioned how many lawsuits there are, which I would think is far more relevant than how many google hits there are, many of which you knew were repeats of other links, even before posting the search results.
Folks can find out how many lawsuits there are on their own, if they're interested...
I'm not comfortable with you telling me what I knew, implying dishonesty on my part. Anyway even if there are repeats, that doesn't mean that in this case, "that the google entries are nothing more than repetitions of the same information."
You've allowed that some subjects are more repetitive than others anyway, so I'm not sure what you're going on about here...
Mitch Perkins wrote:
MovieStuff wrote:It might turn out that a million hits on one topic only reveals 10,000 unique links while 500,000 hits on another topic reveals 100,000 unique links. Thus it is possible to have more relevant and new information links from only 500,000 hits on one topic than from one million hits on another.
That's right - this is one of those topics with a lot of hits having unique links. IOW, not one of those topics where "the google entries are nothing more than repetitions of the same information."
MovieStuff wrote:I never said it was the same information in every link, Mitch, and you know that.
What I know is that you said "it's pretty common knowledge that the google entries are nothing more than repetitions of the same information." Sounds kinda like the same thing in different words, don't it?
MovieStuff wrote:I have repeatedly said that, typical of google, many of the links are repeated entries.
No, it's over a million spectacularly unique hits...WTF? Of course there are repeats, but that isn't the same as simply stating with an imperial wave of the hand that "the google entries are nothing more than repetitions of the same information", because in this case there are many unique hits, and the sheer volume indicates a lot of interest...so I posted the search.
MovieStuff wrote:The funny thing is that, even if I didn't point it out, you knew that about google even before you posted the number of hits from your search.
No. The funny thing is that you presume to read my mind and accuse me of disingenuity.
MovieStuff wrote:That you are now attempting to make a distinction where there is none is mystifying unless you really believe that over one million hits somehow means there are over one million lawsuits against PayPal.
The distinction, for the fourth time, is that *in this case*, the hits are not "nothing more than repetitions of the same information."
MovieStuff wrote:If you don't believe there are over one million lawsuits, then you have to admit that many of the links are repetitive. And if you admit they are repetitive, then you know that listing the number of total hits is irrelevant.
No. The number of hits can be relevant if there are enough of them that are unique - there doesn't have to be a million lawsuits; and the number of hits "is an indicator of interest on the internet" (your words), showing that the subject of Jim's post is of interest to a lot of people.
Now this one below I'll just leave for the entertainment value -
MovieStuff wrote:
The number of google hits is an indicator of interest on the internet; not a measure of guilt or innocence for the company being discussed.
Roger
Mitch Perkins wrote:As you say, it represents general interest in most cases, and in this one many of the hits are unique, ceratainly not "nothing more than repetitions of the same information."
MovieStuff wrote:Well, again, that is never what I said ...
Funny stuff!
MovieStuff wrote:So, like the Duke example, to list X number of links about PayPal lawsuits is meaningless because you have no idea how many are unique, how many are repeats,
Check the headlines and urls - while there are some, even many, repeats, all the hits are certainly not "nothing more than repetitions of the same information".
MovieStuff wrote:how many are true and how many are false. In fact, unless you've read through all 1,000,000+ entries, you really don't know much more now about PayPal's legal problems than before you posted the number of hits.
I know that there's a lot of interest in paypal's legal problems, and that the hits on the pages linking to them are not "nothing more than repetitions of the same information". As for true and false, time will tell...
MovieStuff wrote:And anything that you have gleaned from posting the hits is because this discussion has forced you to read the information connected to the links.
Yes, your logic is all-powerful - get real - I checked the urls and headings on every tenth page to the last one. They were not "nothing more than repetitions of the same information". You lose.
MovieStuff wrote:But, before doing that, the actual number of hits told you nothing other than there were X number of hits. And why? Because the number of google hits is an indicator of interest on the internet; not a measure of guilt or innocence for the company or subject being discussed.
Roger
Right - it told me
nothing other than there were X number of hits...oh yeah and that there is a lot of interest.
[looking back edit] Well, it looks like I'm as "entertaining" here as anyone else...~:?)
Mitch