By Steve Sailer
12/29/2018
It’s fun to compare Alphabet’s dominant Google search engine to Microsoft’s Bing search engine for politically relevant results.
I am doing this test in incognito mode so that both search engines give me their generic results rather than ones tailored for me.
For example, say you wanted to look up black versus white crime rates and you start typing “black white cri”. Here’s what Google autocompletes as suggestions:
In contrast, here is what Bing autocompletes for “black white cri”:
Now if you type Bing’s #2 suggestions “black white crime stats” into Google, here’s what Google gives you on the first page of results:
But here is what Bing returns:
Google promotes on its first page of results three fairly neutral sources (Channel4, Wikipedia, and USNews) and two sources, SPLC and ColorLines, that are biased toward the politically correct. Bing cites one fairly neutral source (Wikipedia) and two biased toward the politically incorrect (WhitePrivilegeIsntReal and InfoWars).
It’s interesting that the excerpt chosen from the one source displayed on the first page by both Google and Bing, Wikipedia’s “Race and crime in the United States,” is ambiguous in Google and eye-opening on Bing.
[Comment at Unz.com]
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