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Report: Google Search Manipulation Can Swing Nearly 80 Percent of Undecided Voters

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Published on: April 27, 2018

If you want to discuss meddling in the US elections, you need look no further than the CIA startup, Google and it’s manipulation of search results.

We’ve known for some time that Google is manipulating search engine results.  They claim that it is to give the end user a better experience, but nothing could be further from the truth.

Will this presidential election be the most important in American history?

Nothing was wrong with how search results were being displayed before Google, along with social media platforms like Twitter, YouTube and Facebook went full-on Nazi censors on conservatives or anyone that opposed their worldview.

However, a new report is out that shows that Google’s search manipulations could swing nearly eighty percent of undecided voters.

The report was written by Robert Epstein, Roger Mohr, Jr., and Jeremy Martinez of the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology.

According to the report,

A series of randomized, controlled experiments was conducted to quantify the power that search suggestions (sometimes called autocomplete suggestions) have to shift opinions and voting preferences.

The investigationsuggests that (a) a search engine has the power to manipulate people’s searchesfrom the very first character people type into the search bar, (b) negative (“lowvalence”) search terms can attract 10-to-15 times as many clicks as neutral or positive terms can (an example of “negativity bias”), which means that a simpleyet powerful way for a search engine company to manipulate elections is tosuppress negative search suggestions for the candidate it supports, while allowingone or more negative search suggestions to appear for the opposing candidate (the“differential suppression of negative search suggestions”), (c) the optimal numberof search suggestions for manipulating opinions is four, which was the defaultnumber of search suggestions Google showed people on laptop and desktopcomputers from 2010 until October 2017, (d) the higher a suggestion appears in alist of search suggestions, the more impact it has on search, and (e) overall,manipulating search suggestions can shift a 50/50 split among people who areundecided on an issue to a 90/10 split without people’s awareness and withoutleaving a paper trail for authorities to follow.

We call the power that search suggestions have to affect opinions the Search Suggestion Effect (SSE).

So, what did they discover?

In a series of controlled experiments reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) in 2015, Epstein and Robertson demonstrated the power that search results have to shift people’s opinions and voting preferences without their knowledge – up to 80 percent in some demographic groups. They labeled this phenomenon the “Search Engine Manipulation Effect” (SEME) (http://bit.ly/1REqzEY). That report has since been downloaded more than 94,000 times from PNAS’s website (http://bit.ly/2BCEFTW).

The report demonstrates that by Google simply adding a positive or negative search suggestion regarding a particular candidate that it will affect the search results greatly, influencing potential voters.

The voting preferences of participants who saw no search suggestions shifted toward the favored candidate by 37.1%. The voting preferences of participants in the search suggestion groups who saw only positive search suggestions shifted similarly (35.6%). However, the voting preferences of participants who saw three positive search suggestions and one negative search suggestion barely shifted (1.8%); this occurred because the negative search suggestion attracted more than 40% of the clicks (negativity bias). In other words, a single negative search suggestion can impact opinions dramatically. Participants who were shown four negative suggestions (and no positives) shifted away from the candidate shown in the search bar (-43.4%).

To demonstrate how this looks to the end user, take a look at these search suggestions provided by Google for Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

The first came from October 2017 for the letters typed “trum,” and for the results for “Hillary Clinton is” are from August 2016.  Note the difference between the search engine results of Google, Bing and Yahoo on the Clinton search!

Influencing politics in this manner is far more devious and sinister than any Russian influence simply because Google is a US-based company that was funded by the Central Intelligence Agency.  This can only be considered a sort of propaganda against the people of the united States.

Epstein also conducted a similar report in 2015 and wrote about it at Politico, demonstrating that virtually nothing has changed since that time.

Of course, if you can’t manipulate people to your candidate by search results and silencing opposition on social media platforms, there’s always the good old manipulating the electronic voting machines.

However, Google isn’t just interested in influencing politics.  Nope, they are also interested in influencing your buying habits as well.

We all are aware of the ads that Google offers, which are arguably the highest paying ads on the internet for websites.  However, did you know your search suggestions are also manipulated by Google?

The report identifies that when users enter “a” Amazon, who is Google’s top client on Google Adwords, is at the top of the suggestions, and entering a “t” lists Target, Google’s third-biggest advertising client, at the top.

Other letters drive users to other top advertisers such as Best Buy, Home Depot and Lowe’s.  Companies that begin with the letter “g” obviously get bumped for Google.

So, if you are looking for a real problem in influencing politics, look no further than Google-CIA.  Don’t say you weren’t warned.

Article posted with permission from Freedom Outpost

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