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Google's Search Algorithm Inventor Launches Rival Search Engine
by staff report via lynx - AFP Monday, Feb 6 2012, 11:09pm international /
mass media /
other press
Italian professor launches challenge to Google
ROME — An Italian computer science professor whose development research was appropriated by Google, launched a new search engine and social media network on Monday that he hopes will challenge the US technology giant. [The world is in dire need of a neutral and fair search engine that is not in partnership with the CIA or other nefarious agencies as is Google.]
The new site, "Volunia" allows users to view the components of particular websites to find the subject of interest more quickly and to interact with registered users who might be looking at the same web pages.
"The web is a living place," said Massimo Marchiori, who came up with the algorithm for the Internet page ranking service "HyperSearch" in the 1990s and used to teach at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
"There is information but there are also people. The social dimension is already present, it just has to emerge," he said in an online demonstration.
Marchiori said he believed the functions available on Volunia would soon become normal on all the major search engines including Google and Yahoo!
He has been working on the project for four years and has been praised by Italian commentators for giving up a more high-profile career in the United States to return to Italy, where his salary is 2,000 euros ($2,600) a month.
Marchiori teaches at the University of Padua in northeast Italy.
He has been quoted as saying that future Google founder Larry Page approached him after a conference in which he presented HyperSearch.
Page "was fascinated by it and asked if he could use it. Since it was not patented, he used it in the best possible way," Marchiori said.
Volunia, which has a US copyright, was only launched to selected users on Monday and will be rolled out more widely and in 12 languages including Arabic, English, Japanese and Russian over the coming days.
Organisers said they hoped to fund it by selling advertising space.