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by _delirium 5637 days ago
> Why is that? I thought more words would give more focussed, less spammy results.

I've noticed that if you use too many words, you more often end up with keyword-stuffed or aggregated/scraped pages, because they just happen to use all the words in your search query on the same page. Sometimes this is because there aren't actually any real results for the particular narrow niche you wanted, but sometimes it's just because none of the real results use all of the keywords you tried verbatim, and Google wasn't able to figure out that those non-verbatim matches were more relevant than the exact-match-but-crap pages (admittedly a hard problem).

1 comments

Ah, I see what you mean. These link farms are getting clever, and using content "real" enough to pass the automated sniff test.
Part is also what counts as spam. Google doesn't count a lot of index-type pages as spam, so if you search for a conjunction of a few programming terms, [scala foo bar baz], you often get a page that indexes blogs on a topic, in this case Scala. The post titles on that page will use all of your search terms, but often in different post titles, effectively erasing the conjunction operator in your query.