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Google Joins Semantic Web

As I highlighted a few short weeks ago, Google has been dropping hints about the Semantic Web so subtle that even us chaps realised something exciting was going on over at the Googleplex. During the Searchology conference (their annual slap in the face to startups who dared think they were on to something unique and exciting) Big G revealed that the Christmastime rumors of data islands were no more and that RDFa was accepted!

The announcement focuses on hCard and hReview, which if found on your page be will be turned in to a visual presentation and added to your result on their SRP. Sound familiar? If it does that’s because, as many bloggers pointed out, it’s incredibly similar to Yahoo! SearchMonkey Structured Objects. Competition aside, this is great news for publishers as it is yet another vindication of the benefits of structured data on your pages.

Google Rich Snippets

Google Rich Snippets

Yahoo! SearchMonkey

Yahoo! SearchMonkey

Where SearchMonkey has focused on complete Objects for presentation - e.g. a Video looks like this whilst a News article looks like that - Rich Snippets, as Google is calling this, call out single key/value pairs which can add value to a standard result. So far however their presentation appears to be behind flood controls as you need to add your domain to a waiting list. My hunch is that Google is treading carefully due to concerns as much about spam as the resulting visual impact on their end users.

Now that the top two engines are adopting public, open-standards we can expect to increasingly enjoy the benefits of ever richer, more accurate results with highly targeted presentations.

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