On October 19th from 16:00 – 17:30 CAIS will open its doors to the public with a presentation of the results from the Indexathon, a two-day marathon experiment in ‘alternative search methods’ with 10 invited international researchers.
The p2p search engine YaCy forms the departure point for the Indexathon, with its open source code, privacy searching and ‘freeworld’ of thousands of peers, making it the largest distributed search engine in the world.
During the Indexathon, each researcher is asked to contribute to the public index of YaCy with their interests or research topic: legacy software, full text search, video archives, radical open access, censoring, digital libraries, code, public commons, anonymity, meta search and internet security.
The Indexathon intends to analyse YaCy’s divergent search results from mainstream search engines along with carrying out ‘comparative’ search models. Furthermore, questions about the ‘future of search’ regarding information retrieval, federated approaches to vertical search, natural language processing and search ranking criteria surrounding the notion of ‘relevancy’ will be addressed.
Yet another Cyberspace developer Michael Christen will illuminate YaCy’s latest developments in search such as susi.ai and the forthcoming YaCy Grid project.What are some of the outcomes? How do YaCy results differ from other search engines? What kinds of use cases have been developed?
Moreover, the potentials of the next ‘Indexathon’ or ‘Searchathon’ will be proposed and discussed.
Concept, research and organisation: CAIS fellow Renée Ridgway
Tech lead: Michael Christen (YaCy)
Researchers
- Winnie Soon, Aarhus University (DK)
- Marcell Mars, Coventry University (UK)
- Geoff Cox, Aarhus University (DK), Plymouth University (UK)
- Jan Gerber, computer programmer (DE)
- Dušan Barok, University of Amsterdam (NL)
- Mace Ojala, IT University of Copenhagen (DK)
- Ralf Benzmüller, G-DATA Software AG (DE)
- Janneke Adema, Coventry University (UK)
- Jurij Smrke, Coventry University (UK)
- Bryan Newbold, Internet Archive (US)