New apps spur change in searches
Updated: 2013-01-20 07:59
By Claire Cain Miller(The New York Times)
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SAN FRANCISCO - When the United States Federal Trade Commission decided early this month to close its antitrust investigation of Google without charges, one important factor was just beneath the surface: the mobile revolution.
Google has made the argument that the speed of change in the technology industry made it impossible for regulators to impose restrictions without stalling future innovations.
A case in point is the mobile device. Nowhere has technology changed as rapidly and consumer behavior as broadly. As people abandon desktop computers for mobile ones, existing tech companies' business models are being upended and new companies are blooming.
"Mobile is very much a moving target," said Herbert Hovenkamp, a professor at the University of Iowa who has been a paid adviser to Google. "This is a market in which new competitors come in a week's time."
When the commission began its investigation 19 months ago, for instance, the iPhone did not have the Siri voice search, Apple did not have its own mapping service and Yelp's mobile apps had no ads. But all of that has changed. Google has new competitors on all sides trying to chip away at its hold on the mobile search and advertising market.
Still, Google is even more dominant on mobile phones than on desktop computers. It has 96 percent of the world's mobile search market, according to StatCounter, which tracks Web use. It collects 57 percent of mobile ad revenue in the United States, while Facebook, its nearest competitor, gets just 9 percent, according to eMarketer, a market research firm.
But, analysts say, as people change their search habits on mobile devices - bypassing Google to go straight to apps like Yelp's, for example - that dominance could wane, or a competitor could swoop in.
"It is impossible to really say anyone dominates a section of mobile in a secure way right now," said Rebecca Lieb, a digital media analyst at the Altimeter Group.
On cellphones or tablets, people increasingly skip Google in favor of apps like Flixster for movie times or Kayak for flights. Apple is taking on mobile search with Siri on the iPhone, which can answer questions about the weather or search for nearby restaurants. With its new mapping service, Apple has also entered local search.
On January 4, Blekko, a search start-up, introduced an app called Izik for Apple and Android devices. It tries to make searching more tablet-friendly by showing images instead of just links, and making it easier to swipe through many pages of results with a finger.
On mobile devices, said Rich Skrenta, chief executive of Blekko, "the user experience is so different that we think it opens things up. On your desktop, if it doesn't look like Google, you think that's not a search engine. On a tablet, it's just vastly different."
The New York Times
(China Daily 01/20/2013 page10)