Searching for pirates
While those are handy features, they do bring up a problem when it comes to swear words or casual terms for human anatomy. After all, you wouldn’t want Google to mix in f-bombs with your fuchsia searches. To get around this problem, whenever Google detects that you are searching for a controversial word it stops providing Autocomplete suggestions and/or Instant results.
As recently as January 2011 if you typed “the p” into Google, the top result would be The Pirate Bay in Autocomplete. That does not appear to be the case anymore, with Google not showing any Pirate Bay-related Autocomplete suggestions until you type in “the pirate b.” And even then, you only end up with a Pirate Bay Autocomplete suggestion for the torrent tracker’s Android APK section and not the site’s homepage.
Google is also not returning any search results with Instant for the infamous torrent-related site. So to get Google to display Pirate Bay search results you have to type in at least “the p” and press return before seeing results for The Pirate Bay.
The changes to Google’s search services are unlikely to stop anyone from finding The Pirate Bay, especially since the site is still in Google’s index. But the move could be part of Google’s plan announced in late 2010 to remove search terms from Autocomplete that are “closely associated with piracy.”
This is not the first time The Pirate Bay has been the target of modifications to Google’s service. In 2009, Google removed The Pirate Bay’s homepage from its search results. Google said it removed The Pirate Bay in response to a complaint under the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The search giant restored The Pirate Bay to its search index several days later.
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