Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dogpile is a metasearch engine for information on the World Wide Web that fetches results from Google, Yahoo!, Yandex, Bing, [2] [3] and other popular search engines, including those from audio and video content providers such as Yahoo!.
Online harassment is a common method of dogpiling. Dogpiling, or dog-piling is a form of online harassment [1] or online abuse characterized by having groups of harassers target the same victim.
Name Language Backend ownership Ask.com: Multilingual Google : Baidu: Chinese: Baidu : Brave Search: Multilingual Brave : Dogpile: English Metasearch engine: DuckDuckGo
Infospace, Inc. was an American company that offered private label search engine, online directory, and provider of metadata feeds.The company's flagship metasearch site was Dogpile and its other notable consumer brands were WebCrawler and MetaCrawler.
In April 2005, Dogpile, then owned and operated by InfoSpace, Inc., collaborated with researchers from the University of Pittsburgh and Pennsylvania State University to measure the overlap and ranking differences of leading Web search engines in order to gauge the benefits of using a metasearch engine to search the web.
Web search engines are listed in tables below for comparison purposes. The first table lists the company behind the engine, volume and ad support and identifies the nature of the software being used as free software or proprietary software.
By that time, Go2Net had purchased another metasearch engine, Dogpile. [15] In 2014, MetaCrawler was merged into another one of InfoSpace's search engines, Zoo.com, [16] which was originally launched in 2006. [17]
A cache stampede is a type of cascading failure that can occur when massively parallel computing systems with caching mechanisms come under a very high load. This behaviour is sometimes also called dog-piling.