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Search engine and content providers: neutrality, competition and integration
Author(s) -
Guijarro Luis,
Pla Vicent,
Vidal Jose R.,
Martinez–Bauset Jorge
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
transactions on emerging telecommunications technologies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.366
H-Index - 47
ISSN - 2161-3915
DOI - 10.1002/ett.2827
Subject(s) - ranking (information retrieval) , payment , search engine , net neutrality , incentive , metasearch engine , computer science , search analytics , order (exchange) , search cost , stakeholder , neutrality , business , internet privacy , information retrieval , the internet , world wide web , microeconomics , web search query , economics , public relations , political science , finance , law
In recent years, there has been a rising concern about the policy of major search engines. The concern comes from search bias, which refers to the ranking of the results of a keyword search on the basis of some other principle than the sheer relevance. This search bias is also named as search non‐neutrality. In this paper, we analyse one non‐neutral behaviour, that is, a behaviour that results in a search bias: the payment by content providers to the search engine (a.k.a. side payment) in order to improve the chances to be located and accessed by a user. A game theory‐based model is presented where a search engine and two content providers interact strategically, while the aggregated behaviour of users is modelled by a demand function. The utility of each stakeholder (i.e. the users, the search engine and each content provider) when the search engine is engaged in such a non‐neutral behaviour is compared with that of the neutral case, when no such side payment is present. Additionally, the paper analyses the organisation of such an industry, specifically, the search engine and content providers incentives for a partial and full merger with the content providers, and the effects of each organisation on the users. This paper concludes by identifying the circumstances under which the search bias, on the one hand, and the integration, on the other hand, will effectively result in the users being harmed. This eventual harmful situation will provide a rationale for regulatory measures to be adopted. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.