People searching the Internet for information are more likely to find the correct
answer than a wrong one. The catch is that you’re most likely not to find an answer
at all. Researchers at Ohio State University in Columbus (Reference and user
Services Quarterly, vol 38, p 360) used search engines to carry out keyword
searches on 60 simple questions, such as “What is the population of Cloumbus,
Ohio?”, and found that 64 per cent of Web pages either didn’t contain the answer
or no longer existed. Of the remainder, 27 per cent had the correct information. The
others were wrong.
More from Âé¶¹´«Ã½
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending Âé¶¹´«Ã½ articles
1
Exclusive report: Inside Chernobyl, 40 years after nuclear disaster
2
Neanderthal infants were enormous compared with modern humans
3
Electric vehicle owners could earn thousands by supporting power grid
4
My life as a meteorologist in Chernobyl under Russian occupation
5
How to spot the Lyrid meteor shower tonight
6
The rise, the fall and the rebound of cyclic cosmology
7
We're solving the fundamental mystery of how reality is glued together
8
The man who crawls into the perilous heart of the Chernobyl reactor
9
Why is it so hard to change your mind?
10
Largest ever map of universe captures 47 million galaxies and quasars



