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Here's some next level stuff, I caught on my RSS feed by SEOByTheSea.
Google to use Biometric Indicators to measure "Satisfaction"
Google has acquired a new patent:
I don't know what's worse, capturing "anonymous" data like my heart rate and stuff, that's fine really. I don't care. But "pupil dilation" and "facial flushing" and the others require that the mobile front-facing camera be activated, pictures taken, analysis either done in the device or the picture is shipped out (who's paying for that bandwidth?) AND it has my face in it. I don't care if they say they don't capture meta data (and I've not seen that said, but that's what will be said)... it's not anonymous.
We're eventually going to have a world of completely personalized advertising. Especially once digitally connected contact lenses and all that join the foray. Me and you could be driving down the road, looking at the same billboard and see different advertisements. And all it'll take is to fake the user-agent and now you know I've been looking at purchasing things on Amazon I'd be embarrassed for you to know about.
Anyways, pretty interesting nonetheless.
For us, the benefit is amazingly refined split testing of demographics. The bad part is coming for SEO's. These crowd-sourced metrics like links and social shares are eventually going to matter very little.
I can envision someone like Duck Duck Go purposefully hanging back with classic algorithms as a form of privacy and refusing to use these biometric data points. The war on and for privacy is going to get interesting. We'll lose, and there's going to be a lot of money made on both sides for marketers...
Google to use Biometric Indicators to measure "Satisfaction"
Google has acquired a new patent:
Ranking Query Results Using Biometric Parameters
Inventors: Jason Sanders, Gabriel Taubman
Assignee: Google
US Patent Application 20160103833
Published April 14, 2016
Filed: February 28, 2013
There's all the technical crap out of the way. Here's the good stuff:Inventors: Jason Sanders, Gabriel Taubman
Assignee: Google
US Patent Application 20160103833
Published April 14, 2016
Filed: February 28, 2013
The actions include providing a search result to a user; receiving one or more biometric parameters of the user and a satisfaction value; and training a ranking model using the biometric parameters and the satisfaction value. Determining that one or more biometric parameters indicate likely negative engagement by the user with the first search result comprises detecting:
Flat out, there's only one way they are receiving this type of data, and that's from mobile and wearable technology. iPhones, iWatches, and whoever else makes these kinds of devices is selling the data. I mean, that's the name of the game and no big deal. But I still feel it's invasive and always will.- Increased body temperature
- Pupil dilation
- Eye twitching
- Facial flushing
- Decreased blink rate
- Increased heart rate.
I don't know what's worse, capturing "anonymous" data like my heart rate and stuff, that's fine really. I don't care. But "pupil dilation" and "facial flushing" and the others require that the mobile front-facing camera be activated, pictures taken, analysis either done in the device or the picture is shipped out (who's paying for that bandwidth?) AND it has my face in it. I don't care if they say they don't capture meta data (and I've not seen that said, but that's what will be said)... it's not anonymous.
We're eventually going to have a world of completely personalized advertising. Especially once digitally connected contact lenses and all that join the foray. Me and you could be driving down the road, looking at the same billboard and see different advertisements. And all it'll take is to fake the user-agent and now you know I've been looking at purchasing things on Amazon I'd be embarrassed for you to know about.
Anyways, pretty interesting nonetheless.
For us, the benefit is amazingly refined split testing of demographics. The bad part is coming for SEO's. These crowd-sourced metrics like links and social shares are eventually going to matter very little.
I can envision someone like Duck Duck Go purposefully hanging back with classic algorithms as a form of privacy and refusing to use these biometric data points. The war on and for privacy is going to get interesting. We'll lose, and there's going to be a lot of money made on both sides for marketers...