Egosurfing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Egosurfing (also called vanity searching, egosearching, egogoogling, autogoogling, self-googling, or simply Googling yourself) is the practice of searching for one's own given name, surname, full name, pseudonym, or screen name on a popular search engine, to see what results appear. It has become increasingly popular with the rise of popular search engines such as Google, as well as free blogging and web-hosting services. It is sometimes combined with third-party tools such as Googlefight when several people egosurf together.
Similarly, an egosurfer is one who surfs the Internet for his own name, to see what, if any, articles appear about himself.
[edit] See Also
- kibozing - prior to the existence of search engines, a similar practice existed on Usenet, known as kibozing after James "Kibo" Parry, who was well known for replying in a surreal fashion to anyone who mentioned his name, on any newsgroup[1].
[edit] References
- Patrick Dent (2000-09-14). "Ego-Surfing" derides valid, prudent activity. Online Journalism Review. USC Annenberg School for Communication.
- Search Engine Optimisation – It's all about Ego. The Web Marketing Group.
- Michael Miller (2006). "Specialized Searches: Googling yourself", Googlepedia: The Ultimate Google Resource. Pearson Technology Group, 76–78. ISBN 078973639X.
- University at Buffalo (2004-03-29). ""Self-Googling" Isn't Just Vanity; It's a Shrewd Form of Personal "Brand Management," Says UB Internet-Culture Expert". Press release.
- Beppi Crosariol. "When digital dirt goes all the way to the top", The Globe and Mail, CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc., 2006-09-25.
- Auto Googling Chas Jones, Writers' Services.
- Your Ego Just Took a Blow at Wired.com
- Jargon Watch at Wired.com