Google temporarily disables realtime search

Says it no longer has access to special feed tweets from Twitter as deal between two companies expires.


Afp July 06, 2011
Google temporarily disables realtime search

WASHINGTON: Google has temporarily disabled its Realtime Search feature following the expiration of a deal with Twitter.

"Since October of 2009, we have had an agreement with Twitter to include their updates in our search results through a special feed, and that agreement expired on July 2," a Google spokesman said in a statement.

"Twitter has been a valuable partner for nearly two years, and we remain open to exploring other collaborations in the future," the spokesman added.

Google said that while it no longer has access to a special feed of tweets from Twitter, "information on Twitter that's publicly available to our crawlers will still be searchable and discoverable on Google."

The Mountain View, California-based Internet search giant announced it was temporarily halting real-time search results in a Monday message on its @googlerealtime Twitter feed.

"We've temporarily disabled google.com/realtime," it said. "We're exploring how to incorporate Google+ into this functionality, so stay tuned."

The Google spokesman said Google's "vision is to have google.com/realtime include Google+ information along with other real-time data from a variety of sources."

Google launched Google+, its long-awaited social networking initiative, last week. Google+ is currently available by invitation only.

Google+ allows users to separate online friends and family into different "Circles" and to share information only with members of a particular circle.According to technology blog SearchEngineLand.com, which first reported the disappearance of Google Realtime Search, Google used a number of other sources for real-time updates besides Twitter messages.

They included Google News links, MySpace updates, Facebook fan page updates and results from user-generated question and answer site Quora.Twitter continues to provide its real-time stream of tweets to Bing, Microsoft's rival search engine.

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