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Matt Cutts

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Matt Cutts

Matt Cutts is the head of webspam at Google.[1]

Career

Cutts started his career in search when working on his Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Matt got his Bachelor's degree at the University of Kentucky and Master's degree from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. At 2007 PubCon, Cutts stated that his field of study was computer science; he then moved into the field of information retrieval, and search engines after taking two outside classes from the university's Information and Library Science department.[2] Before working at the Search Quality group at Google, Cutts worked at the ads engineering group and SafeSearch, Google's family filter.[citation needed] There he earned the nickname "porn cookie guy" by giving his wife's homemade cookies to any Googler who provided an example of unwanted pornography in the search results.[3]

Cutts is one of the co-inventors listed upon a Google patent related to search engines and web spam,[4] which was the first to publicly propose using historical data to identify link spam.[citation needed]

In November 2010, Cutts started a contest challenging developers to make Microsoft Kinect more compatible with the Linux operating system. At the time, Microsoft had stated that the use of Kinect with devices other than the Xbox 360 was not supported by them.[5]

Cutts has given advice and made statements on help related to the use of the Google search engine and related issues. [6]

In January 2012, on the news that Google had violated its own flaps, Cutts defended the downgraded PageRank of the Google Chrome homepage results noting that it was not given special dispensation.[7]

References

  1. ^ . 2012-09-20 http://www.heraldonline.com/2012/09/20/4277966/whilst-google-update-brings-diverse.html. Retrieved 2012-10-03. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Text "LONDON, Sept. 20, 2012: Whilst Google Update Brings Diverse Domain Results, Businesses Still Have the Opportunity to Dominate First Page, Says Punch Communications" ignored (help); Text "PRNewswire" ignored (help); Text "Rock Hill Herald Online:" ignored (help)
  2. ^ Kaushal, Navneet. "PubCon – Matt Cutts Keynote". PubCon 2007. WebProNews. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
  3. ^ 'Google': An interesting read on a powerhouse company, USA Today, November 13, 2005
  4. ^ Acharya, A., et al., (2005) Information retrieval based on historical data
  5. ^ "Kinect hacked days after release". BBC News. BBC. 12 November 2010. Retrieved 15 November 2010.
  6. ^ http://www.webpronews.com/matt-cutts-talks-keyword-density-2011-12[unreliable source?]
  7. ^ Arthur, Charles. "Google shoves Chrome down search rankings after sponsored blog mixup". The Guardian.

Further reading

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