A google on “Eugine Nier” for the past week brings up “Some results may have been removed under data protection law in Europe. Learn more” Well, that’s interesting.
And for me, with all of: my own name, “David Gerard”, “Eliezer Yudkowsky”, “Eugine Nier” and “Eliezer Arbuthnot” (a fake name I just made up, for which Google finds no results with the quotation marks, offers me results without them, and again gives the “data protection” warning).
So I think this is a bit like searching for “rat vomit” and getting “Buy Cheap Rat Vomit now” ads from eBay: it’s just an algorithmic thing that gets inserted into certain categories of search.
Let him whine somewhere else on the Internet if he wants a parting shot, if he’s not doing so already. He’s active enough elsewhere.
A google on “Eugine Nier” for the past week brings up “Some results may have been removed under data protection law in Europe. Learn more” Well, that’s interesting.
(In any event, that’s not his real name FWIW.)
It says that for most (it is supposed to be all) name searches, when you are googling from Europe, except when the name is too ubiquitous
Doesn’t show up for “David Gerard” or “Eliezer Yudkowsky”.
It does for me if I include the quotes.
And for me, with all of: my own name, “David Gerard”, “Eliezer Yudkowsky”, “Eugine Nier” and “Eliezer Arbuthnot” (a fake name I just made up, for which Google finds no results with the quotation marks, offers me results without them, and again gives the “data protection” warning).
So I think this is a bit like searching for “rat vomit” and getting “Buy Cheap Rat Vomit now” ads from eBay: it’s just an algorithmic thing that gets inserted into certain categories of search.
It shows up for me even with “Mencius Moldbug”, whether with or without the quotes.