After a three year partnership with Yahoo, Mozilla has switched their default search provider for Firefox back to Google. The post Mozilla drops Yahoo search for Google with new Firefox Quantum browser release appeared first on Search Engine Land
After Yahoo lost some Firefox users to Google, Yahoo begins notifying these users to switch back to Yahoo Search as their default search provider in Firefox. The post Yahoo Asking Firefox Users To Make Yahoo Search Their Default Search Engine appeared first on Search Engine Land. Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
A new message above Google’s search results is the most visible attempt yet at getting Firefox users to switch back to Google. The post Google Is Practically Begging Firefox Users To Switch Their Default Search Engine appeared first on Search Engine Land. Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Yahoo won the deal to be the default search engine in Firefox in November; now after losing some search share, Google’s fighting back. The post Google Suggesting Firefox Users Change Their Search Engine & Home Page appeared first on Search Engine Land.
On October 18 2011, search marketers (and all marketers) took a vital blow when Google announced the “Not Provided” keyword segment in Google Analytics. Click Consult reports that over 40% of all keyword traffic in Google Analytics is now bundled into the black hole known as “Not Provided.” I wrote a post on this back […] Author information Gabriel Gervelis Gabriel Gervelis is the owner of Gervelis Search Marketing . You can find him on Twitter – @seo_pro , Twitter Facebook Google+ The post Mozilla Moves to Block Cookies, What Impact Will This Have on Google Analytics?
BrowserFame reports the latest “nightly channel” of the Firefox browser, version 19, is warning browser users when it appears someone is hijacking the search engine results. This is to warn users when they may be “falling victim” to “search hijacking” according… Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Firefox 14 has officially launched today, which means all Google searches are encrypted by default.
The popular Firefox browser is on track to use a secure method of searching Google by default, a change that will help prevent potential “eavesdropping” of what people are searching for. It will also further reduce the ability for publishers to know how people find their sites in Google..