Skip to main content

Nielsen: Bing Gained Search Share in February

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Although Microsoft’s Bing search engine was greeted with a healthy dose of skepticism when it was first unveiled almost a year ago, but Microsoft must be doing something right—like setting up Bing as the default search engine for Internet Explorer and Motorola Android phones—because the service is continuing to gain share in the U.S. search market. According to media metrics firm Nielsen, during February 2010 Bing was the number three search engine with a 12.5 percent share of the U.S. search market. What’s interesting about that numbers is not that Bing was third, but that Bing was at 10.9 percent in January 2010…and Google dropped over a point from a 66.3 percent share in January to 65.2 percent. Proportionately, that’s a 14.7 percent increase for Bing.

In the past, Bing’s market share gains have seemed to come mainly at the expense of Yahoo. Although Yahoo and Microsoft have entered into a long-term agreement that will see Bing handling the back end of Yahoo search queries, Yahoo says it is keeping its hand in the search game, and according to Nielsen the company still accounted for 14.1 percent of U.S. Internet searches in February. Although Yahoo lost ground between January and February, this time it amounted to 0.4 percent—less than half the share of the overall market Google seemingly lost to Bing during the month. Of course, in proportional terms, Yahoo’s loss is more substantial: month to month, Yahoo saw 2.7 percent of its search traffic go away, where Google saw only a 1.7 percent drop over the same period.

Overall, in raw numbers Nielsen found that U.S. searches dropped by over 1 billion in February, dropping from 10.27 billion searches in January to 9.18 billion in February.

Editors' Recommendations

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
The dark side of ChatGPT: things it can do, even though it shouldn’t
OpenAI and ChatGPT logos are marked do not enter with a red circle and line symbol.

Have you used OpenAI's ChatGPT for anything fun lately? You can ask it to write you a song, a poem, or a joke. Unfortunately, you can also ask it to do things that tend toward being unethical.

ChatGPT is not all sunshine and rainbows -- some of the things it can do are downright nefarious. It's all too easy to weaponize it and use it for all the wrong reasons. What are some of the things that ChatGPT has done, and can do, but definitely shouldn't?
A jack-of-all-trades

Read more
Bing Chat just got so much better in two important ways
Bing Chat shown on a laptop.

Bing Chat is already one of the fastest and more reliable AI chat tools available, and Microsoft just made it more powerful with several significant upgrades.

Possibly the most valuable changes have to do with Bing Chat's memory, allowing longer conversations. Previously, Microsoft limited how long you could chat with Bing before a fresh start was required to prevent a frightening AI meltdown. That has been extended, but Microsoft's blog post didn't share particular details.

Read more
This Bing flaw let hackers change search results and steal your files
The new Bing preview screen appears on a Surface Laptop Studio.

A security researcher was recently able to change the top results in Microsoft’s Bing search engine and access any user’s private files, potentially putting millions of users at risk -- and all it took was logging into an unsecured web page.

The exploit was discovered by researcher Hillai Ben-Sasson at their team at Wiz, a cloud security firm. According to Ben-Sasson, it would not only allow an attacker to change Bing search results but would also grant them access to millions of users’ private files and data.

Read more