The first person to incorporate the idea of meta searching was
University of Washington student Eric Selberg, who published a paper about his
MetaCrawler experiment in 1995. The search engine is still usable as of 2024. On May 20, 1996,
HotBot, then owned by
Wired, was a search engine with search results coming from the
Inktomi and Direct Hit databases. It was known for its fast results and as a search engine with the ability to search within search results. Upon being bought by
Lycos in 1998, development for the search engine staggered and its market share fell drastically. After going through a few alterations, HotBot was redesigned into a simplified search interface, with its features being incorporated into Lycos' website redesign. In 1997, Daniel Dreilinger published a paper on his experimental metasearch engine, SavvySearch, which was able to automatically select the correct search engine to prioritize based on prior experience. A metasearch engine called Anvish was developed by Bo Shu and
Subhash Kak in 1999; the search results were sorted using
instantaneously trained neural networks. This was later incorporated into another metasearch engine called Solosearch. In August 2000, India got its first meta search engine when HumHaiIndia.com was launched. It was developed by the then 16 year old Sumeet Lamba. The website was later rebranded as Tazaa.com.
Ixquick is a search engine known for its privacy policy statement. Developed and launched in 1998 by David Bodnick, it is owned by Surfboard Holding BV. In June 2006, Ixquick began to delete private details of its users following the same process with
Scroogle. Ixquick's privacy policy includes no recording of users' IP addresses, no identifying cookies, no collection of personal data, and no sharing of personal data with third parties. It also uses a unique ranking system where a result is ranked by stars. The more stars in a result, the more search engines agreed on the result. In April 2005,
Dogpile, then owned and operated by
InfoSpace, Inc., collaborated with researchers from the
University of Pittsburgh and
Pennsylvania State University to measure the overlap and ranking differences of leading Web search engines in order to gauge the benefits of using a metasearch engine to search the web. Results found that from 10,316 random user-defined queries from
Google,
Yahoo!, and
Ask Jeeves, only 3.2% of first page search results were the same across those search engines for a given query. Another study later that year using 12,570 random user-defined queries from
Google,
Yahoo!,
MSN Search, and
Ask Jeeves found that only 1.1% of first page search results were the same across those search engines for a given query. == Advantages ==