• DocumentCode
    2359666
  • Title

    On the evolution of clusters of near-duplicate Web pages

  • Author

    Fetterly, Dennis ; Manasse, Mark ; Najork, Marc

  • Author_Institution
    Microsoft Res., Mountain View, CA, USA
  • fYear
    2003
  • fDate
    10-12 Nov. 2003
  • Firstpage
    37
  • Lastpage
    45
  • Abstract
    We expand on a 1997 study of the amount and distribution of near-duplicate pages on the World Wide Web. We downloaded a set of 150 million Web pages on a weekly basis over the span of 11 weeks. We then determined which of these pages are near-duplicates of one another, and tracked how clusters of near-duplicate documents evolved over time. We found that 29.2% of all Web pages are very similar to other pages, and that 22.2% are virtually identical to other pages. We also found that clusters of near-duplicate documents are fairly stable: Two documents that are near-duplicates of one another are very likely to still be near-duplicates 10 weeks later. This result is of significant relevance to search engines: Web crawlers can be fairly confident that two pages that have been found to be near-duplicates of one another will continue to be so for the foreseeable future, and may thus decide to recrawl only one version of that page, or at least to lower the download priority of the other versions, thereby freeing up crawling resources that can be brought to bear more productively somewhere else.
  • Keywords
    Internet; Web sites; document handling; reproduction (copying); search engines; Internet; Web crawlers; near-duplicate Web pages cluster; search engines; Crawlers; File systems; Mirrors; Plagiarism; Sampling methods; Search engines; Uniform resource locators; Web pages; Web sites; Writing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Web Congress, 2003. Proceedings. First Latin American
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-2058-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/LAWEB.2003.1250280
  • Filename
    1250280