Surfing fingers are no longer looking for sex
Sex is finally losing its appeal on the net according to researchers in America.
Interest in sex and entertainment had been replaced by more serious surfing, a study of 200,000 users conducted by Penn State University's School of Information Technology has found.
The research, conducted over five years, found that in 1997 approximately one in six web queries to search engine Excite was about sex.
By 2001 only one in 12 surfers was searching for sex and many of these enquiries were about human sexuality rather than pornography.
Commerce beats sex During the same period searches related to commerce, travel and employment rose from 13.3% in 1997 to 24.7% in 2001.
Our results indicate that a significant percentage of users continue to have low tolerance for wading through large retrievals
Amanda Spink, Penn State University
Researchers note that the increase interest in commerce and travel coincided with an 80% increase of commercial content on web servers by 1999.
The study also found that surfers are becoming less patient with trawling the web.
In 1997, people were willing to look harder for the information they wanted with less than 30% of Excite users examined only one page of results per query.
Impatient surfers By 2001, the percentage of single-page searches had risen to more than 50 percent. A frustrated 70% would not go beyond two pages of results.
"Our results indicate that a significant percentage of users continue to have low tolerance for wading through large retrievals," said Amanda Spink, who led the research project.
"Many people tend to take the first thing they get, no matter what the quality.
"From other studies we see that users jump on and off the web search engines in little spurts, many times on the same topic," she added.
The waning popularity of porn is borne out by other net measurement firms. According to JupiterMMXI porn is not even in the top 10 websites.
Instead portals like MSN, ticket booking services and corporate sites are the most visited sites on the net.
Novelty wearing off It could be that on other search engines sex is still popular
The number of spam e-mails inviting people to pornographic websites has increased phenomenally in recent years.
Danny Sullivan from Search Engine Watch believes the Penn University study is flawed because it looks at just one search engine.
"Excite has undergone significant change since 1997 and has diminished in terms of popularity. It could be that on other search engines sex is still popular," he said.
It could also be simply a case of the novelty wearing off said one analyst who declined to be named.
"Once people finally stopped looking up the rude words in the first ever dictionary, they actually used it for proper reasons, like Scrabble and trying to spell difficult words like Sequoia," he said.