Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Web
  4. Legacy Archives

Comscore: Bing Gaining Ground in Search

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image used with permission by copyright holder

It’s been over a year since Microsoft launched Bing, it’s latest effort to take on market leader Google in the field of Internet search. And while Bing’s rise in the market can’t exactly have been described as meteoric, media metrics firm Comcore says Bing is making headway in the U.S. search market. According to Comscore, both Bing and Yahoo picked up 0.6 percent of the U.S. search market between May and June of 2010, with the bulk of that gain coming at the expense of market leader Google.

Comscore found that Google still accounted for some 62.6 percent of the U.S. search market in June 2010; however, Yahoo gained 0.6 percent to come in with an 18.9 percent share, and “Microsoft sites”—at this point meaning almost everything powered by Bing—also picked up 0.6 percent for a 12.7 percent overall share in June. Google’s share amounts to a 1.1 percent decline; Ask.com held even at a 3.6 percent share and AOL lost 0.1 percent to wind up at 2.2 percent. Comscore’s search numbers for the U.S. market focus on “core search,” and omit things like searches on mapping services, user-generated video sites, and local directory services.

Recommended Videos

The news could be good for both Yahoo and Bing: Yahoo has been introducing revamped services and pages designed to make the Yahoo collection of services more social and integrated with other popular online offerings; meanwhile, Bing has been touting itself as a “decision engine” that focuses on making use of data people search for, rather than a mere list of search results. Under a long-term partnership, Bing will soon start handling the back end of searches submitted to Yahoo, although Yahoo will continue to develop its own search front-end and services.

Comscore also found that U.S. search users conducted 16.4 billion searches in June, up 3 percent from May.

Geoff Duncan
Former Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
The maker of ChatGPT wants to make open-source projects less of a security bargain
OpenAI launches Patch the Planet for open-source security, with over 30 open-source projects on board.
openai-chatgpt-os

OpenAI has launched Patch the Planet, a new initiative aimed at fixing one of the internet's quietest problems – the chronically underfunded security of open-source software.

Patch the Planet pairs OpenAI's most security-capable AI models with Trail of Bits, a security firm that has committed its entire research organization to the effort, alongside support from HackerOne and Calif.

Read more
I sifted through the Prime Day chaos to find the best Apple deals actually worth buying
Apple's about to hike prices. Prime Day 2026 is your last chance to save up to $150 on MacBooks, AirPods, and iPads.
Prime Day Deals on Apple Products

Apple is set to increase the prices for its upcoming iPhones and MacBooks, as the company can no longer offset the rising RAM and storage costs. That means, if you are looking to upgrade your aging device, you should buy the current-generation Apple products rather than wait for the new ones.

And since Amazon Prime Day is offering good discounts on the latest iPhones, iPads, MacBooks, and other Apple accessories, this is the perfect time to buy them. Here are my favorite Amazon Prime Day deals for Apple products. 

Read more
This sneaky photo trick gets AI chatbots to ignore their safety rules
Florida International University researchers built a method that nearly doubled the rate of harmful responses from a tested AI model using nothing but pixel-level edits in an image.
JaiLIP AI chatbot exploit image

A photo that looks completely ordinary to you could carry a hidden instruction to trick an AI chatbot into ignoring its safety rules, according to new research out of Florida International University. The study found that pixel-level alterations in an image that are invisible to the human eye can be enough to confuse the model reading the image and lead it to generate responses it would normally block.

Hacking what the AI sees

Read more