We can say that Bing learns a lesson from the competition, but it looks like he also extracts other people's search results. Google spokesman Amit Singhal claims this, providing the results of his curious (if not to say "very clever") verification. Here's how it works: find such a query that doesn't find anything in any search engine, manually add a “bait page” to Google as a result for this query, then force about 20 Google employees to search and click on this result using Internet Explorer with the Suggested Sites feature and Bing toolbar enabled. After two weeks, according to Singhal, a sufficient number (about 7–9) out of 100 “baits” will also turn up in Bing. Including wild results like “mbrzxpgjys”, “hiybbprqag” and “indoswiftjobinproduction”.
Does this mean that Bing is “cheating,” as Singhal claims? The experiment was conducted with the Bing toolbar enabled and / or the Suggested Search function, and they are directly stated that they collect data to improve the search results. And on popular queries, unlike rare, Bing gives its own results. Microsoft does not steal private information, but is this not a dishonest device? We think that over this spears will break.