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== Definition ==
 
== Definition ==
   
The '''deep Web''' (also called the '''Invisible Web,''' '''Undernet,''' and the '''hidden Web''')
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The '''deep Web''' (also called the '''Invisible Web,''' '''Undernet,''' and the '''Hidden Web''')
   
 
{{Quote|is [[online]] [[content]] that cannot be found by [[search engine]]s. These are [[page]]s that are either located too "deep" in a [[website]] for a [[search engine]] to find them, are [[page]]s that a [[search engine]] cannot index because it technically is unable to do so, or are [[page]]s that a [[search engine]] cannot [[access]] because they are [[password]] protected.}}
 
{{Quote|is [[online]] [[content]] that cannot be found by [[search engine]]s. These are [[page]]s that are either located too "deep" in a [[website]] for a [[search engine]] to find them, are [[page]]s that a [[search engine]] cannot index because it technically is unable to do so, or are [[page]]s that a [[search engine]] cannot [[access]] because they are [[password]] protected.}}

Revision as of 22:27, 11 April 2015

Definition

The deep Web (also called the Invisible Web, Undernet, and the Hidden Web)

is online content that cannot be found by search engines. These are pages that are either located too "deep" in a website for a search engine to find them, are pages that a search engine cannot index because it technically is unable to do so, or are pages that a search engine cannot access because they are password protected.
denote[s] a class of content on the Internet that, for various technical reasons, is not indexed by search engines.[1]

Overview

Search engines rely on technology that generally identifies "static" pages, rather than the "dynamic" information stored in databases. Deep Web content resides in searchable databases, the results from which can only be discovered by a direct query. Without the direct query, the database does not publish the result. Thus, while the content is there, it is skipped over by traditional search engines which cannot probe beneath the surface. "Information on the deep Web is 400 to 550 times larger than the commonly defined World Wide Web."[2]

References