Skip to main content

Bing Search Gets Social with Facebook

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Microsoft has turned its Bing search engine more social, bringing live feeds from Facebook right into its search results. The move is the latest move in Microsoft’s recent efforts to enhance the Bing experience and search capabilities. According to Microsoft, Bing is the first search engine to incorporate the Facebook “firehose” of status updates, shared links, and non-page content right in its search results.

Last October, Bing announced a deal to bring Twitter’s “firehose” of real-time tweets into Bing search results. The new Facebook integration builds on that idea, adding Facebook fan page updates as well as popular links posted by Facebook users with their status updates visible to the world. Mindful of recent privacy concerns surrounding Facebook, Microsoft is quick to note that material from non-fan pages is only used if it’s specifically shared with the whole world, and no names, photos, or text associated with the link gets published…or, if there’s no much information to accompany a link, Bing might show an aggregate number of people who have shared a particular link.

Alongside the Facebook status information, Bing has updated its home page to show trending topics extracted from both Twitter and Facebook’s firehose feeds, so users can get an immediate glance at what’s hot on both social networking services. Bing also tries to show some context about why trending topics might be important or interesting, along with a sample of search results from its social media.

Microsoft says it plans to add more features to it’s “social vertical” soon, meaning more integration with social media and real-time status feeds. This might be great news for folks who live and die by what’s trending on social media sites, but for folks who think it’s mostly hooey—and, face it, social media is not exempt from Sturgeon’s Law—there doesn’t appear to be any way for users not to have Bing throw social media in their faces.

Editors' Recommendations

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Are Facebook and Instagram still down? Here’s what we know
The Facebook app icon on an iPhone home screen, with other app icons surrounding it.

If you had difficulty using Facebook and Instagram today, we have some news: you weren't alone. On Tuesday, March 5, both of the Meta-owned social media websites were experiencing outages, rendering them unusable for many people. This came after AT&T experienced a nationwide outage of its own last month.

When did this Facebook/Instagram outage start? Are any other websites down? Is the outage fixed? Here's everything we know.
When did the Facebook and Instagram outage start?
Looking at Down Detector, reports of Facebook and Instagram being down first started coming in a little before 10:30 a.m. ET on Tuesday. Reports spiked around 10:24 a.m., with over 500,000 outage reports coming in at that time.

Read more
‘Take this as a threat’ — Copilot is getting unhinged again
A screenshot of Copilot's unhinged responses on a screen.

The AI bots are going nuts again. Microsoft Copilot -- a rebranded version of Bing Chat -- is getting stuck in some old ways by providing strange, uncanny, and sometimes downright unsettling responses. And it all has to do with emojis.

A post on the ChatGPT subreddit is currently making the rounds with a specific prompt about emojis. The post itself, as well as the hundreds of comments below, show different variations of Copilot providing unhinged responses to the prompt. I assumed they were fake -- it wouldn't be the first time we've seen similar photos -- so imagine my surprise when the prompt produced similarly unsettling responses for me.

Read more
Apple’s Vision Pro to get bespoke Microsoft 365 apps at launch
Microsoft Teams being used on the Apple Vision Pro.

Apple’s Vision Pro is just a couple of days from landing on people’s heads, with many speculating how much of a success -- or not -- the tech giant can make of its most important product launch in years.

A key factor is expected to be the level of interest developers show in creating custom-made apps for the mixed-reality headset, with some major platforms such as Netflix, Spotify, and YouTube deciding to hold back from offering bespoke apps.

Read more