Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

A Survey on Profound Web Md Mohsin Ansari Department of CSE. Integral University, Lucknow

Md Mohsin Ansari

Abstract


The Deep Web contains 99% of the information content of the Web; however, most of this information is contained in databases and is not indexed by search engines. A complete approach to conducting research on the Web incorporates using surface search engines and Deep Web databases. Most users of the Internet are skilled in at least elementary use of search engines; however, skill in accessing the Deep Web is limited to a much smaller population. The Deep Web is the fastest growing sector of the Web and it appears to be the “paradigm for the next generation Internet”.

 


Full Text:

PDF

References


Bergman, Michael K (July 2000). The Deep Web:

Surfacing Hidden Value. BrightPlanet LLC.

He, Bin; Patel, Mitesh; Zhang, Zhen; Chang, Kevin

Chen-Chuan (May 2007). "Accessing the Deep

Web: A Survey" Communications of the ACM

(CACM) 50 (2): 94–101.

doi:10.1145/1230819.1241670.

Garcia, Frank (January 1996). "Business and

Marketing on the Internet", Masthead 15 (1).

Archived from the original on 1996-12-05,

Retrieved 2009-02-24.

@1 started with 5.7 terabytes of content, estimated

to be 30 times the size of the nascent World Wide

Web; PLS was acquired by AOL in 1998 and @1

was abandoned. "PLS introduces AT1, the first

'second generation' Internet search service" (Press

release). Personal Library Software, December

1996, Retrieved at 24-02-2009.

Raghavan, Sriram; Garcia-Molina, Hector (2001).

"Crawling the Hidden Web" (PDF). Proceedings of

the 27th International Conference on Very Large

Data Bases (VLDB). pp. 129–38.

Alexandros, Ntoulas; Petros Zerfos, and Junghoo

Cho (2005) (PDF). Downloading Hidden Web

Content, UCLA Computer Science, Retrieved 2009-

02-24.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.