Invisible web for legal research

Invisible web for Legal Research

What is the “Invisible Web”, a.k.a. the “Deep Web”?
The “visible web”is what you can find using general web search engines. It’s also what you see in almost all subject directories. The “invisible web”is what you cannot retrieve (“see”) using these types of tools.

Since 2001 search engines’ crawlers and indexing programs have overcome many of the technical barriers that made it impossible for them to find and provide invisible web pages.

These types of pages used to be invisible but can now be found in most search engine results:

Pages in non-HTML formats (pdf, Word, Excel, PowerPoint), now converted into HTML.
Script-based pages, whose URLs contain a ? or other script coding.
Pages generated dynamically by other types of database software (e.g., Active Server Pages, Cold Fusion). These can be indexed if there is a stable URL somewhere that search engine crawlers can find.

Why isn’t everything visible?

There are still some hurdles search engine crawlers cannot leap. Here are some examples of material that remains hidden from general search engines:

The Contents of Searchable Databases. Most of the invisible web is made up of the contents of thousands of specialized searchable databases (library catalogs, article databases, etc.). When you search in one of these, the results are generated “on the fly” in answer to your search. Because the crawler programs cannot type or think, they cannot enter passwords on a login screen or keywords in a search box. Thus, these databases must be searched separately.

A special case: Google Scholar is part of the public or visible web. It contains citations to journal articles and other publications, with links to publishers or other sources where one can try to access the full text of the items. This is convenient, but results in Google Scholar are only a small fraction of all the scholarly publications that exist online. Much more – including most of the full text – is available through article databases that are part of the invisible web. The UC Berkeley Library subscribes to over 200 of these, accessible to our students, faculty, staff, and on-campus visitors through our Find Articles page.

Excluded Pages. Search engine companies exclude some types of pages by policy, to avoid cluttering their databases with unwanted content.

Dynamically generated pages of little value beyond single use. Think of the billions of possible web pages generated by searches for books in library catalogs, public-record databases, etc. Each of these is created in response to a specific need. Search engines do not want all these pages in their web databases, since they generally are not of broad interest.

Pages deliberately excluded by their owners. A web page creator who does not want his/her page showing up in search engines can insert special “meta tags”that will not display on the screen, but will cause most search engines’ crawlers to avoid the page.

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How to Find the Invisible Web

Simply think “databases”and keep your eyes open. You can find searchable databases containing invisible web pages in the course of routine searching in most general web directories. Of particular value in academic research are:

Librarians’ Index

Infomine
Use Google and other search engines to locate searchable databases by searching a subject term and the word “database”. If the database uses the word database in its own pages, you are likely to find it in Google. The word “database”is also useful in searching a topic in the Google Directory or the Yahoo! directory, because they sometimes use the term to describe searchable databases in their listings.

EXAMPLES for Google & Yahoo:
plane crash database
languages database
toxic chemicals database

Remember that the Invisible Web exists. In addition to what you find in search engine results (including Google Scholar) and most web directories, there are other gold mines you have to search directly. This includes all of the licensed article, magazine, reference, news archives, and other research resources that libraries and some industries buy for those authorized to use them. The contents of these are not freely available: libraries and corporations buy the rights for their authorized users to view the contents. If they appear free, it’s because you are somehow authorized to search and read the contents (library card holder, member of the company, etc.).

As part of your web search strategy, spend a little time looking for databases in your field or topic of study or research. Remember, however, that all proprietary information — most of the journals, magazines, news, and books — are not freely available. Publishers and authors control them under copyright and other distribution rules. You will be prompted to pay or enter a password to see full text. A library you have the rights to use may have access to what you want, however.

The Ambiguity Inherent in the Invisible Web:

It is very difficult to predict what sites or kinds of sites or portions of sites will or won’t be part of the Invisible Web. There are several factors involved:

Which sites replicate some of their content in static pages (hybrid of visible and invisible in some combination)?
Which replicate it all (visible in search engines if you construct a search matching terms in the page)?
Which databases replicate none of their dynamically generated pages in links and must be searched directly (totally invisible)?
Search engines can change their policies on what the exclude and include.

Want to learn more about the Invisible Web?

The Wikipedia “Deep Web”article provides a fairly up-to-date summary of the problems, current state, and technologies associated with the phenomenon.We defer to its links to other resources and readings.

Source: https://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/InvisibleWeb.html

Conclusion

Notes

See Also

References and Further Reading

About the Author/s and Reviewer/s

Author: international

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