Here I am, surfing from Austin TX USA, and I noticed that Google and Yahoo both are under the impression that I’d rather see links to *.co.uk sites and ads for online stores and products for the other side of the Atlantic than for something more local. I checked my setting on my accounts at both sites, and confirmed that I’ve told them I’m a Merkin, not a Limey, but the problem persists. It’s particularly annoying when I try to get a map. Any ideas as to what’s going on?
Oh, I’m running Firefox 2.0.0.2 on Ubuntu 6.10, it that makes a difference.
I get Yahoo! ads for all kinds of British stuff with my listserv messages from the Old Dance Band Music group. The membership is largely .uk (they’ve always been somewhat keen on 1920s & 30s bands over there), so the assumption is that all members are .uk.
You too may have interests or searches which might suggest you are British to a casual observer.
Back in the days when I used Yahoo, it ALWAYS assumed I was a Brit. I’ve still got a .co.uk email address. Not only that, but I COULDN’T tell them otherwise. There was no way for me to get a .com.au address (which they have).
Is it possible that you have your locale set to the UK? Although I would have assumed that they’d be doing geographical IP address lookup, it’s possible that they’re basing it on what your agent settings are telling them. Also, of course, it’s possible that your ISP has some funky routing that’s confusing their location-based algorithms in the same way.
Are you using the little search box in the top right of the Firefox window? The versions I have at work and on my laptop are subtly different, my laptop seems to have .com sites and work .co.uk sites in use for searches.
If you discover why they think you are British can you let me know because I want to fool them into believing me I’m not in NZ. It irritates me no end, when I type google.com and they change it to google.co.nz.
It’s good old American’s Capaitalism!
They’re simply offering you the best quality services available from the most successful companies. So of course it’s gonna throw up British ones.
I’ve noticed Google’s geolocation algorithm seems to have a bit of trouble. When my in-laws in Dallas switched from Comcast to Time Warner, the new IP address they got caused them to be switched from www.google.com to www.google.co.uk.
There used to be a site on google to report these kinds of problems but I’m having trouble finding it. In the meantime, go to Google and it should set a cookie to stop the redirection.
Try going to http://www.ipaddresslocation.org/ and seeing if that site correctly guesses your location. If that one gets it wrong too, there’s probably some weirdness with your ISP.