How to Use Search Engines and Spot Unreliable Websites
Search engines like Google are the gateway to almost all information on the internet, but not every result that appears is accurate or trustworthy. Learning how to search well and how to evaluate what you find will make you a more confident and safer internet user.
Type clear, specific questions into Google to get better results. Look for information from government websites (.gov.in), established news organisations, or official institutions. Be cautious of websites with extreme headlines, no author names, lots of pop-up ads, or addresses that look slightly wrong. When in doubt, check the same information on two or three separate, trusted sources.
Key Takeaways
- Use specific words and phrases in your searches — the more precise your question, the more useful the results will be.
- Government websites ending in .gov.in and .nic.in are among the most reliable sources for official information in India.
- Watch for warning signs of unreliable websites: no author or date, extreme or shocking headlines, and pressure to share content immediately.
- If you read something surprising or alarming online, check it against at least two other trusted sources before believing or sharing it.
The internet holds an enormous amount of information — some of it accurate and helpful, some of it wrong, and some of it deliberately misleading. Search engines like Google help you find information, but they do not decide what is true or false. That part is up to you. The good news is that with a few simple skills, you can quickly judge whether a website is trustworthy and find the information you actually need.
How search engines work
When you type words into Google and press Search, Google looks through billions of web pages and shows you a list of results it thinks are most relevant to what you typed. The pages that appear at the top are not necessarily the most accurate — they are simply the ones Google’s system considers most useful based on a complex set of signals.
At the top of the search results, you will sometimes see results marked Ad or Sponsored. These are paid advertisements, not recommendations. The non-sponsored results below them are called organic results and are generally more reliable, though they still need to be evaluated.
How to search more effectively
Many people type very short words into Google and get results that are not quite what they needed. Here are simple tips to search better:
- Be specific. Instead of typing ‘health problem’, type ‘symptoms of diabetes in adults India’ or ‘what to do if bitten by a stray dog India’. More specific searches give more useful results.
- Ask a full question. Google works well with natural language. You can type ‘What documents do I need for an Aadhaar update?’ and get direct answers.
- Add a trusted source name. If you want information from a specific organisation, add their name to your search. For example: ‘Aadhaar update UIDAI’ or ‘income tax return CBDT’.
- Use site: To search only within a specific website, type site:rbi.org.in loan fraud in the search bar. This shows you only results from that website.
When you need official government information — about ration cards, Aadhaar, pensions, or schemes — always search for the .gov.in or .nic.in website directly. These are official Government of India web addresses and are the most reliable source for such information.
Understanding website addresses
A website address (also called a URL) tells you a lot about who runs the site. Here is how to read them:
- .gov.in — Indian government websites (e.g., india.gov.in, uidai.gov.in). Very reliable for official information.
- .edu or .edu.in — Educational institutions like universities. Usually reliable for academic information.
- .org — Non-profit organisations. Can be reliable, but worth checking who runs the site.
- .com — Commercial websites. These can be anything from major news organisations to fake blogs. Evaluate carefully.
Watch out for addresses that look almost like a real site but have something slightly different — for example, rbi-india-alerts.com instead of rbi.org.in. These are often fake sites designed to trick you.
Signs that a website may be unreliable
Once you open a website from your search results, take a moment to look for these warning signs before trusting or sharing what you read:
- No author name or date: Trustworthy articles tell you who wrote them and when. If there is no name and no date, be cautious.
- Extreme or shocking headlines: Headlines like ‘SECRET REMEDY THAT DOCTORS DON’T WANT YOU TO KNOW’ or ‘GOVERNMENT HIDING THIS TRUTH’ are designed to provoke strong emotion. Credible sources use calm, factual language.
- Many pop-up advertisements: A website covered in flashing ads and pop-ups is more interested in clicks than in providing good information.
- No ‘About’ or ‘Contact’ page: Reliable websites tell you who they are. If a site has no information about who runs it or how to contact them, treat it with caution.
- Pressure to share immediately: Messages or articles that say ‘Share this before it gets deleted!’ or ‘Forward to all your contacts!’ are a common sign of misinformation.
- Poor spelling and grammar: While occasional errors appear even on good websites, a page full of spelling mistakes and badly written sentences is a warning sign.
Fake news and health misinformation spread very quickly through WhatsApp in India. Before forwarding any message about health remedies, government schemes, or alarming news, check it on a fact-checking website like BOOM Live or AFP Fact Check. A few seconds of checking can stop harmful misinformation from spreading further.
How to check if information is accurate
When you find information that is important to you — especially about health, money, or government schemes — follow these steps to verify it:
- Check two or three independent sources. If a claim appears on only one website, be sceptical. If multiple well-known, independent organisations report the same thing, it is more likely to be accurate.
- Look at the original source. If an article says ‘according to the Health Ministry’, find the actual Health Ministry website and check whether it really said that.
- Search for the claim plus the word ‘fact check’. For example, type ‘tulsi cures cancer fact check’ into Google. Fact-checking organisations in India like BOOM, Alt News, and Vishvas News regularly investigate viral claims.
Reliable sources to bookmark
Here are some websites in India that provide trustworthy information on common topics:
- Government information: india.gov.in — the National Portal of India, with links to all central government services and schemes.
- Health information: nhp.gov.in — National Health Portal of India, with verified health information.
- Financial guidance: rbi.org.in — Reserve Bank of India, for anything related to banking, loans, and financial fraud.
- Fact checking: boomlive.in and altnews.in — well-regarded Indian fact-checking organisations.
Searching in Kannada
Google works very well in Kannada. You can type your search question in Kannada script and get results in Kannada. You can also use Google’s voice search — tap the microphone icon in the search bar and speak your question in Kannada. This is especially helpful if typing in Kannada is difficult on your phone’s keyboard.
Using the internet well is a skill that grows with practice. Start with topics you already know something about — you will quickly develop a sense for which websites feel trustworthy and which feel doubtful. This instinct, combined with the simple checks described here, will serve you well every time you go online.
Sources
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