I'm constantly looking up things on wiki for
information on certain topics especially sciences like chemistry, biology, and astrology.
Not exact matches
The attention economy takes care of the rest: If we pay attention to a
certain topic, more
information on that
topic will be produced.
Kahan and other social scientists previously have shown that
information based
on scientific evidence can actually intensify — rather than moderate — political polarization
on contentious
topics such as gun control, climate change, fracking, or the safety of
certain vaccines.
Teachers can evaluate whether students are prepared to face
certain challenges, such as not finding enough
information on a
topic.
There is also the slight possibility that Governmental agencies start asking Amazon to reveal
information on who bought and highlighted passages that are potentially problematic —
certain religions,
certain topics.
As well as a messaging feature that lets developers poll for posts
on certain topics or share
information (which could be used for a Miiverse replacement).
When I saw how quick
information related to
topics like climate change, civil rights, healthcare, disappeared from U.S. government websites immediately after (or
on) Inauguration Day, I couldn't help thinking that we were lucky not to have to rely only
on government websites to have access to copies of the U.S. Code or key decisions (in relation to a
certain travel ban for instance).
The Civil Law Project of Student Legal Services consists of law students who can provide basic legal
information on various
topics in civil law, such as wills, landlord - tenant matters, employment, and
certain small claims.
For example, you could divide your keywords into 3 categories based
on intent: Buy Now for keywords people use when they're ready to make a purchase (those will often include words like «buy», «coupon», «discount», «deal»), Product for keywords that imply that searchers are looking to make a purchase but haven't completely decided
on the product yet («review», «comparison», «best», «cheap»), and
Information for terms that indicate the searcher is just researching a
certain topic or industry («how to», «tips», «what is», etc).