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Google dominated U.S. searches in January

As search engines Google and Microsoft grow in percentage share for searches in the U.S., Yahoo continues to shrink, according to ComScore data.

Dara Kerr Former senior reporter
Dara Kerr was a senior reporter for CNET covering the on-demand economy and tech culture. She grew up in Colorado, went to school in New York City and can never remember how to pronounce gif.
Dara Kerr
2 min read
ComScore

Big surprise, Google continued to reign over all other U.S. search engines in January with 66.2 percent share, according to data released today by market researcher ComScore.

Not only did Google overshadow all other engines, it also managed to take some of Yahoo's traffic and grow by 0.3 percentage points.

Yahoo did not have it easy last month--users' searches decreased by 0.4 percent putting it at 14.1 percent share. It was the only search engine not to increase share or at least keep the status quo in January.

Over the last year, Yahoo's share has been steadily falling. In December, it finally lost its second place spot to Microsoft's Bing. A year ago, Yahoo's search market share was 16 percent.

Now, Microsoft has 15.2 percent share, growing 0.1 percent in January. Other search engines retained small percent shares, such as Ask with 3 percent and AOL with 1.6 percent. These numbers calculated by ComScore are only for explicit core searches, which are what people manually enter on a Web page.

In December, overall queries rose by 2 percent, however in January they fell by 2 percent. In total, people made 17.8 billion explicit core searches last month. Google nabbed the first ranking (of course) with 11.8 billion, Microsoft had 2.7 billion, and Yahoo had 2.5 billion searches. Google and Microsoft's overall queries fell by 2 percent and Yahoo was down 5 percent.

Google's "powered by" searches, which include those at its own sites along with Google-branded searches at AOL and Ask, seized 68.4 percent of all organic searches--up from 68.1 percent in December. Microsoft's "powered by" searches, which cover those at Bing and Yahoo, captured 26.5 percent of all organic searches with no change from December.