The results are provided 'as is' and should not be considered reliable, nor do they reflect the opinion of whatdoestheinternetthink.net, its creators or Microsoft.
Furthermore, results may vary greatly on a daily, or even hourly, basis. The results are merely a reflection of a majority in search term results reported by said search-engine.
Since launching, this site sparked up some discussion as to how it all works. Ofcourse, we don’t want to disclose too much of the ‘algorithm’ (it's not all that high-tech) of the site. However.. basically it searches based on associative (english!) sentences. The given searchterm is used in these sentences which are then sent off to the search engine, counting the amount of results returned. (Sentences are double quoted before they are sent off, so as to make sure the search-enginges search for occurances of the *whole* sentence).
This, ofcourse, produces questionable results which – considering the varying results per day/hour – should not be taken very seriously. However, the more results returned, the more reliable these results can become. Do a search for George Bush and then Barack Obama, and you’ll see that the internet is certainly not far off – or perhaps even in-sync – with the result you had in mind.
Doubtful? My advice: sum up 10 ‘obvious’ searches, of which you are almost certain of the results (like ‘beer’, ‘sex’, ‘sleeping’, etc.) and then write down 10 less obvious searches. Then enter these results into the search field. If the first 10 convince you of accurate results, the second 10 will perhaps be not as random as you thought!