From November 26 through December 12, our home page had a screen scraper that demonstrated how many links from the top 100 were missing for the search terms you entered. We were hoping that Google would relax the filter. See the essay The Great Google Filter Fiasco for more background on this.
Our screen scraper analyzed 10,000 search terms per day when it was operating. After purging duplicates and some porn, we ended up with closer to 5,000 per day. The numbers were stable from November 26 through December 6. From December 7 to December 10, there were minor shifts for some terms. On December 11, however, the numbers began taking a dive for all terms. We believe that the Google glitch that made our demonstration possible was getting fixed. It does not appear, at the end of December 12, that those sites that lost their ranking will be restored to any significant extent. The fact that Google blocked our screen scraper IP address on December 7 (it took about four hours to change to a different server), together with Google's glitch fix, suggest that Google would rather suppress our data than restore the thousands of innocent sites.
We archived our data from December 6 through December 12, and this data is available here for searching. You will see the massive shift downward in the numbers on December 12. That's the day when we pulled the screen scraper, because it could no longer do its job of collecting data. To give you a general idea of the scope of the search terms involved in this filter, the December 6 list is shown below. The numbers on December 6 show the last day of the stable period, and are numbers that we believe still represent the true state of affairs with the filter.
The number in front is the number of links that are missing for that term, out of the top 100 links in a recent Google search. Scan this list and other lists since December 6 by using three or more consecutive characters, including spaces: