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Article here [internetnews.com]
And what about Grandma's site about growing flowers, no one will ever see it because the hobbyist will not fork out the cash for inclusion. Inktomi's index will look like a pile of infomercials. Why would a portal pay for that?
Jimmy6 you are right.
[webmasterworld.com...]
I'm going to protest this one - others should do the same. Carry the logic of this out and go a couple of years into the future and Ink's move is the first nail in the coffin. If this succeeds every major portal will eventually go the pay for placement route. The art of SEO will be obsolete, and the spidering search engine will be a relic.
Yeah, I know it is a rant, everybody should be ranting..
I still feel the same way, sort of...
I guess the difference now is that it is like fighting an old man with one foot in the grave.
Is INKTOMI becoming the new GOTO??? Wouldn't the directory listings be the best target since they are in the positions we all want anyway.
And what was the close of INKTOMI's stock today???
-s-
Are we having fun yet? ;) I have been trying to figure out why the pages I've paid for are not only buried but missing from the database at this point. This news makes me think that we're going to take the "back-back" seat in Inktomi unless we pay per click. I'm unhappy to say the least.
My PT pages are still ranking high - but now I'm worried! Does this 'full leverage of your meta data' mean that big sites can whack in any keywords they like and rank higher than us because they are now PPC? Yikes! And what about the Looksmart partnership?
I'm very confused.
" Inktomi last year introduced Search/Submit, which lets sites pay to be searched on a regular basis. But that service--which Toman described as "hugely successful"--was aimed at smaller sites, or those submitting fewer than 1,000 Web page addresses. Index Connect is designed to offer a similar service to the large sites. "