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I study lots of different kw's and categories in AV across a broad range of topics. And I'm very surprised how much spam there still is in AV, and how well senseless kw repetition and invisible text still seem to work. [BTW I don't believe most of these are cloaked pages with red herring results to confuse SEO's.]
So my question is, what's up with that? ;)
I've been under the impression that the spammier practices are a dead end now with AV. Yet the engine still seems to be rewarding the abusers? I've been (stupidly?) trying to develop themes and relevance with related pages and keyphrases. Should I just be cashing in with hollow repetition and white-on-white text instead? ;)
These are just the non-cloaked pages, many with recent dates (verified in the non-US AV engines). It really makes me wonder what lurks behind some of the cloaked ones!
Any input here? :)
You're right, I try to keep in mind that they'll all get purged eventually. It's tough though when the best hope is to end up somewhere in the top fifty (hundred?) rather than the top ten for competitive terms!
alexjc, I think you're probably right about some of the listings, but many are very recent pages (like several weeks old)! Hmm, maybe it's time for a little experiment . . .
Still, I guess if we all stay where we are in this jungle the SE's will eventually hack through and find us. ;)
Give the site the little extra "help" it needs, eh? Good point. So far I usually just submit sites that are 404.
That and I just repeat "Google is merciful, Google is merciful" . . .
Try searching for - bs7799
For the past week most of the top two pages have been filled with identical Symantec sites (www.symantec.com/us.index.html, www.norton.com/, symantec.com/, www.symantec.ca/index.html and others).
This is obviously either spam, accident or some deal between AV and Symantec.
If accident, I can't figure out how they have done it. The visible page content has no reference to bs7799, neither have the meta tags.
I am beginning to wonder just how much importance is now being placed on link pop and hit pop by AV.
I thought 'cloaking' as the practise of submitting a site with one set of contents, and then re-submitting with another set when this has been indexed.... sounds like I was wrong (I'll look it up!).
This explains the content, but I still wonder how AV can allow them to have 16 or so duplicate pages under different domain names... unless the cloaked pages are all different... which really is ultra-spamming.
By the way, what makes you think I'm not modelled on the guy from 'Man from UNCLE', Napoleon Solo? I assume here that, like me, you're old enough to remember this! ;)
Thanks for the laughs...
Helps the hideous headache I'm getting from reading post after post after post...I haven't moved in 2 hours and it looks like I need 2 more! 5 pages since I left work on Friday afternoon!!!!!! Outta control!!! But, most of it fascinating, of course...
:)
2M
I am trying to figure out how you determined that it is a cloaked page. The description in AV reads: "Enterprise Solutions. Internet Partners. Home Computing. Small Business. Partners. Insert Virus Name Here. --> --> --> Virus Alert: Download New..."
I find the first part of this in the HTML: "Enterprise Solutions. Internet Partners. Home Computing. Small Business. Partners. " But I cant find "Insert Virus Name Here. --> --> --> Virus Alert: Download New..."
Any comments are of course appreciated.
Except that, in my experience, this has never had any result. Whatever you report, hidden text on doorways etc., nothing happens. So I can't be bothered anymore, despite encouragement from certain quarters...
BTW, I would love to hear if anyone has had any success reporting spam.
Tenuous link in that BS7799 is a security standard and sysmantec sell security related products. However, when there are dozens of sites dedicated to the standard and these are swamped out... something is going on.
The theming point is interesting... obviously Symantec will do well on the term 'anti virus' and here's the crunch, 'security'. If AV have clumped 'BS7799' and 'security' together in some way, then just maybe....
This may fall apart a bit though when you consider just how many Symantex sites there are there. Surely ALL of these can't be doing that well... well enough to swamp out all the BS7799 stuff?
>>I've been a fool. At the time of indexing, that right hand panel with all the news articles probably had a reference to this: address <<
Great spot. I agree there may have been a link to a page heavy with BS7799 content (which I hadn't found previously)... but even with theming, should this elevate the page above sites exclusively covering BS7799?
Obviously it shouldn't, because people searching for BS7799 are now finding the off-topic pages.
This does... and this is the important bit... seem to illustrate just how important theming is in the AV algorithm. I knew that it was a factor, but expected it to be fairly marginal. Looks like I was wrong.
As far as Symantec are concerned though, it still leaves the spamming arguement of having 16 identical pages on the first two AV pages.
AV have been mailed about this by one of my customers... but no joy so far. I do have some suspicions on this.
Anyhow.... thanks guys.... I've certainly learned quite a bit more about AV from this thread.
"right hand panel with all the news articles probably had a reference to this:"
I think this is definitely a possibilty. With symantec's strong security related link popularity they could get away with a much lower keyword density/theme.
You may be correct though, in that maybe their bs7799 USED TO BE the paged indexed. To check this out, and as a service to AV of course, I have re-submitted all the Symantec pages. The next re-index should be interesting.
Even if this sorts the problem... there is the issue of 16 identical pages. Not just in terms of AV preventing it (a technical nightmare probably for a SE so I am not casting blame), but in terms of the timeliness of their response to emails about spam.
I expected the latter to be dealt with within a few days, but obviously it takes a bit longer than this (assuming of course that they do consider it spam and there is not something else there). Anyone know what the normal turnaround is?
There are a lot of issues in play with this one... strong link popularity, strong theme, zero keyword density, a big corporate, repeated pages, etc. I am still a long way from figuring out the details of AV's algorithm! Maybe the next re-index will clarify this a bit.
However, I think that you are best doing as you have done and resubmitting.
Also bear in mind that this other company has done well by being well linked and possibly highly clicked-on (for other searches). This may be where you need to concentrate some of your efforts.
Don't let the big boys give you the elba.
Wish I could get 1-5 on AV by accident!