Forum Moderators: martinibuster
I have been lazy about doing it for a few months, and today I finally bit the bullet. Not as bad as I feared, but still took me close to an hour to straighten everything out. Several useful sites had moved without a redirect, and one site that I have many deep links to redid their structure, again without benefit of redirects.
I am curious, how do people with multiple sites deal with keeping their links up to date?
Complicated spider = perl script, fake user agent ;), rotate the agent for different runs, and also fetch pages through a proxy (rotating as well). This way it seems a bit more like a "real" bit of traffic, instead of an application checking their links...
I have considered creating an 'oops' page where the links of those that have not played fair will go to.
Opps!, sorry the link to 'x' insn't working, please try any of the following
Now I am going to take the step.... I'm signing up for Linksmanager dot com. If you can afford to pay a few dollars every month.
I've been running a quite large directory for some years, there are thousands of outbound links and i can't controll all manually in a day, not even a week, but i do so - regularly.
The thing is: When a page shifts topic it often becomes useless to users of my site. Throughout the years i've had quite a few brilliant sites on most topics changing into pr0n sites, linkfarms, weird networks, weight loss product sites, and most other options.
/claus
Claus needs to ensure absolute quality control, not only checking for broken links but also inspecting and confirming relevance to maintain standards.
Others need only check for broken links and link exchanges.
Its that old 'horses for courses' maxim :)
I agree totally but I delete those who don't play fair for absolute pleasure. The company I work for, the website is an "authority" (We rank no.1 and no.2 for half a dozen serps) if you will and we get link requests fairly often everyday and of course I only link to those of quality. But some of these guys try take advantage and delete our link so G will see that we are outbound linking to site X. And so they are getting a nice link from a very decent site.
So I usually delete the link and write them a polite email almost condesending (might as well be a dick to them...subtley) and 9/10 times I get an email back either apologetic and telling me my link is back up or someone telling me it was always there....ya right. So I am a delete button addict;-)
"Opps!, sorry the link to 'x' insn't working, please try any of the following"
LOL that is a really good idea:)