Forum Moderators: open
teeceo.
Google depends on websites with good and relevant content.
Earning your living based on other people providing content for your search engine is risky business.
Your search algorithms can return garbage if you're not careful and the only person you have to cry to is yourself.
I'm glad this -sj thing happened...it underscores how important websites are to Google.
Truth is, if webmasters got P/O'd with Google they could easily do an exclude/ban of Googlebot en masse and Google would cease to be; other search engines would fill the gap.
Very important to realize what makes a SE great, and that's the content of the websites it crawls/ranks.
Peter
[edited by: Critter at 3:16 pm (utc) on May 5, 2003]
Truth is, if webmasters got P/O'd with Google they could easily do an exclude/ban of Googlebot en masse and Google would cease to be; other search engines would fill the gap.
Riiiight...would you trust your competitors to also ban Googlebot, or just let them pick up the traffic/SERP positions you left behind?
I wish it was simple as that, then we'd have all the search engines by the proverbial balls, but the reality is largely the opposite and Google knows it. As if anyone needed to reach for an example, despite their all-important mission critical New Year's resolution of improving communication with webmasters, nothing has changed. If trying to glean something meaningful from GG's cryptic posts is communication, then I think I'll pass.
Never say never, things turn on a dime in the forum of public opinion; and especially on the Internet.
All it takes is one immensely popular service to block Google and G loses all its credibility. Could you imagine if you typed in "Slashdot" and the Slashdot site didn't show in the SERPs?
Or what if a big hosting provider blocked Googlebot? Pretty soon people would find out that "I typed it in at Google, but nothing showed up; then I went to X SE and I got it".
It doesn't take a lot to get something like that started if Google does something boneheaded...not that this is the case. My point is that Google relies on us, not the other way around.
Peter
[edited by: Critter at 3:37 pm (utc) on May 5, 2003]
All it takes is one immensely popular service to block Google and G loses all its credibility. Could you imagine if you typed in "Slashdot" and the Slashdot site didn't show in the SERPs?It doesn't take a lot to get something like that started if Google does something boneheaded...not that this is the case. My point is that Google relies on us, not the other way around.
Bad example...anyone who knows about slashdot probably doesn't need to search for it. If you were just looking for it, you'd also get several hundred thousand references to the site itself:
[google.com...]
I don't think any one or even any large group of popular sites could sit by and watch their competitors grow from Google traffic just to prove a point. There are a lot of sites out there that might not be around a month later if they saw their traffic drop by 50%. Just about every "niche" is filled several times over, and any site would be more than happy to move up a position because Joe Webmaster decided that Google doesn't love him.
after a while you will find thats a fallacy. If its your own business the customer is your boss. ..and possibly your accountant ;)
In some ways, especially if you depend on free Google listings, Google is a customer...
[edited by: chiyo at 4:19 pm (utc) on May 5, 2003]
If this turns out to be the case then all of Googles so called decent ranking tactics are crap I'll start spamming as there's even a site above me on SJ with half a page full of dark purple on black keyword stuffing
RIP GOOGLE!