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I foolishly answered an email from a S.E.O company called <snip> who offered to get me more traffic through building links. It worked by putting loads of hidden links on your page linking to other sites.
I registered 4 of my sites with this company and now have paid the ultimate penalty - BANNED FROM GOOGLE. I actually realised this was bad news and had removed the code from my page just before google banned my sites and those of 300+ others.
Whats more the person behind it is refusing to ignore any emails - mine and others.
The bar is gray with curent page is not ranked by google - so I guess I am banned. Is there any point emailing Google saying I realise my mistake, won't do it again etc? Also is there any chance that the site may get relisted? Or is it time for a new domain name?
Any help greatly appreciated
Iain
[edited by: WebGuerrilla at 8:01 pm (utc) on Nov. 25, 2002]
[edit reason] no specifics please [/edit]
Welcome to WebmasterWorld.
I'm afraid there isn't a whole lot you can do. The best approach would be to clean everything up, and then wait it out. If the penalty isn't lifted in 6 months, and you get most of your traffic from Google, then you might want to begin the process of starting fresh with a new domain.
Just now are we starting to rebound a little from the punishment. It's been nearly four months of hard work for that small group of websites to pull them back out of the abyss a little.
From what I have heard, maybe GoogleGuy or someone with a deeper understanding can confirm - once you are flagged for problems like you mention, you have approximately a 4-6 month waiting period, whereas you may be able to "rank" again or at least not receive the grey bar altogether.
If it was me, and I had it to do over again, I would've dropped the older sites altogether and started over. Unless you have a brand which doesn't allow you to do so as easily.
Good luck to you
TM
If you want a quick fix - get a new domain name and a new host(or just a new IP block) then put your content on the new domain. As with most quick fixes this has some major draw backs - like you lose all your link pop.
Don’t ya just love Google...
TrueMarketing I could easily switch to another domain name, would it be ok to point a new name to the same site that I have just got banned and just rebrand? So would it be the domain name and the IP address thats banned or just the domain?
Also what really sickens me is that the person who proports to being a S.E.O ignores my emails and says we knew the risks! I ended up asking him why he was avoiding everyone on a similar site to this and I got banned for a month! I guess I'm on a downward spiral worked hard to create a good free used car site and bang nothing. I cannot even name the company here so others can join in if effected.
Thanks
Iain
Personally I would blame Google - Not the SEO - Google is the one that chooses to ban sites for reasons that Google does not disclose (except for VERY general do’s and Don’ts) then Google gives no way to get the site back in its index once it has complied with the Google rules. But often times its very difficult to just figure out what you have done that ticked google off.
Would it be okay to have my new domain pointing to the banned domain so that all the established links would still remain?
Iain
If you are trying to trick Google in to giving a higher page rank for your site and you get caught, why blame Google.
Clean sites with lots of good content are the way to go. All the spammy sites I have built rank high in all the other engines, except google.
They are just trying to deliver spam free results.
I don't - and I've been around a while!
I thought an SEO company was a company who worked on producing/optimising websites that would rank high on search engines. One that talks about creating hidden links is surely a Link Farmer - or maybe I'm being naive!
Anyway, back to the point - I suppose you get what you pay for. As in all purchases - caveat emptor!
As for pointing your other domain - if you are grey barred and the other domain is registered to you and/or it is on the same IP and/or it is on the same C block and/or you want to gain your illicit link benefits for this domain, I'd forget it and start again (as far as Google is concerned).
Photoads,
Before you do anything desperate be absolutley sure that the site is actually banned or has a penalty.
There has been a lot of back and forth on whether the gray bar or the all white PR0 bar shows a penalty. I think -- and others will differ -- that the dreaded white bar is the penalty and that the gray bar simply means that Google doesn't yet have enough to assign a PR to a page -- directory listing, links ,etc.
What's the consensus out there? Gray bar or white bar?
And if gray bar does just mean not yet ranked then wait for the next update while you try to build some good links, etc.
Jim
The company is a one man band from the uk. The service was supposed to be automated, so you added a piece of php code that was updated each time someone visited your site.Those not able to run php were to paste the code onto their page.
This then created a huge list of sites on 1x1 pixel images, there was no screening of sites some real dross, and some that I did not want to be associated with. I questioned the service and was reassured it was OK and he was working on some changes!
I tried to have him "publicly horse whipped" but like all crooks they are protected by the law (moderators) when they claim you are making slanderous remarks against them.
Its really interesting how this has escalated and I appreciate all your comments - a real community feel! I may try calling the UK office or am I wasting my time?
Seems like a ban as the other domains that used the service are also of the same status.
Thanks
Iain
Have been 'lurking' here for a while now - mostly due to the problems in this thread and one of our clients. Client with a relatively new (6 months) site that was giving very good SERPS for major keywords disappeared earlier this month. Don't know what the PR was, since I didn't have the dreaded Google toolbar (shame on me!). I now have the toolbar and it is grey for this client.
Site's disappearance earlier this month (around 9th November) coincided more or less with adding a new product range and a re-vamped front page and re-organised dbase and asp pages to accommodate new range. Freshbot been visiting regularly. However, when searching for domain on Google (which is companyname.com) the site itself apparently does not exist, although search brings a listing of all the links pointing to the domain. Googles cached snapshot (according to toolbar) are the old pages.
After reading avidly here for the past fortnight, I was of the opinion that this was not a penalty, more a glitsch. HOWEVER a couple of days ago client received an email from a disgruntled guy who, apparently, had signed up with an 'automated link' programme (then thought better of it when he saw the code he was supposed to put on his index page) and was writing to everyone whose url appeared in the code to warn them that using this programme resulted in a ban from Google, and the company in question refused to answer his emails or take any responsibility. In fact in the 'propoganda' on this site, they openly mention achieving a higher ranking in Google! They also say that they have a different network of sites for Adult Material and that an Adult-related website will not be linked to or be linking to "mainstream" sites. However the code that was sent by above disgruntled guy contained the urls and descriptions of some very dubious sites!
Now the crux of this is - my client never signed up for this service (or at least denies vehemently that he did) and he certainly never asked us to insert any code (which he would have done quite innocently if he had spent the money) - and if he had, we would have pointed out the error of his ways and refused to insert the code!
So - how did client's url get into the code? Is it possible a competitor signed him up to get him banned from Google?
AND more to the point - what to do now? All input/comments gratefully received
During the last dance, it was dropped and changed to a grey bar.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with the page, in respect to dodgy link farming, hidden text etc... so I can see no reason why google would ban it.
I am waiting 'til next month to see if it is truly banned and suggest you do the same if yours has only changed to grey during the last build.
Personally, I would immediately setup the new domain with a few pages (not clones of the original site) and create a few incoming links from somewhere other than your potentially banned domain.
If you find your current site IS banned, you can copy over the pages to the new site and ban google from your old site with htaccess. As the pages linking to this site will have been picked up during this dance, you will be 1 month ahead.
If you find your current site is NOT banned, simply continue with the original site.
IMO :)
Usually, link farms operate such that you have to put the pages on your site in order to get linked by others. Hence, Ann's suggestion to check old cached versions of the site is a good one - it could be some SEO-type "helped" the site in the past. I'd also be sure to do a thorough search of the site as it exist now (if you haven't blown everything away at least once). When working with large, old sites it's easy to get old content pages that aren't part of your navigation structure but are still linked from an individual page, or that are orphaned but not deleted.
If there's no trace, past or present, of the site's participation in this link farm, it is still possible that somebody stuck your client's URL into it. Theoretically, that alone shouldn't be cause for alarm, since the general thinking is that a bad inbound link alone can't hurt you. I'd still be a bit wary, though, particularly if the site isn't well linked from "good" sites.
If this link farm business is still in operation, you could ask them how your client got in the list, and, of course, to remove it. Of course, it the link farm operator is the perpetrator, you probably won't get a useful answer.
But frankly, I think you knew that what you were doing was dodgy, and it may not be a good idea to try to shift the responsibility to someone else. Then again, the benefit of legal action would be that it would stop some other people for falling for the same line.