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Google Update Bourbon Part 2

May 2005

         

steveb

6:19 pm on May 23, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Continued from: [webmasterworld.com...]



"We know how the webmasters feel about this update."

No, that is zero sum game. The most useless posts here are from people saying the serps on some datacenter suck or are good because their own stuff ranks bad or good on that datacenter. Not only does nobody else care, there is someone thinking the exact opposite due to how their stuff is ranking.

In any case (repeating mantra from past several updates), a lot folks should consider that screw ups are not deliberate policies. Google has been a technical mess for more than a year now, just over two years really. Allegra was just a blip of an update, but was a huge technical disaster. Google also has a horrible time figuring out canonical pages, particularly when webmasters deliberately do inconsistent things.

This update seems to me to be another minor bit of shuffling, with the added "bonus" of a lot of anomalies, most caused by lazy or uniformed webmastering (meaning if you have been reading webmasterworld and haven't had a 301 on for non-www and www since at least last summer, you only have yourself to blame).

I see almost no changes in my niches, except... a HUGE increase in straight redirect domains. This tactical trash gets discovered fairly quickly but apparently a new tactic has been discovered and needs to be squashed; authority sites performing same as recently; sites still in the sandbox dumped back to pre-Allegra levels, while sites that got out of the sandbox with Allegra doing a bit better.

sailorjwd

8:45 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I have an idea for Google to fix this problem and give everyone what they are looking for...

Google needs to add another dimension - tabbed interface. Categorize each site based on 'type of site
and have tabs across the top something like this:

a) Cloaked Sites
b) Directory-style sites filled with other folks snippets
c) Page is > 50% adsense script
d) Pages > 15 screens long
e) Pages you are looking for

Something like that anyway.

AnonyMouse

8:54 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Now THAT was funny!

I've learnt from this thread too - that I need to know more about scraper sites linking to me. Checking my backlinks using "domain.com" was indeed enlightening.

And for my 2 cents worth, results I'm seeing in a VERY competitive arena are showing very relevant and very authoritative results. (Not mine, unfortunately). Some space in there for a bit of SEO, but top results are pretty good in my book.

[edited by: AnonyMouse at 8:57 pm (utc) on May 24, 2005]

lorenzinho2

8:56 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



< They're not unlike the old results, but they are different.

I stand corrected.

You guys are absolutely right. These are new SERPs - that are similar to the pre-bourbon ones, but with a number of new ( previously sandboxed?) sites.

flicker

8:58 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Wow. A quick data point here: I hadn't even noticed there was an update. I came here to check out a totally unrelated question, and found two humungous threads about Update Bourbon.

The SERPs have not budged in the educational sector as far as I can tell, nor in a couple of hobby sectors I'm interested in. It might help y'all to figure out what's going on if you could pinpoint which web sectors were having this problem.

Whatever it is, though, it's not a scraper penalty, and it's certainly not an authority-site penalty (unless I'm misunderstanding what an authority site is). There must be thousands of stupid scraper sites who have started linking to the major educational authority site of the organization I volunteer for over the past couple of months (rendering it impossible for me to check the site's backlinks anymore :P ), and Google results regarding it look exactly the same. My hobby site has few links to it but is still in the first page of results about its topic because the topic is obscure ; now it has somehow picked up a whole bunch of scraper links on a completely irrelevant topic, to the extent that it now has more irrelevant scraper links than real links. Yet it has not been banned either. It's still on the front page for this obscure term (and #1 for its name).

I'll be VERY curious to see if a good explanation can be found for why this update is destroying good sites in some corners of the web (I don't know Helleborine's site, but Danny's site is terrific, and I used EFV's site myself a couple months ago), and leaving other corners of the web completely, blissfully unscathed. I wonder if perhaps it just hasn't finished factoring some things in yet?

europeforvisitors

9:05 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)



I think they're holding steady because they are the old results.

That's my impression, too. When I checked earlier this afternoon, one of the "stable" data centers that was mentioned showed results that were identical to those of a few days ago before Bourbon was unbottled (at least for the keywords that I've been monitoring).

sailorjwd

9:08 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Just noticed some of my cache dates went from may 20 to apr 22 on default google.com.

blend27

9:14 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



plain google.com, usualy on page 60 thrue 70 returns same page-set slightly rearanged for some of keywords i monitor. so sinse my site is no where to befound for thouse keywords, i hope once this is over, i might come up in 600 + which would a great plus for 2 year old site(today) on G(scraped, banned, filtered and in top 10 on Y and top 5 on MS)

2create

9:16 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Just wondering....for those of you who have gone down in the ranking, how many have link pages. Not FFA's or anything spammy like that, just partner or resource pages. I do and I'm wondering if that is hurting me with this update. The people I link to are all related to my site but not all have good PR's. Is it bad to link to a related site even if they have a low PR?

LearningNow

9:23 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I have to agree with flicker. Over the past three months many scraper sites have been linking to one of my sites that is educational based and this update hasn't done anything to hurt in any way. It's as if there isn't an update at all. In fact, with every one of these updates over the past year this particular site just steadily gains strength in the rankings as I work on the individual pages. I've done very little with the linking except occasionally a request comes in or I send out a request to a complimentary site. Many authority sites have been linking to this site, likely because of the unique content.

I wish people could share what their industry is so we can see if these update changes are industry specific.

bobothecat

9:30 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)



I wish people could share what their industry is so we can see if these update changes are industry specific.

U.S. Travel here... no changes with the SERP's I check - nothing much happened with "Alegra" either.

nsqlg

9:37 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



72.14.207.104 suits me just fine. cleaner results for my keywords. i vote for that to be the winner.

I like this one too. Looking the messages, nobody disagrees with this.

dave741

9:50 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



72.14.207.104 looks like pre-Bourbon to me ...

2create

9:52 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I like 72.14.207.104 too. Have a feeling it won't last though.

I'm in the web design/development area BTW and I have been dropped.

Dayo_UK

9:53 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)



>>>pre-Bourbon to me

Bourbon with a twist?

I cant decide on that DC for deffo - no doubt when I get up tomorrow it will all be different

reseller

9:58 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Dayo_UK

>no doubt when I get up tomorrow it will all be different<

Lets hope so ;-)

nsqlg

10:03 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



One domain (have two, the small one) part of my authority site (if you look a book in my language/niche will find ours books in any library), had been penalized, bad for then and the users, I will say, if you build a good website, can almost forget the search engines... Yes, I know, referers of the G are a candy, but google dont is mine, dont is my business what they will do with yours visitors.

I need work :)....

(sorry for my english, tks)

Powdork

10:14 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I like this one too. Looking the messages, nobody disagrees with this.
I disagree, and if you look at the messages you'll see many people feel those are just old results (pre-update).

I am also in US travel and see very few changes except on 64.233.163.104 where sandboxed sites are showing up. This is exactly what happened during Allegra. Then my sandboxed sites made brief appearances on certain DC's but were buried again days later. The difference I am seeing now though is that the datacenters with the sandboxed sites showing have more results than those without the sandboxed sites. That gives me some hope, but not much.

RichTC

10:44 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Wow, some real moaning going on here!

Look, the same volume of surfers are using Google today as they were before. If one site loses some traffic another one is gaining it.

We should be discussing here what the new algo adjustment is doing, how to do some google SEO to keep up.

Sitting back and moaning that you have a site that has ranked well and has now fallen back a little is not the answer. Frankly a good mix up is still required if you ask me. A number of very stale websites still rank high in google just because they are over a certain age imo. The sector im in sees very little change in the top 20 and its been like this for ages.

My own sites major keywords dont even rank in the first 70 on Google, i have to work on smaller keywords to get any traffic from Google and this is nothing to do with google SEO or content its down to age imo. I believe Age to be a major factor for top commercial keywords.

Some of you moaning should be gratefull of the free traffic you have had so far from Google, some of us here are not so lucky.

Good luck

helleborine

10:54 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



72.14.207.104 looked like old results minus my site 30 seconds ago, but now it looks like the other DCs as I'm typing. Also minus my site.

You think the users won't notice? I think they will. Faster if we decide it's worth pointing out to them, as some of us are already doing.

I love to come up with these examples... post-Bourbon, if you search for the Moonwalking One-Legged Giraffe Tour's Official site, http;//moonwalkingoneleggedgiraffetour.com, and type Moonwalking One-Legged Giraffe Tour in the search box, you're WAY more likely for it to come up #1 on Yahoo than on Google.

It's the... "site name penalty!"

Bravo, Google engineers, bravo! I feel sorry for those of you that won't have a job anymore on Monday. Cash the stock options right away, you'll have the last laugh!

AAnnAArchy

11:03 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



<<72.14.207.104 looks like pre-Bourbon to me ...>>

It definitely isn't the same. I had one site that's been stuck in the sandbox for a year and it's #2 on that dc.

And for the people complaining about the people complaining about the update - from what I recall from the past couple of years, this *is* the whining thread. The serious discussion thread doesn't start until the update has settled, as now no one knows for sure what's sticking. There's only anecdotal evidence and complaining/cheering. If you want serious discussion, wait until that thread starts.

steveb

11:06 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The whining in these threads is useless. But there ARE some things that can be learned by watching as the stew is being made. Sometimes, not always but sometimes, and now does seem more likely than usual, as ingredients are added, some lessons can be learned. A focus on that would be nice.

When very different types of results appear on different datacenters, there are always interesting things to be observed. These 72* things had never even been posted before the past few days (that I ever saw at least).

sunflower12

11:19 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



"And a lot of authority sites are untouched. In fact, the vast majority of the results in my highly competitive commercial niche are very good, unless you are a cheesy link farm disguised as a directory. As mentioned, its a zero sum game. "

I agree, all the authority sites I follow are still ranked in the top 5 and this update seems to have erased many link farms on page one.

[edited by: sunflower12 at 11:21 pm (utc) on May 24, 2005]

AAnnAArchy

11:20 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The whining is generally accompanied by information about people's sites - why they think they dropped, who's been linking to them, etc. And when the posts don't have any info, consider it a vent by someone who can't vent anywhere else. It's not like you can even explain a Google update to most people.

steveb

11:24 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Previously hijacked site, now ranking about eight for its site name on some dc's does not register at all for allintext on those dc's. On the dc's it is ranking second for its name, it shows as #1 for allintext.

It shows #1 or #2 on all dc's for allintitle, allinanchor, and allinurl. It's only a complete airball on the bad-rank dcs for allintext.

g1smd

11:28 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



>> "May 20, 2005 - Cached"
>> however when i click the "cached link" it says
>> "as retrieved on May 21, 2005 02:16:21 GMT" <<

Correct. Cache Date/Time is UTC (Google calls it GMT). SERPS show Fresh dates in some US Time Zone about 6 hours behind UTC.

>> The interesting thing is the percenatge of people complaining about odd/unjust/unlikely changes who don't have the www/non-www issue consistent, or have inconsistent linking like relative links or some links to "/" while others go to index.html or default.asp?

I fixed a friends site in mid March so that everything redirected to non-www (the opposite of how I normally set things up) and so that all internal links ended in a trailing / on the URL (every page is an index page in a folder). It took Google 6 weeks to drop all the non-required pages and list only those without a www and with a trailing / on the URL. A week later (about 2 weeks ago) it started adding the other URLs back in (as URL-only listings), just a few at a time, every few days. Three days ago, it suddenly added ALL of the four variations of the URL back into the index, and did so for every one of the 116 pages of the site.

I think that if Google has fixed the 302 problem (and I don't see any evidence that the problem is fixed) then they have done it by totally destroying some part of the algo that deals with 301 redirects.

Powdork

11:46 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



here is an interesting one.
On 72.14.207.104 I do a pet search of mine and add &filter=0.
The fourth result and the tenth result are the same page. They share the same url exactly including the www. My browser shows that I have visited one, but not the other. So is Google putting a different page into the results but showing the url of the redirect-destination page. The page that shows up twice does have a nonwww to www redirect in place.

fearlessrick

11:50 pm on May 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Could somebody point me to the info on 302's? or how to fix the www vs non-www situation. I have no clue what that's about, but I'm sure it's part of my problem.

librarian

12:04 am on May 25, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I've been gone all day but I've been watching the changes on my sites since the weekend before last. At least that's when pages began to shift around. Search result numbers jumped all over the place. My site's two pages listed on page one disappeared before this was named as an update. What I saw was all the pages on page one that had been there before the last update. My site's pages had been on the top of page two before moving up to page one again during the last major update. So for me it's looked very much like a roll back. Then I returned home this afternoon and did some checking to find Google now lists our site both as www.site.com and site.com instead of just site.com which is the way Google has listed it for years. I checked the cache to find the new listing was spidered on May 22nd. The non www versions were spidered in April on a couple of different dates. I've checked the logs for the date in question but can't find Googlbot looking at anything but the non www version of pages.

Tomorrow I plan to check with the host to see if a redirect is in place. The site is on an NT server which makes it harder for me. However, no matter which way I type in the address, with and without the www, the site comes up to the non www version.

I saw several pages back others may have a similar problem. Do I need to try to get a software redirect on to the site other then from the host? I see duplication problems coming up. The other thing I noticed was that the www version is actually out ranking the non www version.

Any comments would be appreciated.

Thanks,
Librarian

Powdork

12:10 am on May 25, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



fearlessrick,
If you are running an apache server add this to your .htaccess file

RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^example\.com
RewriteRule (.*) [example.com...] [R=301,L]

This will redirect the nonwww to the www. If you don't have an .htaccess file then make one in a plain text editor, name it .htaccess and upload it to your root directory. Sometimes you will already have one hidden in your files, depends on your host. If you upload it and notice that it is called .htaccess.txt, then rename it .htaccess.

arubicus

12:11 am on May 25, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



g1smd

Well about darned time. What do people think I have been saying many months ago. 301's were not acting accordingly since this supposed 302 fix went into place.

Does this site happen to be EFV site? I noticed on his site after his fix some of the same stuff started to happen. I noticed when looking at his cached pages of what is supplemental most if not all were cached last year. If the site you are referring to is not his I suggest look at the cached versions I can almost predict that they will be OLD cached versions.

If there are any other redirects on the site I suggest also an investigation into what google is displaying under the original url and new url. This is where I caugh google indexing the new page under the old url. This old url never seen that design.

Any external redirecting 301 scripts I have seen google index the page the URL is on under the redirecting URL.

I did notice that there were 4 versions of the index pages (with www trailing, without www but with trailing, www without trailing, and without www without trailing) each having different cach dates right before we disappeared. (last update) Google may considering these pages the same and if instead if finds a redirect it may get confused.

A couple of things to look at.

I have been looking into sites that are listed in google results and seeing if they or they do not have the www fix. Most don't but I do run across a few. I looked at what google is displaying under site: for those that don't and it looks as if google seems to index them as if they did have the fix. The 301 issue may be causing the problem -or- that google can and does understand the relationships between www and non www versions as well as the trailing slash index pages. If google crawls one and it is not there it may be getting confused so to speak since they are now considered the same rather than different as before.

But if this is the case then only those with the 301 fix (or massive 301's) would have a problem with a site getting dropped and to url only listings.

But I am not sure that it is the case as of yet.

This 704 message thread spans 24 pages: 704