Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
linux
In the meantime, I have found a knockoff site of x.com, where they just put the pages on their server and everything is the same except now it's y.com, not x.com.
This hijacking domain is www.excite.co.jp. I have seen other postings complaining about them. In fact, I found two of my sites on there. If anybody knows what the deal is with them, can you sticky me? Can something like this account for being knocked down in the SERPS undeservedly?
But clearly Google is struggling. MSN and Yahoo can easily connect my website with its own name. Since December Google cannot get me to #1, which shows a vulnerability of their algo. After sitting at around 150 for a month it moved up to #4 recently. After this update it now sits around #55 - and that is not even the home page.
My sandboxed site offers a very unusual section that MSN and Yahoo quickly put at #1. I am not even in the top 1,000 for this keyphrase on Google.
Maybe the it's the hangovers from the ski trip, but they are in sad shape. After witnessing these poor results myself, I have already switched over to Yahoo.
I've got two awol sites, but they are only awol on half the datacenters, so I don't think it means much, especially considering how sandboxed sites seem to be coming out gradually, definitely not all at once.
What passes for SE optimism these days: when they mush it altogether, maybe it won't suck.
64.233.171.99
64.233.171.104
64.233.171.105
64.233.171.147
left over or some ray of hope? Come on Google....
"I wonder how many webmasters see the other side of the coin on this, i.e. the results look good."
My traffic is up about 30% since Allegra hit, so the other side of the coin looks fine to me. :-)
so, what do we make of this? Our sites got lost or maybe the DCs haven't been synched yet? grasping at straws.