Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
mmmm... Is it possible that G can analyze a sites recip links and figure whether a certain percentage of the links link back and then downgrading those links. Say for example that a site has 100 links and 75% of those links link back. This could be downgraded in the algo while a site that has 100 links and only 50% link back, no downgrade. It could even be on a sliding scale in which the higher percentage of "true" reciprocal links, the more the effect of the downgrade.
Of course, if this is true, this along with the many other factors considered in ranking may make it difficult to pin down.
Just some thoughts :-)
(I am not targeting them as I have many good friends there)
The quality of work from 95% of those I have tested out is terrible. They copy content from other sites and claim to write their own unique content, they are copy replace professionals, this leads to Google penalties for sure, I would know.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
I think all companies whom you met are 1 man companies claiming to have a big team for SEO and doing all work themselves,
i am from an indian company and we have 6 copywriters to write stuff for our client sites, All copywriters are Postgraduates in masscomm, viscomm, literature etc, We are a team of 30 members all dedicated just for SEO, we do only SEO with a 30 member team, We are much appreciated by lot of U.S companies when it comes to quality of work, So I recommend you be more specific in blamming Indian companies, We know what we are doing and well trained to do that,
widget term0, widget term1 , widget term2, widget nextterm
our title read "widget"
we dropped of to # 4 ..
The I just did the same as him:
widget term0, widget term1 , widget term2, widget term3
and #1 we still are on this term .. even after Jagger .. so I dunno possibly a chance event who knows.
Still would like to know where my traffic is ... I removed a description tag: saying blabla bla: widget
Whereby the blabla bla always was the same: whereas widget changed.
and I put rel="nofollow" on the reciprocals between the main two sites ..
Let's hope G gets it over time..
By speaking up, you have just validated Hollywood's point.
On topic, has anyone seen any more movement on the J3 rollout? I have only seen everflux today, as G picks up the changes I have made over the last month.
Back to watching
WW_Watcher
Edited to add,
Most of the sites in the serps for the terms I tested, other than mine have been static, and not moved.
Yes, I have noticed those sites requiring a recip link and those having a high % of recips are hurting.... I know many people will not like that if it's true, but it was only a matter of time before the agressive recip linkers got caught. If I can map out recip links on sites/networks and such, I'm sure it's easy enough for Google to do it. I don't believe they are penalizing those sites - they are simply discounting those links and the sites rank where they would without them. In a nutshell if 98% of your links are recips - you lost 98% of your links. With the toolbar PR update I think they are trying to discourage link hunters.I'm not hurting on any site as I never got involved with recip/hunting links (I don't spend the time and wouldn't trust anyone else with that job).
Same here. I was waiting to hear what you had to say on this one I have to admit. One reason this isn't more obvious is that certain type of link schemes evaded Jagger, and others didn't. My suspicion is that this came from the initial google spam directory seeding that happend about 1 month before the first sign of jagger.
Plus I think Google also pulled back significantly on their backlink degradation that was more visible in jagger 1 and 2. Probably changed the serps too much is my guess.
No site I know of that has had no artificial link building done, including reciprocals or anything else, has dropped at all. I really hope that Google focuses more and more on trying to automate as far as possible fake link building scheme detection, that will severely cripple the seo industry. Of course it's hard, and seos will find workaround, but those involve more and more emulating real sites, which is more time consuming long term.
This is only my opinion, but I believe far too much attention is being paid here to canonical, duplicate content, etc issues, that is, onpage factors under your direct control, and far too little on backlink spamming, in whatever form it appears. The reason for this is obvious, it's easy to fix onpage stuff, it's very hard to fix broken link schemes.
Execution is everything.
You be good now?
You remember that question you asked me about if I thought Google got caught up in the links coming and going?
I think my reply was along the lines if Google didn't have enough sense to age the links it could cause problems and they would get what they deserved.
Well I think they don't, and that it does, and the pay back is a coming.
I looked at a site earlier today and between possible major duplicate content issues and massive IBL churn it is totally in limbo land.
There are all kinds of interesting things going on.
3 link farm networks, two run by folks in Austrailia, one is hiding behind a privacy screen, all three networks are hosted in the US. They are also all using the same software.
There is no way off of their pages without clicking an ad, half of the ads are Google ads, some of the others terminate at other real useful sites but go through plenty of indrect redirects picking up click pennies as they go.
If that isn't enough one of the end sites produces a list of pages every link of which goes to a get your medically induced 4273 66 type of site.
One of the other sites is just pages delivering Google's home page at the end of every link. Must be trying to get PR10 or something.
Me thinks the bit twiddlers need a new game.
Within some of the Datacenters, some of the servers have it, some do not, so it is spotty at the moment, but rolling out. With it distributed on so many subnets, IMHO I would think it would not take too long now to finish the rollout.
Edited to add
64.233.161.99
Back to watching
WW_Watcher
[edited by: WW_Watcher at 10:20 pm (utc) on Nov. 13, 2005]