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Google giveth and Google taketh away

Google and distribution of web income

         

deus777

3:58 am on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I have grown increasingly disapointed with google and its perpetual change of its algorithms to paste over the fact that an indexing scheme based on links is badly flawed.

Everytime google changes something it alters the distribution of income on the web. we are all to blame for allowing google to gain near monopoly power.

At first google was insanely great, now its insanely irritating.

I am going to start using ATW and teoma and encourage everyone I know to explore non-google options. If this becomes a trend the web won't be so dependent on google for the distribution of web dollars.

This might encourage google to look at its business ecology. Quite simply it doesnt have one. It doesnt help business' on the web and isn't interested in sharing income. It doesn't publish any rules and changes them on whim. This lack of business ecology is going to seriously hamper its momentum going forward imho.

Are you reading this google? we want some stability and certainty! and to the point we want cooperation.

Critter

4:47 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I'll agree with soapystar as well: This probably shouldn't have been done in public, and perhaps was done because of a mistake or bad call on Google's part.

Now I know that it's been said that this was intentional, and that this process will improve SERPs in the future (hopefully). But the whole spin we've seen on this change so far reminds me of an Abraham Lincoln story:

While giving a discourse to an audience on why slavery should be abolished, Mr. Lincoln was asked by a member of the crowd "Mr. Lincoln, if slavery is so wrong then why don't you just pass the legislation to get rid of it?"

Mr. Lincoln answered with a question: "Sir, if I call a lamb's tail its leg, how many legs will it have?".

The man answered "Five."

"No, it will still have four", replied Mr. Lincoln, "calling a lamb's tail a leg doesn't make it a leg."

Peter

Kirby

4:54 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I would say that PageRank is a pretty good way to measure the reputation of a page

GoogleGuy,

I don't see how the reputation of a page on my site has improved with my visitors because of a corresponding increase in the number of links. It only improved in the SERPS. Then while I was busy selling widgets to the leads generated from this site, someone else moved up in the SERPS because they spent the time asking for more links. And so it goes.

grifter

4:57 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree with Tropical Island. Google owes you a living like the Old West owed homesteaders a completely built ranch house in California with the fire roaring upon arrival.

My point is it's still the Old West. This is an amazing time in which 2 little guys, a seller and a buyer, can completely circumnavigate monopolies, cartels, and big corporations to connect with each other for commerce, at an unprecedented level (Ebay too, but a well placed site in G has way higher upside). I have been frustrated as well lately, but I feel the love when I disconnect from my enterprise and from WebmasterWorld for 10 minutes.

Unfortunately we're hunkered down in Donner Pass right now and lots of webmasters are brandishing the eating utensils.

mikeH

5:00 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Last month and this has been a bad time for most of us webmasters but I still think Google is by far the best SE for users and webmasters. I mean you don't see an employee from other SE's like MSN and Alta Vista posting on this forum trying to help us out. Googleguy is a prime example of what Google is, a ray of hope. In every other SE money is the name of the game and how much you will give them, at least Google tries to play as fair as possible, and for that I am grateful.

mfishy

5:04 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Soapystar, I agree with you as well. The only problem is Google does NOT think the results are poor and there is no sign of new data and filters being brought in.

Seattle_SEM

5:07 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Unfortunately we're hunkered down in Donner Pass right now and lots of webmasters are brandishing the eating utensils.

he he...I couldn't agree more. As the buffet of Google leads and sales stagnates, I'm sharpening my knife, and getting out my A1 sauce.

mfishy

5:15 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Seattle_SEM

LMAO!

internetbrothers

5:21 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



>>I am going to start using ATW and teoma and encourage everyone I know to explore non-google options. If this becomes a trend the web won't be so dependent on google for the distribution of web dollars.

I am now using alltheweb and am very satisfied with the results I get.

soapystar

5:28 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



i'm also using and recommending alltheweb, and the funny thing is alltheweb is basically a google clone these days, but the old google. Theres a moral there somewhere.

grifter

5:39 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



i'm also using and recommending alltheweb, and the funny thing is alltheweb is basically a google clone these days, but the old google. Theres a moral there somewhere.

I'm sure G doesn't mind losing the queries of us webmasters, who are looking solely at SERPs and don't click on Adwords.

Tropical Island

5:52 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Well said MikeH:

"you don't see an employee from other SE's like MSN and Alta Vista posting on this forum trying to help us out"

Critter

5:56 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



At the risk of sounding cynical I believe that GG's presence here is as much garnering informed feedback as it is public relations.

Peter

mack

6:07 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



We are all very willing to say we are moving to another SE and recomend others do the same. What we need to remember is, we do not know Google that is broken. I agree there is a noticable reduction in search quality (from out point of view) but this seams more like a change process rather than the system being broken.

If we thing of a search engine as any other site, Changes do happen. When we change things on out sites there will always be a certain amount of displeasure with our own users. The big difference with google is that are working with terrabites of data. Data that takes a lot of time to process therefore any change will take a lot longer than simply moving a few pages around.

If google are making changes to improve their search engine then, in my opinion this time in flux is worth it.

Mack.

Critter

6:15 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



On my website I have what's known as a "dev" server...it's the latest thing!

I can make changes on the "dev" server, and those changes aren't seen by the public! They don't even know I'm upgrading my site!

Google may look into "dev" servers in the future...but it's so cutting edge that I would expect them to take at least a couple years before they adapt these "dev" servers.

Peter

penfold25

6:17 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



well explain this, i was listed on google in a good spot, then i disappear from google, but am getting hits from yahoo?

soapystar

6:42 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



yep...aol and yahoo are showing fluctuating serps too...

ulounge

6:56 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree with Critter.

I know the idea of Dev Servers is a pretty inovative idea and all :-) but it almost seems like Google is testing the results live.

Why put results live if spam and other filters are not yet installed like some have said?

It just doesn't add up.

Marcia

7:10 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Well, I have to say that I most respectfully have to disagree with the basic concept that started this discussion:

"Google giveth and Google taketh away"

First of all, Google isn't giving us our rankings, so they can't take them away. They're not really "giving" us anything as far as our individual sites are concerned. They're taking, along with all the other pages they go out and take. They send Googlebot out and take our sites and include them in their index. Submitting is nothing more than a request for inclusion - they still have to come by and take.

What they are making available (not giving) is the opportunity to be included in their index. Period. Nothing more. And that is not taken away ever, the opportunity is always there as long as Googlebot is out crawling. The only time that opportunity is not available is when a site is removed - and that is usually the the responsibility of a site owner who failed to meet the conditions for inclusion. In those cases Google is not taking anything away - they didn't *give* anything in the first place. They are simply exercising their option of no longer taking the site and putting it into their database.

We are the ones giving - giving them the web pages by putting them up on the web. As far as rankings go, they don't "give" rankings. The web pages we give them are indexed according to their formula according to their concept of what presents the best relevancy for their users. If we optimize sites well, they are not giving us our rankings, we are giving them optimized pages and taking advantage of the fact that we know how to interpret how they measure relevancy - all of us, to varying degrees.

Google gives nothing and takes nothing away. We are the ones who give. And we are the ones who take. We do the taking in terms of benefits, income and profit if we've given them a quality site. It's all on our end - our opportunity and our responsibility.

soapystar

7:13 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



As far as googleguy goes i agree that i/we owe him some respect and gratitude. Its true without his postings (whatever the motives or reasons) we'd be even further in the dark than we are, and its also true other search engines dont have pr guys doing the same thing. I've been on the end of a googleguy bashing and i'm sorry if he takes my comments personally, they are not aimed at him.

soapystar

7:16 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



we do give and he doeth take away. Google asks us to build quality sites and play by the rules. By respecting the way google wants to shape its database we are giving and working with google. If we didnt give we would be spamming away, multiple throwaway domains on a monthly rotation and destroying the serps google is trying to create.

WebGuerrilla

7:58 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I can't even count how many times we've had a thread like this during my time as a Google Mod.

Each time this topic comes up, there are a few people like victor who point out the fact that every webmaster has the power to stand up and refuse to let Google use their content.

But what never seems to come out of the discussion is any concrete strategy for launching a webmaster revoultion against Google.

Everyone seems to understand that an individual webmaster banning Googlebot in protest is a fairly worthless symbolic act. However, what about a collective organized, grassroots campaign to get all the thousands of independent webmasters who provide their quality content to Google to stand up and "Just Say No"?

I think such an effort could have a serious impact.

So rather than continue to complain about all the problems, I suggest we spend our time planning the revolution.

Step 1. Select a new homepage Everyone reading this thread who believes that Google has too much control over the web must select a new homepage for your computer. (My choice will be Teoma). Everyone must also agree to completely stop using Google.

Step 2. Robots.txt exclusion Everyone must add the following to their robots.txt file:

User-agent: Googlebot
Disallow: /

This is the toughest part because in order for it to be effective, it must be done by webmasters who currently receive good traffic from Google. (remember, revolution always requires sacrifice)

Step 3. PR campaign The first thing we will need is a new website to function as the home for the revolution. I'm willing to donate my przero.com domain to the cause. And I'm hoping we can get DigitalGhost to handle writing the copy.

Once we have przero.com up and running, we can launch a press campaign. Within a few days, we should be able to get few hundred copies of a mediocre Cnet story distributed across the web.

Everyone will aslo need to put up a page on their site that explains the issues and encourages visitors to particiapte in a Google boycott.

Step 4. Linking campaign The first place we will request a link from is [google-watch.org[...] (although we will not reciprocate the link until Mr. Brandt complies with our robots.txt exclusion position)

Once these items have been put in place, the general public will begin to understand that searching at Google will mean that they might not ever see the best sites on the web for their particular query. That will cause them to migrate to a new engine, and that migration will inturn restore economic balance to the web.

I'm ready to do my part. Anyone else?

digitalghost

8:14 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I'll write the copy. ;) My homepage is already WebmasterWorld. I'll ban the bot and I can find a coupla links here an' there...

We need a good logo and a catchy slogan. Helps to have something nice to look at while you're stuffin' yer money where yer mouth is.

Vive la revolucion!

IITian

8:20 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I had a simple idea for the revolution:

We all know what Joe Surfer searches for - "google.com" is #3 and "www.google.com" is #7 or something close. Have links from our sites to ATW, Teoma, ... with anchor text "google.com" and "www.google.com" or even "google."

1milehgh80210

8:36 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Good luck with #2 LOL!
Actually though, if enough people did steps #1,3 & 4--- #2 would be easier to implement.

europeforvisitors

9:10 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)



digitalghost wrote:

In your capacity as an editor were you tasked with crafting descriptive titles, using headers for logical subdivisions of text, maintaining the theme of the copy, keeping the copy consistent and adding "continued on page 108"? ;)

Actually, that's the kind of optimization that has Google's blessing. I doubt seriously that the SEOs whose clients' sites have dropped from 1st to 300th in Google's search results are being punished for using descriptive page titles, headlines, or anchor text--or for writing copy that relates to the page's topic.

Critter

9:29 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I could very easily write a batch program for the site that would check the robots.txt file on the associated web sites so that only websites that actually had the exclusion for googlebot would be listed and certified by przero.com to be "google free"...

Sound like an idea?

Peter

Web Footed Newbie

9:49 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



As John Stoesel on ABC's 20/20 says:
"Give me a break!"

Okay, you own a business. Your choice is to make a profit or loose money. Google chooses to make a profit.

Now, you are a savvy business person. What would you choose?

1) Creating a company where you get to set your own rules and make a profit, or

2)Create a company to lose money while someone else makes the rules for you?

Please don't waste our time on your foolishness. You want to make a profit, don't you? Or if you are giving away money, send me some, Mr. Gates!

Google does what it does because it believes it perceives a profit from the actions it takes. No business, including google, cannot be everything to everyone.

My 2 cents.
WFN

[edited by: WebGuerrilla at 10:07 pm (utc) on June 3, 2003]
[edit reason] Rudeness Removed [/edit]

Tropical Island

9:51 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



"Step 2. Robots.txt exclusion Everyone must add the following to their robots.txt file:

User-agent: Googlebot
Disallow: /

This is the toughest part because in order for it to be effective, it must be done by webmasters who currently receive good traffic from Google. (remember, revolution always requires sacrifice)"

Now if you revolutionaries can just convince my competitors to do this I'll be eternally grateful.

And by the way, what's the point? What would you end up proving - a few hundred pages drop out from webmasters who are already complaining that their sites have dropped in ranking. Do you honestly beleive that any one with a site on the first page would pay any attention to this lunacy. Or is all of this one big joke and I'm just missing it?

toddb

9:55 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



umm not sure how you guys work it but 50% of my income is from Google. I like that I only have to focus on one SE. Yep they are pretty twitchy but as far as my terms go they did remove tons of spam. Tons of link work did not show up but I have hopes for next month.

Alcogooglic

10:18 pm on Jun 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I didn't read yet what you wrote... but I feel you are brave and heroic... So... I wanna join you...
As for me... personally... I don't like a tall green letter 'l' in Google logo...I'm 100% sure it must be yellow letter... and it must be shorter... like 'i' letter... even shorter... and then, they must replace this letter by a small picture of yellow banana... 'cause I like them... and I don't like green banana.
If they don't do this today, then tonight I'll disable graphic in my browser forever... in protest...

Also, I have my private secret list of two companies with highest ROI... and Google is #1. And tonight I'll move G at position #15...even at #93... and then after each update I'll move G at different positions...let them feel it themselves...

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