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Some one please tell me how an index page with nothing but images, each portion of each images has the same alt text of "XXXX YYYYYYY ZZZZ" (approximately repeated 25 times)and contains only 2 links, none of which are text and none of which are external. There is absolutely no content on the page what so ever.
How is it these type of pages can rank so high. I've check their back links and they only have 5. Last month when we received a decent position and I was able to check our back links we had about 20. Now the site has fallen off the 1st page and only has a PR of 3 and I can find no back links.
I am thoroughly confused and have no idea on how to compete with this type of work. Anybody have any ideas?
Two more things to consider:
- a bad site may outrank you, but it will have troubles making sales.
- mass generated stuff is hard to beat. It may be removed eventually, but replacing it is just so easy. definitely more fruitful to work on your own stuff, making it better all the time.
GoogleGuy - is the "2003 Suggestion Box" still open? This is the ONLY gripe I have is that Google needs to carefully review each spam report and take action on the ones that are indeed spam.
We're no 1 in dmoz for our keywords, we have a "paid sponsor" on Yahoo have been for a couple of years, but it seems irrelevant now with google listing, find our paid sponsorship link is almost impossible now. We also have the normal "paid listing" with yahoo.
We dropped Looksmart, because of all the problems associated with them and Ink. We're in Alta, Lycos, HotBot, you name it we're there. In fact if I remember correctly we're no 1 in Fast also. So, I have know idea what is going on.
[edited by: sparrow at 4:23 pm (utc) on Jan. 6, 2003]
do you think some of these link farms could have re-instated the link?
<edited to make sense>
your story sounds familiar to what I and many, many others experienced during that Sept, Oct period.
I'd be looking at your existing linking arrangements. Google seemed to set some traps in the forest to catch those big ole ugly bears that were link farm spammers. Only trouble is, judging from the posts in this forum at the time, they wiped out a whole lot of harmless flora and fauna, possibly even Bambi, who had no idea they had crossed into the dark side... because no-one was putting up signposts spelling out the link rules in enough clarity.
If you had a high PR site, squeaky clean & spam free and then got taken out at the kness, its hard to imagine that you suddenly don't have enough incoming links or that external factors can have such a major influence... I'd concentrate on your own site and what caused Google to reasses its affection for you.
This lie was easily discovered when I right-clicked, and clicked on "View Source" (it's a specially feature the guys at Microsoft installed on my pc and forgot to remove when they sold it to me). Notice the email address the form is sent to:
Quote:
<input type=hidden name=MAILTO value=nobody@nobody.com>
Found that in some second rate webmaster forum...
services.google.com/cgi-bin/feedback/feedback.py
There are only three hidden values on that form...
<INPUT type=hidden name="u" value="http://www.google.com/">
<INPUT type=hidden name="t" value="spamreport">
<INPUT type=hidden name="e" value="spamreport">
[edited by: pageoneresults at 11:51 pm (utc) on Jan. 6, 2003]
Depending on how you organize the internal link structure and how easily googlebot can spider your site can have a significant affect on your PR.
For example if you want all your pages to share the internal and external PR coming into your site roughly equally you'd link up every single page (a sitemap on every page). Whilst if you would rather have high PR on your index and important pages and less on unimportant pages use a hierarchy with a back link (A links to B, B links to C and back to A, C links to D and back to B and A).
I'm relatively new to SEO (less than 3 weeks looking into it), but I've made loads of mistakes on our site that I'm slowly correcting. It's apparently important to standardize your incoming links (not sure how important?). For example most domains can be found in the following ways-
[my;domain.com...]
[my;domain.com...]
[my;domain.com...]
[my;domain.com...]
[my;domain.com...]
[my;domain.com...]
www.my;domain.com
www.my;domain.com/
(had to add the ; as there is a mydomain.com!)
Other than the index.htm they all point to the same page (index.html), but if your incoming links are mixed it 'may' cause problems. So best to pick one format and stick to it just incase.
Then there's the actual internal links themselves, we use an ecommerce program that uses a lot of javascript resulting in googlebot only finding a handful of pages out of over 100. If google doesn't find them they won't count towards your PR (we recently added over 1000 pages each linking back to the homepage with a text link with our keywords wrapped in a h1 tag just for PR/SEO reasons). We've added various pages to mimic the structure of the shop, so googlebot will find every page. Looking forward to the next dance to see how we do.
Also remove all external links from any of your pages which receive a significant number of links (your index page) and if the external links aren't reciprocal seriously consider using javascript to 'hide' them from googlebot. This way the majority of your internal and external PR will be shared around your pages rather than to others sites.
David
URLs with index.html, with index.htm, or with www are all different as you point out, but domain.com and domain.com/ are the same. Google usually does pretty well with duplicate content, merging the URLs and even combining the PageRank, but if the content changes between the times that Google fetches those URLs, they don't get merged and the PR is split.
Powdork, focusing too much on PR can also lead to insanity. (but I'm not mad)
1. info.spam1.com/xxxx.cfm/s1/ca30.htm - 54k
(indented) info.spam1.com/xxxx.cfm/s0/xx30.htm?n=1 - 56k
3. www.spam2.com/xxxx.cfm/s0/xx30.htm - 56k
4. www.spam3.com/xxxx.cfm/s0/yy101.htm - 53k
5. www.spam4.com/xxxx.cfm/s0/yy101.htm - 53k
(indented) www.spam4.com/xxxx.cfm/s0/xx102.htm - 55k
7. unique.content.com/keyword/keyword/ - 10k
8. www.whatever.com/location.htm - 4k
9. www.spam5.com/xxxx.cfm/s0/xx30.htm - 59k
10. www.spam6.com/xxxx.cfm/s0/xx102.htm - 56k
All of the spam domains are serving up near identical content. xx represents listings for one state. yy adds three listings from a second state to the xx listings. s0 or s1 refers to the size of the table and the amount of yellow page type non linked listings included. to top it off, all these pages have a powered by 'spamgenerator' link to their leader.
This is not my area of competition. This is where we go for suplliers or references. Sticky me if you would like the search terms.
Powdork