WebProNews News Feeds
    WebProNews Web
Search Jayde:    
Create Dynamic Talking Characters for your Website - Click Here For A Free Trial

WebProNews Video Blog View All Videos
Google Urchin Examined
Google Urchin Examined

The recent release of Google Urchin raises a few questions for Google. WebProNews Reporter Abby Prince compares Google Analytics and Google Urchin.
Recent Videos:

Title Tag Tips!Title Tag Tips!
This is your WebProNews tip of the day, from our new studio in Lexington, Kentucky. Today, Mike McDonald gives you some tips on WordPress title tags for those of you who care about SEO.

Pitney Bowes mailstation 2: FREE for 60 days

Syndicating Your BlogSyndicating Your Blog
WebProNews takes a look into how you can make money from blogging. It seems as though, syndication is an easy way to do so.

SEO Plugins for FirefoxSEO Plugins for Firefox
Mike McDonald of WebProNews has a tip for today that explains two plug-ins for Firefox that allow you to have quick and easy access to SEO information...



WebProWorld
Rafael Robinson
How long for SEO changes to show?
I've recently been doing some SEO improvements on my website and was wondering how long it would take for pages to be updated in Google?

Does Google change the ranking of a page based upon how it appeared when it was last visited (cached)? Or is there a mass update that happens where ALL sites are re-indexed at once?

Hope that made sense!

» Read this Post

Windows Vista Forums
Jason Lee Miller
A Loophole For Paid Links
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008

It seems it was only a matter of time before the cleverer element of the SEO world developed a workaround for Google's penalizing of paid links. The workaround involves a pretty creative "dynamic" linking strategy, and it's playing a little bit dirty.


Editor's Note: This of course walks that gray line Google may not like. It remains to be seen, though, if Google could or would try to do anything about it. It also remains to be seen if it will work, or if it's too complicated to be worth it. In other words, there's a lot to be said, so say it in the comments section.

No longer the province of tax accountants, lawyers, and politicians, an elaborate loophole has been developed by Andy Beard proposing how to get around Google's paid-link vigilance via robots.txt and paid reviews.*

Beard's explanation is complicated, lengthy, and loaded with historical context so visit Beard's blog for further clarification, complete with nifty diagrams. What we will provide here is an overview and basic introduction, and not necessarily an endorsement.

Beard's proposal (or as he describes it, a red flag in the face of the charging bull) involves strategic use of robots.txt to redirect Google crawlers away from paid reviews. This is intended to take the penalty sting away as Google can't penalize for what it's not supposed to crawl in the first place.

In addition to the paid review that is blocked from crawlers, the author creates a follow-up review at another domain that is not paid and links back to the original review, with link juice in-tow. According to Beard, a client would pay for the original domain link, but the not the follow-up on a separate domain (but I imagine the price just got higher, huh?).

The link on the paid review is not a nofollow link, meaning that it will still also pass PageRank since Google shouldn't know or care about it if it can't be crawled, and the link on the follow-up review is also not a nofollow because it's, technically, not a paid link.

In theory, the original, blocked review will still pass a reduced amount of PageRank because Google still links to "dangling" pages, or pages it can't see, if there are backlinks pointing to the page. The link juice it passes, however, is reduced, as is the link juice coming from backlinks to it. What happens next is a matter of determination and scale.

With enough backlinks (according to my understanding), especially authority backlinks, the decrease in link-juice can be overcome, thereby raising the blocked page's PageRank eventually, which is then passed on to its intended paid review/link recipient.

Phew! So, it's kind of like link-laundering.

Create Dynamic Talking Characters for your Website - Click Here For A Free Trial

Your first objection is probably that Google's pretty vigilant about link-spam, too, and bursts of low-quality links over a short period of time will raise the spam alarms, thus either earning penalties anyway or negating the collective power of those links.

Quite right, which is why Andy has a plan for that too. This is where it gets a bit harder, since it involves a real commitment to getting that paid link some good juice to pass along. But it probably should be a part of your overall web-marketing campaign already and anyway. 

Beard proposes getting authority links via:

Social bookmarking: A short description, a title, and a link from BloggingZoom, Digg or other social site is all that is needed to carry a decent, relevant amount of link juice to the target.

Targeted RSS syndication: Syndicate the article, make sure it links back. Send to "hub pages" on content sites that accept syndicated articles via RSS (because Google won't be looking in RSS feeds, either). Aggregators (which will index a snippet and a link) like Technorati also make use of RSS feeds.

Authorized and unauthorized article syndication: Beard syndicates his articles to other publications with high PageRank. Link back to an un-crawled page from there and you've given it some much-needed power. What he calls "unauthorized syndication" we usually call "scraping." On the bright side, publishers can make the most of scrapers by not making a fuss, and instead requiring a link.

Targeting Universal Search: Use images, video/audio descriptions, etc., in unpaid content (which is also syndicated, I assume, to sites intended for that type of format) to point back to paid content.

If Google doesn't find a way to penalize, it could be a viable (if involved) strategy. But it is also more akin to traditional web marketing—taking advantage of the channels you have to promote.** It's doubtful that less legitimate paid linkers will take the time and effort to promote this way, but you have to admire Beard's never-say-die attitude.

*This all hinges, of course, on whether it will work and for how long, and how much you rely on Google as a search-traffic generator. The hard truth is that Google is the defacto search engine on the Net, so making el Goog happy whether or not you agree with el Goog's decrees is an important part of the game. And nobody likes unhappy el Goog.

**Google's penalties seem also to be forcing webmasters to do (nearly) legitimate content and marketing work, which is an interesting side-development.

» Comment Here

About the Author:
Jason Lee Miller is a WebProNews editor and writer covering business and technology.
WebProNews Front Page
Home Search Deals Legal Blogs Advertising SEO Google Microsoft Yahoo
Yahoo Layoffs Could Cost $25M
Most of the charge will hit Yahoo's first quarter numbers
Legal, Yahoo, Layoffs...
Whistleblowing Site Shut Down
Ordered offline by CA court
Legal, Switzerland, Wikileaks...
YouTube Comedy Contest Announced
Sketchies 2 starts today
Social Media, YouTube, Contests...
Google Makes A Texas-Sized Move
Company finally finds offices in Austin
Search, Google, Texas...
New Nickelodeon/MTVN Buy Caters To Expecting Parents
Babunga's networks get integrated
Social Media, Babunga, MTV Networks...
TV Mobile Phone Shipments In Japan Hit 20 Million
1 million shipped in December
Technology, Mobile TV, Japan...
Ripley's Owner Acquires Guinness World Records
When odd sites attract
Deals, Guinness World Records...
Australia Considers Ban On Illegal Downloader's
Law similar to UK proposal
Legal, Australia, MIPI...
Taxes Occupied Net Users In January
Early interest may be those counting on refunds
Financial, Internet, Traffic...
China Censors Horror Material
Says its to protect young people
Technology, China, Censorship...

Visit the SmallbBusinessNewz Directory
Do you have a business site?
Submit your business related site FREE!
Accounting
Book Keeping, Training...

Advertising
PPC, Print, Banner...
Brick and Mortar
Stores,Offices...

Research/Studies
Research, Data, Studies...
» Submit your site «
Advertising Newsletters Corporate Info Site Map Support
© 2008 WebProNews. An email newsletter.
, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy policy. Contact us.
The WebProNews network includes WebProWorld, Jayde and SearchBrains.
WebProNews.com In Affiliation with WebProWorld In Allfiliation With Jayde.com Top News Blog Talk Insider Reports RSS Feeds Archives About Us Advertise Submit an article RSS Feeds