The Dirty Little Secrets of Search 154
Hugh Pickens writes writes "The NY Times has an interesting story (reg. may be required) about how JCPenney used link farms to become the number one google search result for such terms as 'dresses,' 'bedding,' and 'samsonite carry on luggage' and what Google did to them when they found out. 'Actually, it's the most ambitious attempt I've ever heard of,' says Doug Pierce, an expert in online search. 'This whole thing just blew me away. Especially for such a major brand. You'd think they would have people around them that would know better.'"
What do you mean by "know better?" (Score:5, Insightful)
The whole idea of an SEO budget is to push your name out to the top line of google, bing or anything else people use to search.
The intent was to game the system. And by doing so, make a ton of money. There are no laws for internet search ... unless you can use trademark laws to push a competitor who's doing that to your brand name.
Unscrupulous yes, ruthless yes, but that is the true face of capitalism anyway. Google can try regulating, but only enough to make the same people put in pennies into their sidebar offering of less-worth, but clearly marked advertising.
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That said, yes, everybody acknowledges this is just business. If you search for an example from the article (Samsonite carry on luggage), Penny's is no longer on the first page of search results. Yet their paid advertisement appears (with several others) before the very first search result!
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Yes, clearly Google needs to come up with an algorithm that both responds to outside input (in order to give relevant results) while simultaneously ignoring outside input (so that no one can mess with it).
You can't have both.
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Yeah, they are called eyeballs, expensive but by far the most effective anti-SEO method. SEO is only meant to align your site with people likely to search for it, any more than that and you end up doing nothing but pissing people off. When using google there is this http://www.optimizegoogle.com/ [optimizegoogle.com] and when combined with stylish https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/stylish/ [mozilla.org] , those crappy SEO sites disappear all together.
Now if google were less invasive and more polite and sought the output from
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Google is capable of validating the uniqueness and quality of those eyeballs (in fact if google were really cunning that could make a year of reviewing search results for free an entry requirement for employment). SEO can only find clones of the same low quality, deceitful, quisling eye balls. Wont take long to thin them out.
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the uniqueness and quality of those eyeballs ... clones of the same low quality, deceitful, quisling eye balls. Wont take long to thin them out.
Hm, when put that way... it doesn't seem to be in a league very different from average "valid" searches ;p (go through Google Zeitgeist)
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Exactly so.
In spite of their denials of persuing a link-spam scheme their first action upon getting their Google Spanking was:
PENNEY reacted to this instant reversal of fortune by, among other things, firing its search engine consulting firm, SearchDex. Executives there did not return e-mail or phone calls.
.
So they essentially said "We didn't do it" and promptly fired the bunch that they hired to do it for them. Plausible Deny-ability lives.
But Google already had started repairing page rank well before this story broke. It appeared in the Official Google Blog [blogspot.com] and was discussed here [slashdot.org] just last month.
I, (and I suspect Google) would sure like to hear your suggestions on how this sort of
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I'm sure it's much more complicated than this, but off the cuff: You need a manual process to find cases like Penney's. Then, when you find a Penney's, you see all the sites linking to Penney's and they immediately become suspect. Not all of them will be selling links, but a lot will be. If you find a few Penney's's you start to build a spamrank(tm), narrowing in on sites that use stuff like TMX. You make outbound link weight inversely proportional to spamrank(tm, remember), and when you cross some line in
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I think they're already on the right track... linking weight is only a partial solution.
Put it on the users. YOU know whether a site is relevant to what you were really looking for. Hint: how does Slashdot bury spam in
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Put it on the users.
What could possibly go wrong with that?!
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Put it on the users. YOU know whether a site is relevant to what you were really looking for. Hint: how does Slashdot bury spam in the comments? How are good comments made more visible?
I assume I have misunderstood, as you appear to be suggesting that Google should introduce something like slashdot's moderation system as the cornerstone of their search operation.
I need to go to the opticians, I must be overdue for an eye test.
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I assume I have misunderstood, as you appear to be suggesting that Google should introduce something like slashdot's moderation system as the cornerstone of their search operation.
Yup you read it right, that's exactly what he said. I spit my coffee.
In a story about how someone set up an elaborate way to Game google page rank, the suggested solution is to make
gaming the system drop dead simple and bot friendly. Unbelievable.
The sad part is someone is sure to jump to the defense of this in 3...2...1.
Knowing
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Like I said, they're *already* doing it. And what do you think happens when you click on a link from the search results page?
Perhaps you should learn a little more about how Google works now before writing. Thanks.
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there are no laws for internet search
Good thing too. If this something that was actually illegal, the punishment would not probably not be swift nor harsh. I would think companies would try t a lot more if they tended to come out ahead of the game in some way.
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make the same people put in pennies into their sidebar offering of less-worth, but clearly marked advertising
Fast forward to some hypothetical situation: one pretty much has to do it, to be visible - would that be evil? ;)
Company cheats Google, gets punished (Score:5, Insightful)
News at 11.
Reasonably written article.
If you already know the ins and outs of search or have no interest in it's specifics you can spare yourself the read, though. Ymmv.
3rd Party? (Score:2)
To play devil's advocate, who says that JC Penny did this themselves? Maybe their head of IT that was just some lay person that worked himself up through the ranks got one of some SEO spam and thought "Hey, this sounds like a great idea!". Not knowing how they conducted business he just went with it.
Sure enough, JC Penny is #1. He looks like a hero, pays off the small spamming firm and everyone is happy until they're caught.
I'm webmaster for 2-3 smal town rugby websites. I always get "BE #1!" spam. Except I
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"To play devil's advocate, who says that JC Penny did this themselves?"
I'm going to be rude and answer a question with a question: does it matter?
Unless you've been hiding somewhere dark for quite a while, you would know these things happen.
Companies act like assholes all the time. If they act like assholes against Google and Google finds out, they react to them to keep their business 'safe'.
How is this 'news' to a nerd? To a marketing droid somewhere, maybe but even that I doubt in this day and age.
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How is this 'news' to a nerd? To a marketing droid somewhere, maybe but even that I doubt in this day and age.
Please do not insult us nerds by even the hint of parity with marketing droids.
Thanks.
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"Please do not insult us nerds"...
If you feel insulted by that, you better thicken your hide, nerd! You're going to need it... :D
But honestly, I never intended to insult anyone, not even marketing droids... ;P)
(Or perhaps, especially marketing droids, since they might have a modulating armour and heavier weapons
You're welcome!
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"To play devil's advocate, who says that JC Penny did this themselves?"
I'm going to be rude and answer a question with a question: does it matter?
I think it matters.
What it it was the head of IT at MACY'S that boosted JC Penny's ratings.
Right now he's laughing his ass off, as he watches JC Penny in the Google Penalty Box.
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So their IT guy hired an SEO firm without the board's knowledge, does it matter to Google? No. A company gamed the system and they punish the company. Too bad for JC Penny they hired the wrong guy for the job. You can't expect Google to start investigating who in the company originated the SEO move.
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Too bad for JC Penny they hired the wrong guy for the job.
Or, as I mentioned elsewhere, perhaps Macy's hired the right guy, and he gamed Google for JC Penny, and now JC Penny's rankings are dropping like a rock.
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To play devil's advocate, who says that JC Penny did this themselves?
They didn't do this them selves. They hired it done.
From TFA:
PENNEY reacted to this instant reversal of fortune by, among other things, firing its search engine consulting firm, SearchDex. Executives there did not return e-mail or phone calls.
Hiring digital taggers to spray your graffiti all over the net and then insisting you are innocent is a transparently thin defense.
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There's another option here. If I read the article right, JC Penney denied doing it. Searches can make or break a company. So someone who wanted to sink them could have been the one doing it.
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Your alternate theory is that a competitor actively sabotaged JC Penny's search engine rankings so that it would be the on the top results for many consumer products during the explosive holiday season; with the hope that JC Penny would be caught and punished a couple of months after raking in the dough from their increased Christmas sales?
Right.
-dZ.
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Ya, a little something like that. :) I'm confident that's not the case, but I wouldn't be surprised if they came out saying something like that.
Lying to humans by lying to robots (Score:4)
The job of a search engine is to find web pages that are interesting to people, and it does that job by using a lot of robots with models about what's interesting. If you've got a web site you want the search engine to tell people is interesting, you can either do that honestly, by making it actually interesting, or dishonestly, by lying to the robots so they'll tell the humans that it's interesting, and sometimes that's cheaper and easier because robots only have models.
To the extent that there are "white hat SEOs", they're either doing the basic web design jobs of making sure that your information is findable (e.g. putting the keywords in text, not in images played by flash animation that other web designers told you would look cool), or else they're doing editorial work by telling you to write more interesting web content. For the most part, those people don't call themselves "SEOs", they call themselves "web designers" or "editors" or "graphic designers", though there are some companies that really do need to hire somebody to clean up bad web design.
Real SEOs are the black-hat types, who'll offer to get results for you by methods other than making your web site actually more interesting. They're lying scum, but sometimes they're good enough at lying to robots that they get results. Unfortunately, one of the big results they get is garbage all over the web, from link spam in blog comments to garbage that search engines find that's really just copying bits of content to attract advertising. Makes the web as a whole a lot less interesting.
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Precisely. In the Google case, lying to robots==lying to humans. Not Google employees, but the people that use Google to search for something. Google understands very well that if their customers get lied to and Google doesn't stop that, they'll go elsewhere for their search results and Google will do anything it can to prevent that. If that makes Google behave ethically, that's fine with me.
In other words: all this is, is a turfwar by companies. Some behave worse, in the common ethical sense that most huma
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So you're saying that SEO's belong in the sales department, eh? :)
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More like the Marketing Department.
-dZ.
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Thanks. As a non-native speaker I'm pretty glad I make as few mistakes as I do but it never hurts to have mistakes pointed out so I can keep improving.
How badly were they punished? (Score:2, Informative)
I didn't want to RTFA in order to know how badly miffed Google was by all of this, so here's a snippet.
“Am I happy this happened?” he later asked. “Absolutely not. Is Google going to take strong corrective action? We absolutely will.”
And the company did. On Wednesday evening, Google began what it calls a “manual action” against Penney, essentially demotions specifically aimed at the company.
At 7 p.m. Eastern time on Wednesday, J. C. Penney was still the No. 1 result for “Samsonite carry on luggage.”
Two hours later, it was at No. 71.
At 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Penney was No. 1 in searches for “living room furniture.”
By 9 p.m., it had sunk to No. 68.
In other words, one moment Penney was the most visible online destination for living room furniture in the country.
The next it was essentially buried.
Will google get sued? I used to work for JCP (Score:1)
I wonder if Google's action could lead to a lawsuit? It's one thing to re-jigger the ranking equation to block linkfarms, but something else entirely to purposely punish a company and make them essentially invisible.
BTW I used to work for Penney's. They were a good company in the 90s, riding high, and matching 90 cents for every dollar their employees put into an IRA.
Then they got hit hard by the rise of Web shopping, were forced in 2002 to layoff all their managers, eliminated 2/3rds of the clerks, promo
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I wonder if Google's action could lead to a lawsuit? It's one thing to re-jigger the ranking equation to block linkfarms, but something else entirely to purposely punish a company and make them essentially invisible.
It wouldn't be the first time. Look up SearchKing.
They're still on top for samsonite (Score:2)
I just did a Google search for "samsonite carry on luggage". While the text link for JCPenney's is about five or six pages down, Google starts off with a row of Shopping images, and JCPenney's one of them.
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Google Shopping is a vertical, and completely separate from the normal search results.
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Don't really see how it was analogous. He doesn't appear to have an agenda, or even have a sig, journal or homepage, so to me it does seem he was just doing it for those who never RTFA. If you did RTFA you'll see his comment is nothing like what JCP's SEO company did, which was essentially spam up a load of dead sites in order to improve their pagerank.
Let's help them (Score:5, Funny)
Nazi memorabilia [jcpenney.com]
abortion factory [jcpenney.com]
murder weapons [jcpenney.com]
penny stock [jcpenney.com]
worst place to work [jcpenney.net]
token black guy [jcpenney.net]
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Re:Let's help them (Score:5, Interesting)
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Another failure of the redesign? Oops. I wish they'd sort out comment viewing so you didn't have to drill down through everything when you get a reply.
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1 - Change to Classic Discussion.
2 - Turn-off dynamic discussion.
There that should fix your difficulty.
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Thank you so much. I'm so used to having a bad browser experience, that I assumed that it was me, or perhaps bad web site code.
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The 'drilling down' doesn't even work on iPhone, last I checked, because the slider doesn't work there.
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That's AJAX at work! It's like DRM for the web.
Karma bonus (Score:3)
Slashdot adds rel="nofollow" to all links
I thought rel="nofollow" applied only to links in posts without the karma bonus. (checks page source code) Yes, that's still the case.
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Retail is hell... (Score:2)
In a partial shout-out to my comrades - both past and present - in
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And just to be contrarian:
- I liked working retail. Sure every now and then you'd get an asshole customer, but you could usually bribe them with 50% off (or whatever), and make them go away.
- Overall there were more benefits than downsides, such as flirting with cute coworkers, or looking down blouses when the dumb college girls bent-over in front of you (duh - don't bend over)
- But of course the pay was only 1/10th what I make in the office, so that's why I left.
Hey editors, do some actual editing for a change (Score:2, Informative)
The company is "JC Penney", not "Penny".
It's all about the money... (Score:2)
..nuff said!
Cracks in the Google Facade (Score:1)
The Times did a good job on this, but there are some questions.
They did mention that Penney is (or was) a big Google advertiser, but you've got to wonder who else has succeeded in doing this.
I read a blogger Whither the NY Times [blogspot.com] who's doing a pretty funny review of the Times day by day, with the looming paywall in the background.
He asks who else, and wonders how did the Times scope this out?
Businesses seem to rise and fall in their Google rankings in weird ways. Maybe the search engine optimizers hav
Laws are so hard to follow (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Laws are so hard to follow (Score:4, Insightful)
I suspect this is a case of a company trying to play the same games they play in meatspace. Basically is boils down to "follow the letter of the law, not the spirit" with a pinch of of bending the letter of the law every now and then under the assumption that their size and influence will make those upholding the law ignore their transgressions. Unfortunately for them that's not how the "laws" of the internet work...
Black hat SEO? (Score:2)
And the intrigue starts in the sprawling, subterranean world of “black hat” optimization, the dark art of raising the profile of a Web site with methods that Google considers tantamount to cheating.
Despite the cowboy outlaw connotations, black-hat services are not illegal, but trafficking in them risks the wrath of Google. The company draws a pretty thick line between techniques it considers deceptive and “white hat” approaches, which are offered by hundreds of consulting firms and are legitimate ways to increase a site’s visibility.
I find it interesting that they are using 'black hat' and 'white hat' to distinguish between different actions and motives in search engine optimization, when the same terms cannot seem to catch on in public discussions of hacking, cracking and computer security. Makes me jealous.
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I find it interesting that they are using 'black hat' and 'white hat' to distinguish between different actions and motives in search engine optimization, when the same terms cannot seem to catch on in public discussions of hacking, cracking and computer security. Makes me jealous.
The terms have been pretty much universally adopted by the SEO "community".
I have a friend that is constantly trying to get his blog up in the rankings. A site he refers to is http://www.warriorforum.com/ [warriorforum.com] and the black hat/white hat distinction is pretty constantly discussed. I think the real trouble is when amateurs think a black hat SEO campaign is actually a white hat one.
At least my friend asks questions of me before doing some of this stuff; it's like Amway and spammers rolled into one. Crazy stuff.
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I'm active on WarriorForum, and do quite a bit of SEO work.
I don't consider what JCP did to be black hat at all, provided it was done by actual humans. The relevancy of the place where the comment is left... isn't relevant. So long as the comment provides value to the conversation, though, it's fine.
I suspect that what the article didn't say is that these links were auto-generated spam. While I may make 15 or so decent comments with links in an hour on a good day, I could use Scrapebox to generate 150,00
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I'm not in my mom's basement. I'm in my office, finishing my PhD. Just as secluded, but more socially acceptable.
Language is hardly worth using if we can't have fun with it. Perhaps you need to think outside the boxen.
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The parent doesn't need fixing; the definite article doesn't have separate singular and plural forms in English.
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Hmm. A fair point, if one is talking about a specific collection of boxen. "Bobby, be sure to grab all those lunchboxen on the way out the door so that you and your sisters can eat today."
In the case of our intrepid AC, perhaps we have the "Arcane language is dumb" box and the "Slashdotters live in parents' basements" box. Perhaps these two are the exact boxen outside of which the AC needs to think. But what I wrote was meant to suggest something more holistic: "I don't know what your problem is, but you
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It's not like the AC and I were sitting at a table with a collection of cubes in our hands.
Or, to be more abstract, a collection of rectangular prisms. ;-)
Halfway through packing for a move, I really wish more boxen were uniform cubes.
Bing (Score:4, Interesting)
I see they are currently #1 on bing for Comforters and #4 for dresses. I wonder if it would be possible for the search engines share data on who is cheating?
I'm actually really surprised by the article, that it took so few sites to affect results and that such obviously off-topic links still helped. I thought the algorithms were already smarter than that.
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> I thought the algorithms were already smarter than that.
I have the suspicion, that Google is like any other company, in that they only innovate if they must and the bottom line is most the important.
So I would have to applaud JCPenney for causing some progress in the world.
I also have the suspicion that since google seems to be market leader it could be the most affected by search engine circumvention devices. Less well known companies with different algorithms could yield better results just because o
Here we go... another monopoly in the making (Score:1)
Ah yes, our friends at google find themselves in a wonderful position...where multi-billion dollar companies bow to them to get their rankings up. Isn't there something wrong with that? Sure, google was within their right to drop jcp from their ranks for being a tad too clever; but on anther hand, what alternatives to these companies have? IF this was a free service, governed by a non-commercial entity then all is well; but google is no different than Microsoft these days: huge, multi-billion dollar beast w
They are still third or so down on the right bar. (Score:2)
Google penalty box (Score:1, Interesting)
And who declared Google the "decider" of what should top search listings?
Any algorithm is going to have winners and losers. Why should any business simply accept Google's arbitrary ranking without trying to do what they can to improve that ranking? Google penalty box? Sounds like Google is taking it upon themselves to decide "right and wrong" on the internet and inflict punishment on those who don't comply with their dictates for what constitutes "fair", without anyone having any recourse. Color me not impr
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And who declared Google the "decider" of what should top search listings?
Google did. It is their web site and their search. They can rank web pages any way they want to. No one forces anyone to use Google and Google is not an "official" part of the Internet.
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No they're not. In case you didn't know, Google has their webmaster guidelines [google.com] posted for all to see. The motivation behind these rules is to ensure (or at least try to ensure) that their search results continue to be relevant and useful for--wait for it--the use
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The guidelines say:
Make pages primarily for users, not for search engines. Don't deceive your users or present different content to search engines than you display to users, which is commonly referred to as "cloaking."
And I believe they smacked BMW Germany for that.
However pay-wall sites (like elsevier) appear to present different content to Google from what nonsubscribers can see. And they've been doing it for years.
For example, do a google search for: site:elsevier.com cancer +"lower percentage"
http://www.google.com/search?q=site%3Aelsevier.com+cancer+%2B [google.com]"lower+percentage"
Compare what you see in the search results to what a nonsubscriber can actually see. Yes many Google users might be subscribers, b
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As a non-subscriber, to me it looks like an excerpt from the abstract, and lo, the abstracts are visible to non-subscribers!
SEO = SRP (Score:2)
What is search engine optimization to a corporation is search result poisoning to users.
Then again, an opportunity arises for a smaller non-SEO-attacked search engine to rise and take Google's place like Google took Altavista's.
RTFA, seriously (Score:2)
This is a great article. I would really recommend other to read it.
It gives great insight into the world of searches and profiles both viewpoints from a SEO company and also Google's anti-SEO team.
It's a bit long, but definitely worth your time.
Two observations: (Score:3)
First, I noted that in the article, Google claims to try to keep the "money" side separate from the "search" side. Okay, but the fact remains that if you don't crack down on cheating, then companies will have less incentive to buy paid links from Google. The fact that the quality of the results would decrease for the user is secondary. So Google surely is motivated to prevent companies from gaming the system, not out of some altruistic sense of honesty or service to the user, but because cheating threatens their paid advertising model.
The other observation is that SEO tactics could easily be used as a weapon against competitors. If you're a top-listed company and your competitors want to knock you down...all they have to do is put up spam links to your site, then report it to Google. Next thing you know, you've been de-listed.
Shame on you, thespec.com! (Score:5, Insightful)
Copying a New York Times article wholesale, and then using a Slashdot post to bait-and-switch readers into visiting your website rather than the Times?
Ballsy.
Doing so when the article's content is about using malicious links to artificially inflate your site's visibility?
Just. Not. Cool.
The original NY TImes article is here. [nytimes.com] Whether you approve of the Times' registration policy or not, you shouldn't support people who steal their content and use it to make money.
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Point taken, I didn't see that line.
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Point taken, I didn't see that line.
I wish I could mod this up. Someone on /. admitted to a mistake!
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Oh yeah, let's suddenly start assuming everyone who reads Slashdot is a black-hat script kiddie living in their mother's basement downloading torrents of Japanese tentacle porn while dreaming of moving to Sealand.
Did I miss any stereotypes?
Black-hats (Score:2)
David Segal is quite the inane journalist. He equates SEO hucksters with "black-hats". True black-hats are too busy commiting crimes to waste their time on such mundanity.
Bad day at Mountain View (Score:4, Interesting)
This is one of those press events which gives CEOs nightmares.
There's been press criticism of Google before, but it's mostly been anecdotal - blogs, op-eds, and other commentary. This time, there's real reporting, with the New York Times naming names.
Usually, after criticism, Google says nothing, or perhaps replies in a blog posting. Google people rarely speak in forums that they don't control. This time, Matt Cutts had to sit down with New York Times reporters for an hour long interrogation.
Google's vaunted claims that they can detect link spam were shown to be false. Google didn't catch the spam, the New York Times did. Then Google made an algorithm change and claimed that fixed most of the problem. The Times tracked Google's results and showed that it didn't. Only a "manual action" moved J.C. Penny down.
Now the rest of the business press is going to take a hard look at search. Expect follow-up articles in Bloomberg, Fortune, etc. Google management has weeks of pain ahead. After their feud with Microsoft last week, their troubles with European antitrust regulators, and Blekko nipping at their heels, they didn't need this. Attention may be focused on those "manual actions". Should those be published? The European Union has specifically asked for that data, and Google can no longer deny that it exists.
I've been critical of Google's anti-spam efforts, mostly on the Places side.I thought they were better at detecting link farms of junk sites, though. That's old-school SEO. If they missed this, they have worse problems than I'd thought.
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Google's vaunted claims that they can detect link spam were shown to be false. Google didn't catch the spam, the New York Times did.
That statement isn't true. They may detect it but correcting it may need more care and attention. Plus there may be a waiting lists of thousands of cases to be examined. It is not the swiftness of the execution that BlackHat SEOs fear, it is the severity.
Google management has weeks of pain ahead.
I don't think they do. JC Penney's might though.
The European Union has specifically
The trouble with "crowdsourcing" (Score:3)
What does work is Bing's approach of using actual user data.
No, that's spammable, too. See "click fraud". Anonymous crowdsourcing in competitive environments only works if you're a little player and nobody cares enough to spam you. If Blekko gets enough market share to attract SEO efforts, their "slashtags" will be overwhelmed by junk.
Read how Craigslist lost the battle against spam. [techdirt.com] They tried CAPTCHAs. They tried requiring unique email accounts. They tried phone verification. Nothing worked. There are power tools for defeating each of those. Most of the recomm
Who's Really To Blame? (Score:2)
User attitudes towards search are the problem (Score:2)
I can't help but think the only long-term way to reduce the effectiveness of these kinds of SEO tricks is to remove all storefronts from Google results. Even that isn't foolproof certainly, and I'm sure that online shopping sites will then just use non-store entry pages. But these SEO tricks work because many people, when they want to buy something, just go to Google and click on the first link presented, which I don't think anyone knowledgeable about web search will think is a good idea. That behavior h
Vultures of the internet (Score:2)
Yeah right... (Score:2)
Meanwhile, in Meatspace (Score:2)
Corrective is already in place (Score:3)
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Searching for "black dresses" now relegates J.C. Penny to the sixth page of results,
But how many people would actually search for "black dresses" on Google as a way of buying a black dress?
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But how many people would actually search for "black dresses" on Google as a way of buying a black dress?
People unaware that Google results are more than the first three links.
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I could get an accurate number if I had my analytics software in front of me, but I'm going to go out on a limb and say "Thousands. Every day."
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Searching for "black dresses" now relegates J.C. Penny to the sixth page of results,
But how many people would actually search for "black dresses" on Google as a way of buying a black dress?
I have seen someone type 'facebook' into a Google search toolbar to get to the facebook home page to log in. It is surprising (to me, as someone who works in IT anyway) what people search for sometimes.
Just JC Penney? (Score:2)
Why does google even *carry* "sponsored ads" from Target, who at least 85% of the time will claim a hit on *anything* you're looking for, but if you follow it, they don't have it? I mean, try fabric by the yard. Or chemicals. Or....
mark
Re: (Score:2)
That doesn't follow. It's quite possible they didn't know they were using dirty tactics. Normal business people know hardly anything about SEO. They pay someone to improve their search rankings - how are they to know whether they're doing it in compliance with Google's rules or not?
The guys redesigning our website were spouting a whole heap of bullshit about how Google has changed its PageRank algorithms so that links from other pages make little difference now, which I wasn't sure about, but clearly links
Re: (Score:2)
Except in this case they're not even interacting with other companies negatively, they're only bolstering JCP's search rankings. It's basically just spam. Which is something worthy of hate of course, but it's not particularly analagous to murder. The other companies are still there, they're just less visible because of the spam.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Google is being too lenient. (Score:4, Interesting)
No. There are mom & pops who get suckered into SEO promises on a daily basis. There are two kinds of customers who use SEO: those who don't know any better, or are unaware their "designer" is engaging in black hat SEO, and those who entertain the idea for a while and decide to take the risk.
Those who risk black hat SEO
Here's the situation: unless you are in a totally saturated market it is extremely easy to achieve high placement organic search results if you follow Google's guidelines. You don't have to cheat at all but you do have to pay careful attention to having relevant content, clean HTML, and following accessibility guidlines helps a great deal as well. Don't spam your META tags but don't ignore them either.
We've had a couple clients leave to go with SEO specialists who happen to also build web sites, because we do web development but take advantage of Google's recommendations in the process. One client in particular - we'll just refer to him as P. for now, kept asking us about SEO every time traffic power contacted him (always under a new and different operating name because as you know every time Google finds them they punt them from the index, along with all their clients). P. did listen to us about not going with that company but has been suckered by six or seven different independent "SEO consultants."
Now, P. is in a very competitive, saturated market but even so we had achieved respectable search results. We recommended he start submitting his product to third-party distributors and ask them to link back as part of the effort to increase distribution, maybe get a few contractors to exclusively rely on his products and link back to P.'s site, and maybe get a few independent review companies and labs (like Consumer Reports) to review his product, and they would of course link to his site in the review. We also recommended a good Google adwords campaign until his product achieved critical mass.
Another thing you need to know about P.: He is not frugal but he is cheap. He would phrase things like "can you do me a favor and. . . " or "how hard would it be to. . . " and try offering $100 or even as low as $25.00 for something that would require 20 hours or so to implement, test on a staging server, then back up the live server, deploy, and re-test. He just doesn't value anyone's time. I don't understand how but one of my partners had the patience to deal with him, but by the end my patience had long run out, and one time I asked P.: "Oh, you want that for $100? Say, can you come and $foo my $bar in three different $zags for $100.00? No? Then let me ask you this: why is it your time is so valuable, but no one else's is? (The truth is I wanted him gone since he kept one of our engineers on the phone hours each week picking his brain, under the guise of negotiating but unfortunately he was with us another two years. I also worded it a bit more diplomatically than that, but it was the general point). In fact it is my fault we ever got involved with P. in the first place. He suckered us and I believed he was having a hard time getting his product out there, so I convinced my partners to take him on and help him out, giving him a fully-populated web site for $1,200.00. It was based on OS Commerce to save ourselves time so the HTML output wasn't the cleanest but we explained the pros and cons to him up front, and he decided to go with it. Over time we cleaned up some of the HTML output but over the years he was with us he kept asking for better search results, and a nicer design. We would come back with a detailed quote including graphic design time, implementing the design and then development of the features he wanted, and even though we gave him a really good deal, he would come back with something about how the original site cost him only $1,200.00. (hint: don't ever do favors for a cheapskate; they never appreciate it)
Within a couple of years he was netting $360K per year. For a one-man shop doing what he is doing, competing