Archive for March, 2007

March
31

“Search Engine Smackdown!”

Check out this Flash game … with the top faces of search, such as Larry Page and Sergey Brin of Google, Bill Gates, etc. in a boxing ring. With Danny Sullivan as the referee, you have to answer questions related to search. Correct answers land painful strikes on your opponent, while wrong answers inflict pain to you. Three in a row gives a “super shot” and you have to see what each character does … very well done.

I played it a few times. Personal best time was 0:58, but it isn’t showing up on the boards … odd. Have fun with it!

March
30

MSN Turns off Link Checking

Eytan Seidman, the Lead Programmer for MSN Search reported on their blog that due to a few data miners lifting the back links from MSN Search, they decided to pull the plug on the functionality.

And thus solidified the death of MSN Search.

So, instead of plugging the hole in the service, they pull it completely. I can’t say that I am surprised … disappointed is a more appropriate word. I have serious doubts MSN Search will ever launch with the decisions coming down from above.

March
29

Does the “Dup Content Penalty” Really Exist?

I have, for years, been testing issues relating to duplicate content and if there really is a penalty. I have seen some occurances that looked like duplicate content penalties, or filters, but nothing definitive and concrete. Then I came across about 40 of these types of results today, and the same article is appearing in the top ten of the SERPs. In this example, the first two results organically are the same article, posted on different sites.

Dup Content Penalty at Work?

All they did was remove the first two paragraphs and stick two new ones in. I have other examples, but they are in my spaces.

Thoughts? Comments? What are you seeing on your sites?

March
29

Does the “Dup Content Penalty” Really Exist?

I have, for years, been testing issues relating to duplicate content and if there really is a penalty. I have seen some occurances that looked like duplicate content penalties, or filters, but nothing definitive and concrete. Then I came across about 40 of these types of results today, and the same article is appearing in the top ten of the SERPs. In this example, the first two results organically are the same article, posted on different sites.

SERP Dup Content Example

All they did was remove the first two paragraphs and stick two new ones in. I have other examples, but they are in my spaces.

Thoughts? Comments? What are you seeing on your sites?

March
29

Does Google Read Spam Reports?

Google has reported on their blog about the sensitive issue of “Spam Reports.” Most webmasters know there are two different “flavors” of spam reports. One is a “authenticated” form inside of Webmaster Tools – which requires you to have an account and a confirmed email address. The other is a “non-authenticated” form, where email addresses are not verified.

In the blog post, Google states that they investigate every spam report that is received through the authenticated form. However, the reports that go through the unauthorized form, “a large fraction of them are reviewed”.

In my recent experience, Spam Reports, regardless if they are fed through the authenticated form, are not being handled currently. The blog posts states that if “action is not seed against the offending site” there is no need to resubmit the request as appropriate action is being taken, it just isn’t being reflected in the SERPs.

Well, that’s nice, but if there is action being taken, wouldn’t it reflect in the SERPs? You would think it would. Just as I have been advising you to do, post your Spam reports through your Webmaster account in Google.

This is one of the areas that I want to discuss with Matt Cutts, hopefully that long awaited interview can be scheduled.

March
29

Yahoo! “Moves” Slurp

Yahoo! is moving their Inktomi bot from inktomisearch.com to crawl.yahoo.net. The user-agent will still be Yahoo!Slurp, thus it looks like nothing more than a relocation and unfortunately, there has been no update to the bot itself. The IP address isn’t changing either.

This is disappointing … we’ve been waiting since the takeover by Yahoo! that Slurp would get the update it needs. Instead, it will continue to get caught in “spider traps” that are simplistic. It seems that Yahoo! Search continues to be on the back burner with the Yahoo! execs.

March
27

MSN Live Backlink Check

Checking backlinks in MSN today resulted in a blank page. My contact at Microsoft stated that there was an update currently happening and there should have been an “out of service” message, but obviously it didn’t post. This is highly unprofessional and just another reason why Microsoft continues to trail – even after two years from launching their own search engine.

March
26

“Family Friendly” Directory

Alright, this is funny. Check out this directory submission page … do YOU think they are telling the truth?

Hmmm … they say this is a family friendly directory, how they do not allow any adult content, however the picture in the upper right is of a woman with the strap her her dress hanging off her shoulder. Uh, yeah, that is family friendly …. Next!

March
26

Directory List Updating

We are getting closer to releasing the newly updated directory list. One thing we have been finding is that many smaller directories have either been sold, acquired or let their domain expire. There is a record number of directories that have been dropped from our list because they have ceased to be directories.

Our favorite so far is getting a WordPress login screen or a Sample Text Page for WordPress.

March
16

Google AdWords – Pausing Individual Ads

In case you missed it, Google now allows you to pause individual ads instead of removing them or pausing the entire campaign. This is great news as it makes testing ads a lot easier.