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When Adam said "Buyers, purchasing links from dozens of locations, could trigger Google to filter out the value of their inbound links", is he saying just the inbound links in question will be devalued, or all inbound links to the site, even the legitimate ones?
I assume it would be just for the links in question because if it was all inbound links, one could sabotage a competing site simply by buying poor inbounds to it. If it is just the questionable inbounds that are devalued, there is not really a big penalty, just a swing and a miss on a link, they are only out the $ for the link and the site does not take a hit.
As far as no-follow goes, Google will probably continue to promote it's use until links are playing less of a roll in ranking and user behavior a larger roll.
Thanks for the great post.
It was good finally getting to meet you in person and chat with you at the conference today. With that said, though, I do want to clarify what it is that I actually expressed... giving a bit more context for your readers ;).
My core point, which didn't quite come across in your entry here, was that it'd be really nice if nofollow wasn't necessary. As it stands, it's an admittedly imperfect yet important indicator that helps maintain the quality of the Web for users.
It'd be nice if there was less confusion about what nofollow does and when it's useful. It'd be great if we could return to a more innocent time when practically all links to other sites really WERE true votes, folks clearly vouching for a site on behalf of their users.
But we don't live in perfect, innocent times, and at Google we're dedicated to doing what it takes to improve the signal-to-noise ratio in search quality.
When we chatted, I expressed frustration about misperceptions, and -- to an extent -- the necessity of distinguishing amongst paid links, spammed links, trusted links, etc. using nofollow. I'm an idealist at heart, but a practical one :)
I agree that it would be nice to return to the times when links were links, and it didn't matter when, why or how the link was obtained. Unfortunately, it appears Google has placed so much emphasis on links, it has no choice but to try and control the value of them.
It's a shame, Google became popular because it relied on webmasters linking to each other to demonstrate which sites were trusted and connected, that practice happened before Google. It certainly feels like webmasters (and SEOs) were sold a bill of goods with nofollow. We were told it was to help bloggers link to sources, without having to pass credit. Once we adopted the use of it, Google started to insist we use it for other linking practices.
Oh well, no point living in the past. :-)
However, so many sites that what were once great sources of identifying credible sites through linking are turning to the "no follow" attribute that it is reducing the value of sites that are actually credible. If Google continues down this same path, the rate at which sites are turning to "no follow" will largely diminish the capabilities of the Google Algorithm to actually determine credible sites thus creating exactly the opposite effect the "no follow" attribute was intended for.
If you build it (and provide quality content, market it and continue to offer something of value to your visitors), they will come!
If a webmaster links through to an authority site with a highly relevant link, but receives monetary compensation for the link, should nofollow be applied?
For authority, lets just assume Wikipedia or Epinions were in some way compensating people for links.
Webmasters pay to build traffic, via salaries, PPC, and marketing costs. Why should they be penalized for being compensated for driving quality traffic?
Advertisers spent millions of dollars buying ads to drive relevant traffic. Why should they be penalized for promoting quality content?
Call me dumb, but where's the problem here?
I was at the conference yesterday and heard Adam speaking about links and the no follow tag. I would like to ask – what is so wrong with buying links to increase ranking? I understand the whole a link is a vote thing but this leaves commercial websites (particularly e-commerce sites that sell low involvement products) severally disadvantaged. Natural links just don’t occur that easily for a website that only has a catalogue of products. Yes I know that they can develop informative review type content but not all organizations have the human resources to do this. To me a purchased link is similar to a celebrity endorsement. When a celebrity gets on TV and tells us all about their favourite kind of toothpaste we all know that he or she is being paid to say it but we also know they are putting their reputation on the line to do so. I would like to see Google reconsider how they handle paid links – No follow is clearly not the answer.
Eventually, it might make more sense to *gasp* spend time and resources creating useful content that will attract links organically. Optimize for humans and utilize SEO basics...the crawlers will follow. That's a long-term strategy you can take to the bank.
Also just my opinion... I think we need more NoFollow-style controls, not less.
I've been on the company side of PR before. Sometimes you say something that you later regret, and a good move is always to try and clarify a statement. Maybe Adam didn't mean the context he originally conveyed, or maybe he's doing some damage control. I'm sure the Yahoo guy who criticized Google's usability wished he could go back and change what he said. Unfortunately, when you chat to the media, you have to be crystal clear about what you say. Ask Eric Schmidt, he's made some pretty wild statements to me (and the press) and later retracted in the same conversation.
I have a lot of respect for Adam - he's very open and honest - but I don't think my post misrepresents his comment.
I don't think Adam clarified the nofollow usage situation which still seems to be penalizing the little guys who wish to monetize their content without being deceptive to their readers or introducing links that are off-topic.
Yes it is frustrating sometimes building traffic 0 but believe me, I know from experience, traffic turns from a trickle to a torrent very quickly if you have interesting things to say or products - purely because people like linking to them.
I've written a bit about my thoughts on nofollow recently (I hope these links are nofollowed as it's not my intention to comment spam :) but - here is one http://www.utheguru.com/relnofollow-steals-from... ).
I've also found a person with great ideas about the implementation of nofollow - JLH, a regular on the google webmaster tools forum talks about his policy here - http://www.jlh-design.com/nofollow-policy/
I agree with just about everything he says there other than no-following links from developers (for example, the 'powered by wordpress' at the bottom of wordpress blogs), as I believe the fact that someone uses an open source product should be a clear 'vote' for the designers of that product.
Cheers and great topic mate! Wish I was able to make it there - sounds like it was an interesting conference.
Cheers,
Dockarl (Matthew James, Brisbane)
So if you have bad links on your Website putting a nofollow to protect yourself will just not cut it!
Igor
Until I did a neighborhood link check on phpBB. I found out they link to many sub industry Websites...
I do not want to put those word on this board.
So because I was linked to phpBB my forum was infested with sub industry Spam.
phpBB disclaimer states you can remove the copyright but please leave the link or you may not be able to get product support.
Well I never got product support from them and I have removed their bad neighborhood link.
I want to follow Google Webmaster Guideliness of not linking to bad Websites.
I have written many mods to fix the phpBB plague that has infected my forum. All of this I am doing with an intent to provide the same service to other forum and blog users via project PHSDL that I have started.
So let's all stand up and support not using nofollow.
Thank you,
Igor
Google won't likely punish your site for not using nofollow, but it could in theory prevent your links from passing PageRank.
I hope that helps.
Thanks for your suggestions.
David
Seo service
how would google know if someone buying links from the similiar type of domains. The links would look like one way link and google always respect one way links. google can come to know only in one case, if sites are selling lots of links and this would look suspicious.
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