Spamindexing.com
To be spamindexing or not to be spamindexing
The defenition of spam indexing from Wikipedia.
Spam indexing or search
engine spamming is the practice of deliberately and
dishonestly manipulating search engines to increase the chance of a
website or page being placed close to the beginning of search engine
results, or to influence the category to which the page is assigned in
a dishonest manner. Many designers of web pages try to get a good
ranking in search engines and design their pages accordingly. Spam
indexing refers exclusively to practices that are dishonest and mislead
search and indexing programs to give a page a ranking it does not
deserve.
People who do this are called search engine spammers.
The word is a portmanteau of spamming and indexing
(as well as a pun on spandex.)
Search engines use a variety of algorithms to determine
relevancy ranking. Some of these include determining whether the search
term appears in the META keywords tag, others whether the search term
appears in the body text of a web page. A variety of techniques are
used to spamdex, including listing chosen keywords on a page in
small-point font face the same colour as the page background (rendering
it invisible to humans but not search engine web crawlers).
Search engine spammers are generally aware that the
content that they promote is not very useful or relevant to the
ordinary internet surfer. They try to use methods that will make the
website appear above more relevant websites in the search engine
listings. The rise of spamdexing in the mid-1990s made the leading
search engines of the time less useful, and the success of Google at
both producing better search results and combating keyword spamming,
through its reputation-based PageRank link analysis system, led
directly to its becoming the dominant search site late in the decade,
where it remains. However, while it has not been rendered useless by
spam indexing, Google has not been immune to more sophisticated methods
either.
- Hidden or invisible text
- Disguising keywords and phrases by making them
the same (or almost the same) colour as the background, using a tiny
font size or hiding them within the HTML code such as "no frame"
sections, ALT attributes and "no script" sections. This is useful to
make a page appear to be relevant in a way that makes it more likely to
be found. Example: A promoter of a Ponzi scheme wants to attract web
surfers to a site where he advertises his scam. He places hidden text
appropriate for a fan page of a popular music group on his page, hoping
that the page will be listed as a fan site and receive many visits from
music lovers.
- Keyword stuffing (also known as keyword
spamming)
- Repeated use of a word to increase its
frequency on a page. Older versions of indexing programs simply counted
how often a keyword appeared, and used that to determine relevance
levels. Most modern search engines have the ability to analyze a page
for Keyword stuffing and determine whether the frequency is above a
"normal" level.
- Meta tag stuffing
- Repeating keywords in the Meta tags more than
once,
and using keywords that are unrelated to the site's content.
- Hidden links
- Putting links where visitors will not see them
in order to increase link popularity.
- Mirror websites
- Hosting of multiple websites all with the same
content but using different URL's. Some search engines give higher rank
to results where the keyword searched for appears in the URL.
- Gateway or doorway
pages
- Creating low-quality web pages that contain
very little content but are instead stuffed with very similar key words
and phrases. They are designed to rank highly within the search
results. A doorway page will generally have "click here to enter" in
the middle of it.
- Page redirects
- Taking the user to another page without his or
her intervention, e.g. using META refresh tags, CGI scripts, Java,
JavaScript, Server side redirects or server side techniques.
- Cloaking
- Sending to a search engine a version of a web
page different from what web surfers see.
- Code swapping
- Optimizing a page for top ranking, then
swapping another page in its place once a top ranking is achieved.
- Link spamming
- Link spam takes advantage of Google's PageRank
algorithm, which gives a higher ranking to a website the more other
websites link to it. A spammer may create multiple web sites at
different domain names that all link to each other. Another technique
is to take advantage of web applications such as weblogs and wikis that
display hyperlinks submitted by anonymous or pseudonymous users. Link
farms are another technique.
- Referrer log spamming
- When someone accesses a web page, i.e. the
referree, by following a link from another web page, i.e. the referrer,
the referree is given the address of the referrer by the person's
internet browser. Some websites have a referrer log which shows which
pages link to that site. By having a robot randomly access many sites
enough times, with a message or specific address given as the referrer,
that message or internet address then appears in the referrer log of
those sites that have referrer logs. Since some search engines base the
importance of sites by the number of different sites linking to them,
referrer-log spam may be used to increase the search engine rankings of
the spammer's sites, by getting the referrer logs of many sites to link
to them.
Spam indexing often gets confused with
legitimate SEO
(search engine optimization) techniques, which do not involve deceit.
Spamming involves getting web sites more exposure than
they deserve for their keywords, leading to unsatisfactory search
results. Optimization involves getting web sites the rank they deserve
on the most targeted keywords, leading to satisfactory search
experiences. To be sure, there is much gray area between the two
extremes. The root problem is that search-engine administrators and
website builders have different agendas: the search engine wants to
present valuable search results; the webmaster just wants to come up
first, particularly if he/she runs a commercial website and needs
visitor Traffic from search engines and directories. For that reason,
many search-engine administrators say that any form of search engine
optimization used to improve a website's page rank is nothing else than
spamdexing.
Many search engines check for instances of spam indexing
and will remove suspect pages from their indexes.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spamdexing"
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