Five Ways Google Should Know My Posts Do NOT Contain Paid Links

October 9th, 2007

Google seems to be stomping on the blogs carrying paid posts. I think in many respects they appear to be making mistakes and lowering ranks of posts that searchers find valuable; in that regard, Google may be cutting off its nose to spite its face. After all, if a high Google PR becomes un-correlated with “trustworthiness” from the user’s standpoint, and Google still gives “low PR” sites high ranks for competitive search results, who will believe the toolbar PR tell us anything about worth or trust?

Still, to protect my highly coveted PR of 0, I’d like to tell Google how they can tell my blog is not chockfull of what they consider to be paid links.

So, to help Google out, I’ll list five features that indicate “no paid link” with near certainty; others are just “strong hints”. Here go:

  1. Google Adsense in post content: The TOS of most paid posting companies and link selling services generally forbid inserting Adsense in the content of a paid post. Adsense, Adbrite, or obvious banner ads in content means no paid links. (Of course, normal visitor know these are only here to make me money. But whatever.)
  2. Kontera Ads appear in content after five days. The TOS of most paid posting companies and link selling services generally forbid inserting contextual ads by Kontera, Intellitext or any other service. If you see these in a post, you can bet dollars to donuts there are no paid links.
  3. Links to a several domains in one post. The TOS of most paid posting companies forbid adding links to anyone other than the paying customer. If I link to Sebastian , Sephy, WebGrrrl, Steve Cronin, Untwisted Vortex, Blog-op, Great Video Clips and Re-emergence, I may have linked for no other reason than because they appear in my Bumpzee widget, but you can be sure they didn’t pay me. (Meanwhile, as I write, I noticed Slevi stopped by.)
  4. Not an un-ending series of 50 word long posts. The TOS of several companies require 50 words surrounding that dropped link. Others require interim posts with at least 50 words. Loads and loads of 50 word posts often mean lots of paid links. Few generally means no paid posts- though there are exceptions.
  5. Few inexplicably link to words having nothing to do with the main topic. Like… for example, “mail boxes”. Ok, I just threw that one in after I intentionally visited a blog that I know works for PayU2Blog. The blogger seems to believe those links “blend”.

    But, I ask you: Who links the word “mail boxes”? Ok, I could see linking it if you’d just finished an arduous day of shopping for mailboxes, and found an online source. But who links it in an article about- hypothetically- taking her daughter to the ER, and having to deal with doctors bills? PayU2Bloggers do, that’s who!

There’s an incomplete list for Google. I’m sure anyone who visits can now see that I don’t run paid links!

As an added benefit, I bet I’ve opened the Google engineers’ eyes and they’ll now get cracking on new algorithms based on my incomplete list.

Oh… you think engineers with Ph. D.s working on this issue might have figured these five signs out already? I have a Ph.D. in engineering too! And guess what? I think except for precious few bloggers, I’m pretty sure Google already knows how to find most paid links using an algorithm.

That’s why I’m wondering why they keep yammering on and on about how we should add “rel=nofollow”. Sorry, but, can’t you tell?!

Could paid links be made non-obvious? Yep. I don’t happen to run them, mostly because my blog launched after the last toolbar Pagerank update which means no one wants to pay me to linke them. But you know what? If the SEO’s go underground, the way Michael Gray suggest they will, Google will have a very hard time finding paid links.

What’s even more true is this: If Google doesn’t figure out how to detect underground paid links algorithmically they will never detect them manually. Cuz’ let’s face it: Ain’t no-one ever gonna “nofollow” those links!

Where Should the Blogrush Widget Go? What John Reese could do to help us.

October 9th, 2007

Hi John Reese,
I read your you plan to kick out bloggers who place widgets in the footer because you think we are cheaters.

John, your reaction shows you aren’t reading the blogs I read. “Cheating” is not the main reason why Blogrush widgets are often found in the footer. If you understand the main reason, you’ll be able to help bloggers, and improve Blogrush.

Do you want to know why the Blogrush Widget is in my footer?

I moved the widget to the footer because it often loads s__l__o__w__l__y and causes my sidebars to hang. ( I complained about this here. You’ll find Steve Cronin also moved the widget to the footer because it often loads s__l__o__w__l__y . I’m sure if you search a bit more, you’ll find other bloggers who have done the same. )

John, if you aren’t noticing the issue, it’s because you have a consistent, high speed connection. My service from Comcast is finicky.

I’m planning to fix my sidebars to deal with slow loading widgets.

Unfornately, fixing the sidebars will involve CSS; which I’m terrible at. Also, revamping my theme to compensate for slow loading widgets is not a high priority, particularly since the Widget seems to send 0.22% of my total traffic.

I prefer to spend time writing my own pillar content which I think will attract much, much more traffic than Blogrush.

Here’s what you, John Reese, could do to help me, other bloggers, and Blogrush.

It appears you think you can best fix this by threatening us, and kicking us out for placing the code in the footer. Of course, you can do that. But that would reduce the reach of Blogrush.

So, in the spirit of cooperation, might I suggest a fair solution that would help us all?

Could you, or your company post a tutorial on how to correct our themes to prevent Blogrush from interfering with our page loads? This would help you; it would help me. It would help Blogrush.

After you post this tutorial, could you send us a nice email us so we can read that post?

Sincerely,

Eliminate Duplicate Content: Canonical URL Fixer Plugin.

October 8th, 2007


If you are monetizing your blog, or just want lots of traffic, you need to organize your Wordpress templates so that search engines give you the highest possible rank. We all know that one of the things you must avoid is duplicate content. But did you know that Google may think you have duplicate content even though you don’t?

Remember I wrote that about a month ago? Maybe you wanted to fix the problem, but you didn’t like adding a hunk of code to your header? Well, if you didn’t add the code, your posts may still load with both an address like this “http://mydomain.com/mypost ” and “http://mydomain.com/mypost/”.

Google thinks those are two different pages with the same content. This can hurt your page rank; so it’s best to fix it.

Well, I’ve made adding the code easier: I wrote a plugin! My main motivation was that I got tired of having to scroll past the several lines of code when editing my header file.

Now, to insert the code to fix this up, do this:

  1. Download Canonical URL Fixer . Unzip, place in your plugin folder, activate. (Nothing happens yet.)
  2. Open your Header.php file for your theme. Ordinarily, the first line says this:
     
    <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC “-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN” “http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd”>
     
    Stick one line ahead of that line so the top of the file now looks like this:
     

     
  3. Tell your friends about the plugin. Make sure you mention they can get the plugin here, and tell them the talented Sebastian identified the problem and came up with the fix.

It’s just a simple plugin, and one line of code. But, it will eliminate this particular type of duplicate content and should help your page rank (which will mean more money in the long run.)