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Lucia Liljegren comments on blogs about making money blogging.

DoFollow & the “Jew” Google bomb.

From time to time, racists decide to google-bomb the word “Jew” or “Jewish” to make Google Searches point to hateful results. Google often detects Googlebombs after they occur. In those cases, they post pages like this: Explanation of 2007 “Jew” Google bomb, copyright 2007.

In the meantime:

  1. I noticed someone left a comment with the name “jew” pointing to the url for Google’s explanation page on my knitting blog. I’m sure the goal is to boost the rank of that page. I approve of this, and I will be dofollowing this.
  2. I suggest everyone watch for any “jew” names with urls, check the link and make sure it’s not a hate site.

If I get any comments with urls pointing to hate sites of any kind, I will be sending them to Akismet.

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DoFollow & the “Jew” Google bomb. was posted on August 30, 2007 - Filed Under Search Engines SEO |  

 

Dear Jason, About “News” Scraper Sites. . .

Dear Jason Calacanis,

I was thrilled to see referrers from Google Mail’s Mahalo email area indicating that people were visiting my post “Dear Jason, You Have a Problem with Link Rot NOW.” I was even more thrilled to check the revision history for climate change and discove, soon after those hits to my article, Sara removed the link rot that Lon missed during his early morning revisions!

Responsiveness does encourage feedback.

You predicted, the ability of total outsiders to comment on the pesky little problems at Mahalo would encourage us to give you more feedback. So it has!

So about news scarper sites. . .



Your Ad Here

I will tell you that this morning, I was saddened to see that Mahalo Press Coverage for August 22, 2007 currently includes a link to what appears to be a scraper blog. You know, the sort of blog that just copies the contents of other blog posts?

If you visit Technology News Blog: Jason Calacanis: Fast Company profile raises more questions than it asks, you will find that “news” story seems to simply regurgitate ValleyWags August 21, 2007 story with the somewhat similar title “Technology News Blog: Jason Calacanis: Fast Company profile raises more questions than it asks”.

Might I suggest the duplicate story be removed? Might I also suggest you train the Mahalo guides to compare the titles and content of “new” stories to already posted stories. That habit would help them avoid this sort of embarrassing duplication of content in the results of your human powered - reviewed - massaged or whatever search engine.

Why not replace that slot with Jason Calacanis - Mahalo?

I know deleting the link to that duplicate content article might make it seem the blog-o-sphere is not simply abuzz about Mahalo. So, might I suggest you replace the link to that scraper site with Jason Calacanis - Mahalo?

CyberCelt included a screen shot that shows the absolutely splendid results returned for “advertising”.

Now, I know that because Mahalo is only in beta alpha, the sort of results Cyber Celt shows might not be considered news. But don’t you think the VC’s might want to gauge public reaction to what you’ve released for public perusal? Especially by people outside the Techcrunch 50,000? Even if they just don’t seem to “get it” about Mahalo?

Or maybe the VC’s should be shielded from that story?

Of course, this is just unsolicited advice from a knitter. I’m sure you’ll use your judgment on including these links to these sorts of negative reactions. After all, maybe the Venture Capitalists aren’t sophisticated enough to understand Cyber Celt’s complex story told using screen shots of the results pages.

Alas, my news article is missing too.

Naturally, I would never question why Dear Jason, You Have a Problem with Link Rot NOW was not included in the August 22 news stories. I’m sure the guides got busy responding to emails and making all the changes I suggested, and just forgot to add the story.

Wishing you well!

As always, I admire your gumption in trying to make this thing work. Dealing with enthusiastic underpaid guides and the flurry of volunteers in the Greenhouse must be a bit like herding cats. Still, I’m sure that by 2040, you will manage to put Google out of business.

I hope my feedback helps!

Sincerely, Lucia

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Dear Jason, About “News” Scraper Sites. . . was posted on August 24, 2007 - Filed Under Mahalo Sphinn Search Engines Spam Marketing SEO |  

 

Dear Jason, You Have a Problem with Link Rot NOW.

Dear Jason Calacanis,
I read your response to Skrentablog’s criticism that Mahalo will have problems with link rot.1 The fact is you have a problem with link rot right now on at least one page updated by your team today.

Dead Links / Stale Links on Climate_Change

Let’s look at the links on your search results for “Climate Change” which was edited on August 22 — in other words today.

Because my husband had to take “polar bear defense” training before setting off on an arctic research expedition, I clicked on “‘Don’t discuss polar bears’: memo to scientists” found on Mahalo’s climate change links page.

Clicking lead me to this now dead article.1

Nestled among banner ads and Google Ads, we find the content. It says “We’re sorry… this story is not currently available”.

By the way, I held up writing this post. That link was already dead a week ago.


How many stale links appear on the very day Mahalo search results are “updated”

I’m not going to click to check every link; that’s what Mahalo’s team should be doing. But anyone who enjoys reading news and issue oriented blog quickly learns which news sites habitually publish stories under temporary links.2

I know your team will find it helpful to learn your freshly reviewed page contains at least four additional dead links. These include:

  1. The Latimes editorial: “Climate deal talks gain global support” (Published August 3.)
  2. Another Yahoo news article: “Blair Using Last Bush Visit to Urge Action on Climate”.
  3. Reuters news article: “Singer Sheryl Crow starts global warming tour”.

More dead links than Google.

Google results are sometimes mediocre too, but they are rarely dead. The ‘bot catches the little “We’re sorry… this story is not currently available” messages and gets the articles off their index rather quickly.

Many, including Allen Stern and Peter D at V7N have warned you that Mahalo needs to think ahead on this link rot issue. On your podcast Graywolf warned you that lack of scalability ensured linkrot in Mahalo’s fu ture.

But honestly, the Mahalo link rot is not only your future: Mahalo link rot is now.

Here’s a suggestion from someone who is not a member of the TechCrunch 50,000: Either ask your team to actually look at each web page, or develop an algorithm that recognizes that a page is now dead. Then check your links.

Because those outside the Techcrunch 50,000 prefer search engines that return live links.

Mis-categorized & Missing Important Links.

There are other problems with the page. There is at least one mis-categorized link under “blogs and forums”. (That is, they are miscategorized if one believes all links under “blogs and forums” should point to a blog or forum rather than a Joomla Newsportal.)

Also, I have reason to believe the most relevant, authoritative and, well “best” links are missing. After all, “Real Climate” does not appear on the list of blogs; it should. There is undeniable: “Real Climate” ranks #1 for “climate change” at Technorati, #2 in the Google search for “Climate Change Blog”. With contributors who publish regularly in referred journals on Climate Change, and hundreds of comments per blog post, Real Climate, is arguably the most influential climate change blog in the US.

Are other important links missing? Frankly I don’t know. I strongly suspect they are.

Now Jason, bless your heart. I know you’re trying. I know Mahalo, while released and constantly extolled by you at your blog, is only in Beta. That said, it would be one thing if the humans missing the most important links in a subject was a one time thing.

It’s not a one time thing. As you recall, I criticized your links page for Crochet because it lacks the most authoritative link.

I speculated this happened because the list of links for “crochet” was compiled by people who do not crochet.

I will now be so bold as to repeat advise I have given before: assign the compilation of links to people who are familiar with the subject at hand.

As always Jason, I wish you luck with your endeavor.

Cheers,
Lucia



Footnotes:
1. Jason Calacanis described his process for preventing link rot as follows:

5. If we have a staff of 100 at Mahalo and those folk update 15 pages a day (i.e. 30 minutes per page) we can do 1,500 updates a day or update the entire 25,000 page index in ~20 days/one month. If we had the public (i.e. Greenhouse help) with the 1,000 folks in the Greenhouse we could update everything in 10-15 days. So, we can handle updating 25,000. 600,000 pages? No…. that would be a problem. :-)

2. For what it’s worth, I probably found all or most the dead links. I clicked all except the ones I was almost certain would remain live (e.g. government agencies, blogs and such.) Certain big daily news services habitually run articles under temporary links and later run the article under a permanent links. Careful bloggers learn how to find the permalink. I found the March 8 article and currently live link by entering the title of the article into Reuters search box; the article is here.
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Dear Jason, You Have a Problem with Link Rot NOW. was posted on August 22, 2007 - Filed Under Mahalo Search Engines SEO |  

 
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