Slashdot Mirror


Webmasters Pounce On Wiki Sandboxes

Yacoubean writes "Wiki sandboxes are normally used to learn the syntax of wiki posts. But webmasters may soon deluge these handy tools with links back to their site, not to get clicks, but to increase Google page rank. One such webmaster recently demonstrated this successfully. Isn't it time for Google finally to put some work into refining their results to exclude tricks like this? I know all the bloggers and wiki maintainers would sure appreciate it."

14 of 324 comments (clear)

  1. Cyberneighborhood Not-Watch? by raehl · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In the real world, there are neighborhood watch signs to "deter" criminals.

    Perhaps there could be a command in the robots.txt file which says "Browse my site, but don't count any links here for page ranking"? That would make your site less of a target for spammers, but not prevent you from being ranked at all.

    1. Re:Cyberneighborhood Not-Watch? by phutureboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You can also list robots.txt commands as meta tags in the [head] portion of the document. So, the wiki authors could just put them in the sandbox template, and individual site owners would not even have to know about / monkey with robots.txt to be protected.

  2. like porn by millahtime · · Score: 4, Interesting

    These seems similar to the system all those porn systems used to get such a high rank in google.

    Kind playing the system with the content not being quite as desirable.

  3. Complacency by faust2097 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Isn't it time for Google finally to put some work into refining their results to exclude tricks like this?

    It was time to do that at least a year ago. It's pretty much impossible to find good information on any popular consumer product and this is a problem that's been around for a long time.

    But they're too busy making an email application with 9 frames and 200k of Javascript to pay attention to the reason people use them in the first place. It's a little disappointing, I'm an AltaVista alumni and I got to watch them forget about search and do a bunch of useless crap instead, then die. I was hoping Google would be different.

  4. This happened to me by JohnGrahamCumming · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This happened on the POPFile Wiki. Eventually I solved it by changing the code of the Wiki itself to have an allowed list of URLs (actually a set of regexps). If someone adds a page which uses a new URL that isn't covered it wont show up when the page is displayed and the user has to email me to get that specific URL added.

    It's a bit of an administrative burden, but stopped people messing up our Wiki with irrelevant links to some site in China.

    John.

  5. Google. by Rick+and+Roll · · Score: 3, Interesting
    When I search on Google, half the time I am looking for one of the best sites in a category, like perhaps "OpenGL programming". Other times, however, I am looking for something very specific that may only be referenced about twenty times, if at all.

    When I do search in the first category, especially for things such as wallpaper, or simpsons audio clips, the sites that usually turn up are the least coherent ones with dozens of ads. I usually have to dig four or five pages to find a relevant one.

    The people with these sites are playing hardball. Google wants them on their side, though, because they often display Google text ads.

    Right now, my domain of choice is owned by a squatter that says "here are the results for your search" with a bunch of Google text ads. I was going to/may still put a site there that is very interesting, and the name was a key part of it.

    I firmly believe that advertisements are the plague of the Internet. I would like to see sites selling their own products to fund themselves. Google doesn't really help in this regard. The text ads are less annoying than banner ads, but only slightly less annoying.

    Don't get me wrong, I like Google. It's an invaluable tool when I'm doing research. I would just like to see them come out in full force against squatters.

  6. Hmm by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Leave the links, edit the text to read something like "worthless scumbag, scamming git, googlebomb, please die, low quality, boring" - and lock the page.

  7. Re:Yes... PLEASE... by n-baxley · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The system was even easier to rig back then. Back in 96ish, I created a web page with the title "Not Sexy Naked Women". Then repeated that phrase several times and then gave a message telling people to click the link below for more Hot Sexy Naked Women which took them to a page that admonished them for looking for such trash. I added a banner ad to the top of both of these pages, submitted them to a search engine and made $500 in a month! Things are better today, but they're still not perfect.

  8. Re:Why just wikis? by abscondment · · Score: 3, Interesting

    posting on Wikis doesn't screw up your own blog.

    posts on message boards will be deleted quickly, unless the board is expressly google bombing (as in the current Nigritude Ultramarine 1st placer) / people are stupid

    i think the idea is that wikis make it easier in general for your post to stay up and not affect your blog.

  9. Re:Why just wikis? by nautical9 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I host my own little phpBB boards for friends and family, but it is open to the world. Recently I've noticed spammers registering users for the sole purpose of being included in the "member list", with a corresponding link back to whatever site they wish to promote. They'll never actually post anything, but they've obviously automated the sign-up procedure as I get a new member every day or so, and google will eventually find the member list link.

    And of course there are still sites that list EVERY referer in their logs somewhere on their site, so spammers have been adding their site URLs to their bot's user agent string. It's amazing the lengths these people will go to spam google.

    Sure hope they can find a nice, elegant solution to this.

  10. "Finally"?? by jdavidb · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Isn't it time for Google finally to put some work into refining their results to exclude tricks like this?

    I take extreme issue with that statement, and I'm surprised noone else has challenged it. Google does in fact put quite a bit of work into making themselves less vulnerable to these kinds of stunts. They even have a link on every results page where you can tell them if you got results you didn't expect, so they can hunt down the cause and refine their algorithm.

    The system will never be perfect, and this is the latest issue that has not (yet) been dealt with. Quit your griping.

  11. image based spam control by MaximusTheGreat · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What about using random image based spam control lik the one yahoo uses on its new mail signup?
    So, every time you edit/post comment, you would be presented with an image with a random distorted text, which you will have to type in to be able to edit/post. That should take care of automated systems.

  12. Another solution besides robots.txt by wamatt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Spammers are going there because you have a high PR. So cut the PR supply and you in business, http://www.site.com/~url=http://www.link.com and voila - URL rewriting. no more PR for mr spammer.

  13. Which is why I thought it was real time by swb · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I thought it was a real-time thing, where the account creation bots passed the image that loaded during the signup process to a porn site and the images were decoded by a real person, and the result passed back to the bot who then signed up for the account.

    To avoid the timing problems with porn signons needing to happen concurrent with account signups, the account generation process was actually initiated by a porn signon. It limits your account generation ability, but only to the extent that you have porn traffic.

    Did I just imagine this, or does it work that way?