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A Search Engine Manipulator's Tale

NevDull writes "Well known Search Engine Optimization expert Greg Boser of WebGuerrilla shares how he manipulates search engine results, using simple techniques, with Wired Magazine." From the article: "The search engines live in a fantasy world...Every link is a vote. But people buy and sell links."

42 of 287 comments (clear)

  1. Search Engines just Advertising Now? by lecithin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not too long ago I could do a search on google and actually find something that was usually close to what I wanted. These days I get bogged down on the sites advertising there services and links to ebay.

    I dunno. I would really like a search engine that isn't being used to 'spam' me with services that I really am not looking for. I wouldn't mind the ads so much if clicking them got me to the root of what I was searching for to begin with.

    --
    It could be worse, it could be Monday.
    1. Re:Search Engines just Advertising Now? by micromoog · · Score: 4, Informative
      Just subtract terms from every search to cut out the crap. Compare a search with the same search using these additional keywords:

      -buy -price -checkout -sale -shop

      I think you'll be pleasantly surprised.

    2. Re:Search Engines just Advertising Now? by badasscat · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Not too long ago I could do a search on google and actually find something that was usually close to what I wanted. These days I get bogged down on the sites advertising there services and links to ebay.

      I've noticed this too, and it really is amazing how quickly Google's become nearly useless for most searches. Picking relevant search terms that will cut the crap out has become something of a fine art.

      What I have always wished Google would do would be to have an option (even just on their "advanced search" page) that you could separate out e-commerce sites. I'm not sure exactly how this would work, but maybe just a mirror image of Froogle would do the trick. This would seriously cut out about 95% of all the search engine spam, because these sites are always selling you something. If you just want information, Google is almost impossible for a lot of things.

      Of course, the other amazing thing is that people continue to use Google over other search engines despite this issue (and it is an issue that goes to the heart of what they do). I haven't used many other search engines lately - are any of them really any better?

    3. Re:Search Engines just Advertising Now? by lecithin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yep, you could do that, and I do.

      But, if you are looking for something specific that is published, you may not get the results you want.

      An example may be that you are looking for information on a nebula. By using the "-" keywords above, you would get rid of places like space.com, skyandtelescope.com, possibly universities and other places that advertise and have subscriptions for their information.

      I don't think that taking away keywords is a good answer to me.

      --
      It could be worse, it could be Monday.
    4. Re:Search Engines just Advertising Now? by jschnell01 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There really is no efficient way to hide from the spammers now... as good as any search engine is... once it gains popularity its like sending up the batsignal... or rather... in this sense it would be the spam signal. where there is traffic there will be spam. i dont think there will ever be an effective remedy for that.

      LOOK, ITS THE SPAM SIGNAL!!

      --
      Words offer the means to meaning, and for those who will listen, the annunciation of truth.
    5. Re:Search Engines just Advertising Now? by micromoog · · Score: 3, Informative
      But the original results for "nebula" were pretty good anyway ;)

      Seriously, though, a combination of selectively subtracting "junk" words like these, along with using several keywords to narrow it down, seems to work well. Particularly, enclosing multi-word phrases in quotes makes a HUGE difference sometimes.

      It's not perfect, and it is extra effort and annoying when you end up at trash no-content sites, but Google still does a good job for me overall.

    6. Re:Search Engines just Advertising Now? by NevDull · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Teoma engine (which powers AskJeeves) produces results that appear to be far better filtered than Google. It also produces fewer results, from a smaller number of total pages, but... depending on the term, it can give quite nice results.

    7. Re:Search Engines just Advertising Now? by wbm6k · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Of course, the other amazing thing is that people continue to use Google over other search engines despite this issue [SNIP]. I haven't used many other search engines lately - are any of them really any better?

      Of course, the really amazing thing is that you freely admit there is a problem with Google, that it does not do what you want it to, and yet you still haven't checked out the alternatives.

      Which shows that it isn't amazing at all; people don't perform a web search these days--they google something. The site has become synonymous with the task, and I suspect it will take a MAJOR problem (on the order of institutionalized censoring by Google) to change that.

    8. Re:Search Engines just Advertising Now? by rm999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's a really good idea. I would like to see something like that built into google (ie. a checkbox next to the seach box along the lines of "filter out commercial sites"). Google could then look for keywords that indicate that they are trying to sell you something and remove the offending pages from the results. This would benefit the user by giving better searches, and benefit google by giving more attention to their own ads. They probably already have the algorithms to do this from froogle.

      I personally am starting to get annoyed with how much effort I need to put in to search for information about commercial products on google. The amount of noise in the results can be mind-boggling.

  2. Call these people by their real titles please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful


    they are not
    Search Engine Optimization experts

    they are
    Search Engine Spammers

    and they are just polluting the search engine, remember if your searches cease to be relavent then those customers they are seeking will just go elsewhere

    1. Re:Call these people by their real titles please by shawn(at)fsu · · Score: 4, Insightful

      just a though. In the article one company gurentees top 10 placement, what if 11 companies all selling the same product use their spammi... Optimazation service?

      --
      500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
    2. Re:Call these people by their real titles please by micromoog · · Score: 4, Funny

      You mean a shady, fly-by-night business specializing in deception may not be able to deliver on promises? I'm shocked, SHOCKED I tell you!

    3. Re:Call these people by their real titles please by KillerDeathRobot · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This guy is anyway. There's nothing wrong with white hat tactics to get your page to rank well. There are lots of times people are searching Google and really do want product results.

      On the other hand, scumbags like this guy are definitely, as you say, search engine spammers.

      --
      Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
  3. On no by suso · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Another method is link spam, aka "blog comment spam," in which automated bots plaster ads with return links on the comments pages of blogs.

    Oh no! I've been exposed. The light! The light! Ahhhhh!

    Seriously though, I didn't realize how well this worked until now. Just by posting to slashdot with my signature, I've managed to go to the top of google if you search for "website/email hosting". Impressive. Doing this wasn't my goal however, I was just trying to get some slashdotter's attention. *blushes*

    1. Re:On no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      perhaps you'd appreciate this then too. HOT GAY COCK

    2. Re:On no by suso · · Score: 5, Funny

      Thanks a lot.

  4. search engines can be manipulated? Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny
  5. Misleading by duffer_01 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I read this article and I thought it was somewhat misleading. Although there were places where it mentioned that Link Exchanges could be bad. It gave me the impression that the more the better.

    There is a really good site http://www.iprcom.com/papers/pagerank/
    that tries to explain exactly how bad these link exchanges can be (at least from the Google perspective).

  6. Not quite that easy. by bigtallmofo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I read this article yesterday and found it very interesting but a little simplistic and light on details. Greg Boser appears to make repeated claims that getting top billing in the search engines is easy, but he doesn't point out that for any particular search engine term, there are thousands of people attempting to get top ranking. Even though the basic concepts are easy, when you have thousands of people competing for limited resources, the task is still going to be difficult.

    As for his claim of buying and selling links - a quick search on Google for "buy links" verifies that is very true. Sites such as LinkAdage act as EBay-style auctions for links on sites of various pagerank, various Free-For-All sites allow you to post your links for free for a certain period of time and of course Blog-spamming.

    --
    I'm a big tall mofo.
    1. Re:Not quite that easy. by voma · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As for his claim of buying and selling links - a quick search on Google for "buy links" verifies that is very true. Sites such as LinkAdage act as EBay-style auctions for links on sites of various pagerank, various Free-For-All sites allow you to post your links for free for a certain period of time and of course Blog-spamming.

      Google says they often identify these "link farms" and drop you from search results if you appear in one. I don't know if that's true or not, but it's a big risk to take.

      -Voma
      --
      Volunteer and Non-profit jobs:
      www.igc.org/jobs.html

  7. Relevance of Google Search Results by iBod · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Does anyone else find that Google's results are being degraded and becoming less relevant?

    They seem to favor large sites over small ones, regardless of content, and consistenty rank SEO spammed pages over clean ones.

  8. Was it just me... by thirteenVA · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Or did anyone else find that article to be useless. Way to state the obvious...

    I think we all knew that back links and keyword rich text help our placement in google. What exactly has this 'expert' shared with us?

    Paying a professional to perform SEO for you seems to be fruitless. If you've been in the web development game for long you already know most of the legitimate techniques to help improve your placement. Seems like the SEO industry is a bit of a sham.

    1. Re:Was it just me... by 0x461FAB0BD7D2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It was just another way for him to increase his visibility, and for his company too.

      He manipulated Wired and used them to "optimize" search engines, while preaching to them about search engine optimization. It's quite brilliant really.

  9. Yes, indeed by WillerZ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And people have been known to buy and sell votes before. I do not see why anyone is surprised that this has happened.

    As soon as you have a process which is advantageous to a party if it comes out a certain way they will seek to influence the outcome in that direction. It happens that in this case the process is well-understood, and has an obvious manipulation strategy.

    Frankly, I would be shocked and surprised if this type of thing didn't happen.

    --
    I guess today is a passable day to die.
  10. Uncritical by slavemowgli · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Whatever happened to critical journalism? This guy isn't a "search engine optimization expert", he's a spammer trying to make some fast bucks by essentially denying (or attempting to deny, at least) the service search engines provide. He's not a single bit better than those spammers who send me 300-400 email messages a day (yes, I do get that many, these days), or the spammers that have flooded newsgroups I used to follow years ago with similar amounts of spam and essentially killed them completely (when a group gets 50 times as much spam as it does on-topic messages, it doesn't take long for all the regulars to leave for greener pastures).

    He's nothing but a parasite, and that's exactly what you should call him.

    --
    quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
  11. Content based ranking by Jovian_Storm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Link based ranking might have worked once upon a time, but for truly relevant results, the search has to primarily focus on page content and analyze it. Current link-based ranking means that the search engine is relying on what other websites (and indirectly, webmasters) think of the site in question.

  12. I've waded in this industry.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Optimizing" your website is now just double speak for abusing the search engines as liberally as possible.

    Wikispam, blogspam, doorway pages, gateway pages, links bought and sold by Google PR ranking, cloaking, and any other techniques that don't consist of just desgining a good web page.

    When Google first created its system, it worked well because the internet wasn't as filled with people trying to manipulate the results. Now usually 5 of the top 10 results are just some commercial venture to take advantage of a keyword.

    Guys like this jerk are the ones who are ruining search engines.

  13. I like to confuse the search engines by Timesprout · · Score: 4, Funny

    By putting my servers in different positions in the server room a couple of times a week

    --
    Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
    What truth?
    There is no dupe
  14. search engine spam by bdigit · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think what google is really needing is a way to filter out all these spam links in their search results. I hate searching for something and then i have to skip the first 3 pages because I will click on a link and it will be some spam portal page or some other site that has copied wikipedia and thrown in a bazillion ads.

  15. Again, the line between slime and genius blurs by MrAnnoyanceToYou · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You can't help but respect someone who knows what they want - a spike in the wheel of something designed to be useful.

    One is reminded of the story of the engineer who wrote a bill to a railroad out for $1000 (when it meant something) for a hammer tap that started a train. "The bill is for knowing where to tap."

    This man has found a place to tap that sends the train where he wants, good luck to him.

    And an incredible good time in the fires of Hades.

  16. nip it in the bud by temojen · · Score: 4, Informative

    Make sure your blog comment software adds rel="nofollow" to all user-submitted links that you've not approved. Then google (and probably others) will ignore the link.

  17. Use nofollow! by sho222 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Back in January Slashdot ran an article on the rel=nofollow attribute that will prevent Google (and MSN and Yahoo, probably others) from indexing the link in anchor tags that contain it. This is meant to cut out the motivation for Blog and Message Board comment spamming.

    For all of you out there creating blog/board software and maintaining blog sites, please use this attribute! (/. inlcluded, I suppose)

    ... of course, you'll have to put a notice somewhere on your site that the links in comments will be ignored by search indexers so the message board spammers know their efforts are futile on your site.

  18. Sadly, he's right - page ranking is easy to fake by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Back when the national NOW website was just getting started, most of the time when you used Yahoo or Google to search, most people came up with pages for my WA NOW website and our underlying pages, because I coded them to show up high on keywords and links.

    Naturally, I provided links back to them, but since we had been on the web before they were, and were responsible for forcing them onto the web in the first place, it wasn't surprising. Their webperson now was part of the three state chapters that forced them to get a web presence, and she knows all about how to get good page rankings - so this is no longer the case, especially since I don't spend much time on the site anymore.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  19. My Experience by DanielMarkham · · Score: 3, Informative

    I have a new website. I've also been paying for marketing.

    I found I got almost as much traffic this month when I put my website in my slashdot profile! Way to go Slashdot!

    For all of the trickery and such, I think that promoting your site or idea is just going to boil down to old-fashioned guerilla marketing. Once the search engines become polluted, people are going to start looking for valuable _content_, and then from there going to a site to purcahse things. It's basically what Google is supposed to do -- use web pages as a "virtual" referral tool. Only this has the benefit of not being amenable to spamming.

  20. But my customers want me to spam SEs! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm the owner of a small web dev firm. Most of our work is intranet apps, so no problem there, but we also do general web design etc.

    Even though we do everything we can (legit) to make customer site spider friendly, and make sure the keywords are prominent in the title, heading tags and body copy, we get customers complaining that their competitors are ranking above them in Google.

    Why is that?

    Their competitors (or their web developers)use invisible text, doorway pages, keyword overloading, link farms and God knows what else to claw the site to the top of the pile!

    Explaining that you only use 'ethical' SEO methods just looses you business.

    I could weep!

    Google has made this so, I'm afraid.

  21. Doesn't work like that by dtfinch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Search spamming sometimes works, for a while at least, but it all goes to hell when your clients' sites get penalized or banned because your tactics. We've seen competitors's sites with hidden text disappear from the search rankings. On one occasion one of our own sites was badly penalized for a typo that could be seen as spamming. It took a couple months for it to rise back up to the top. And every year or so, Google does a major update to shake a bunch of the spammy sites out of their index. SEO's give these updates names like they were hurricanes, like Florida and Brandy.

    This guy sounds like a complete amatuer. He talks like doing what the other 100000 black hat SEO's are already doing will guarantee his clients a lasting top 10 result. And PageRank has much less weight today than it used to. In 6 months some of his clients will probably want to sue him.

    You can get a good rank that lasts without being spammy. For the most part, having good content works very well.

  22. How to report spam by GoogleGuy · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you find a page in Google that violates our quality guidelines (cloaking, sneaky redirects, hidden text, hidden links, etc.), please let us know by reporting it at our spam report form.

    If you include the word slashdot in the "Additional details" section, I'll someone to do an additional check this weekend for Slashdot-reported spam.

    We use spam report data to improve our quality directly, but also to look for new types of spam and ways to improve our scoring algorithms.

    1. Re:How to report spam by GoogleGuy · · Score: 5, Informative

      I wouldn't necessarily say that I'm high up, but I am an engineer at Google. The googleguy.de fellow nicely let me have the GoogleGuy identity at Slashdot. I think (hope) that we sent him some schwag to say thanks.

      So yes: from now on, when you see GoogleGuy on Slashdot, it is the original, tried and true GoogleGuy. I even subscribed and everything.

  23. Misleading Robots for Fun and Profit by billstewart · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Yeah, SEOs are 90% slime and 10% standard advice about making the information on your page accessible (e.g. telling you to use the META keywords and not just have all your navigation information in dancing flash attachments.)
    • Google is a robot that tries to guess what pages are most interesting to humans.
    • SEOs try to take pages that are not very interesting to humans and make them look interesting to robots.
    • This is annoying to humans, because the pages aren't very interesting to humans.
    Occasionally lying to robots can be fun - the "Weapons of Mass Destruction" Googlebomb, etc.

    But mostly it's just annoying, and it's made some kinds of searches totally useless. I've recently been trying to find out about drug interactions, and not only do you get tons of legitimate pages that are describing the "side effects" of "drug1" and also list "drug2" in their index of things they'll tell you about (or sell, which is fine), but there are lots of pages which are full of robo-generated sentences with drug names, common medical phrases, and phrases having nothing at all to do with medicine, with medical phrases in the URL pathnames as well, designed to attract search engines to their pages. I'd expect this if I were searching for widely spammed drugs starting with V, but it's annoying to have to put up with it when I'm looking for variants on penicillins.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  24. Get him, boys! by TiggertheMad · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why would you post a link to his site that says HOT GAY COCK? I looked at the site and there isn't any mention of HOT GAY COCK on it. I mean, I've never been to a HOT GAY COCK page before, but I can imagine what a HOT GAY COCK site looks like. I mean, it doesn't even seem close to a HOT GAY COCK site. First off, there needs to be a lot more HOT GAY COCK on the site. And when I say more, I mean at least one HOT GAY COCK. There isn't even one single HOT GAY COCK to be found.

    Now, you may find yorself suddenly at the top of Googles rankings for HOT GAY COCK. Don't thank me, just convert your hosting businuess over to a pr0n site that has HOT GAY COCK, rake in the cash, and send me a cut. Afterall, Does your hosting businuess really make more money than a HOT GAY COCK site?

    Now that we have worn that joke out completely, you should check the google listing for you page in a week or two to see where it is in the ranking for HGC. Since all the links to your site regarding HGC are from /., it will give you an idea ho heavily slashdot's links are weighed in the ranking system. It would be interesting to see how quickly you get a boost from silliness such as this.

    (mods: this honestly isn't a troll, read the parent and grandparent posting.)

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
  25. Making SEO SOL by Eponymous+Koward · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Search engines have at least two options to deal with SEO.

    Option 1: Defensive tweaking of ranking algorithm. Craig Silverstein estimated in a talk a three years ago that "most" of the thinking with respect to ranking was in response to battling SEO. And that was before anyone knew what SEO stood for.

    Option 2: Lower the cost of advertising. If you can put your link in a banner ad more cheaply than using SEO to get the top result, you'll probably take that path. The cost of advertising has a direct impact on the viability of the business of SEO.

    Option 2 isn't bad: if Google lowers the cost of advertising, their margins shrink, but less investment in defending SEO will be required, and results will be more relevant.

    Furthermore, option 1 is hard. To fight SEO, you need to distinguish between that portion of the web which is a network of human-created links, and that portion which is doing its best to simulate being human-created. This is an AI-hard problem.

    Ultimately, google needs to strike the right balance between options 1 and 2. They need to make SEO more expensive than it's worth. My guess is that, right now, there is more than one open spreadsheet devoted to figuring out that balance.

  26. A clear path to a good Google ranking by wintermute42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is a clear path to a good Google ranking: publish good content that people want to read. If you sell widgets, publish material on widgets, their use, development, etc... If you can't find a constant stream of interesting material to publish on your product and services then perhaps you are in the wrong business.

    Think about this: how many of us know about Fog Creek Software because of Joel Spolsky's "Joel on Software" web page? I don't think that this was Joel's original intent, but his writing has been a great marketing tool for his software business.

    Rather than waste money on web site marketing and trying to game Google, invest in building content on your site. If you do this, your links will grow and your Google ranking will go up. It's really that simple.

    Of course this approach does not have the attraction of a quick fix. You actually have to invest in building your business.

    A number of people have commented on how poorly researched the Wired article is. I've subscribed to Wired since the early days. At one time Wired ran innovative and interesting articles. For example, Neal Stephenson's excellent article on undersea telecommunications cables. The magazine is now a tragic shadow if its former self. My subscription is expiring this year and I don't intend to renew it. Wired's journalistic and editorial standards have become pathetic. It has become an attempt at a techno-geek version of the "lad mag" Stuff without the scantily clad women.