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Pay-Per-Click Speculation Market Soaring

Rob writes "Computer Business Review is reporting that the number of web sites being opened purely to publish pay-per-click advertising links from the likes of Google and Yahoo is rocketing, according to VeriSign, which runs the .com and .net domain names." From the article: "Sclavos said that the company will change the way it reports the size of its domain name business, in terms of active registrations, because of the amount of speculation going on. It will reduce the size of the reported registrations by about 2%, he said. 'Names are being bought and then tested against traffic analyzers...The ones that can generate more than the $6 or $7 [registration] fee per year are kept, the other ones are returned within the five day grace period.'"

149 comments

  1. Meanwhile, Pay Per Lick porn market suffering... by elrous0 · · Score: 3, Funny
    At least I'm doing my part to support it.

    -Eric

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  2. Taking market share from legitimate sites? by vidarlo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This can only go on as long as few enough do. When enough people start doing this, google can tell sites wanting to much money for their adspace to go stic it up. Then, legitimate sites will get hurt, advertising in general will be hurt since those fake sites is mainly a hoax.

    Further, it is quite irritating, as most of those sites don't have a single piece of information. I remember a while ago a blog set up to earn money. The blog was about asbestos damage. Quite OK if they can provide content in addition to the ads. However, my guess is that google will ban sites not having any content /other/ than their ads.

    1. Re:Taking market share from legitimate sites? by Eric+Giguere · · Score: 4, Informative

      my guess is that Google will ban sites not having any content /other/ than their ads

      That's already the case -- you can't normally display AdSense ads on a site if the site doesn't have any content. If Google notices this or if someone reports it, they'll ask you to take off the ads or lose your AdSense account.

      That said, Google and other third parties do offer domain parking facilities that explicitly allow you to show ads. But you have to explicitly sign up for that kind of program.

      I don't know how any of this would be considered "illegitimate" use of domain names, though. It's the price you pay with an open market.

      Eric
    2. Re:Taking market share from legitimate sites? by khakipuce · · Score: 3, Interesting
      When enough people start doing this, google can tell sites wanting to much money for their adspace to go stic it up

      Google does not negotiate a price for ad space. The way it works (on Google at least) is basically the more an advertiser pays the higher up the list/more likely to get seen the ad is. When a link is clicked Google charges the advertiser and pays a proportion to the site that has syndicated the ads.

      This means that Google gets paid whatever. The only thing Google has to worry about is sites generating clicks falsely - as in, I set up a site and sit there all day clicking the Google ads to generate revenue from Google. But Google checks the spread of time, IP addresses etc. and refuses to pay if it thinks the clicks are not genuine.

      The thing that I can't figure out is who goes to a contentless site and starts click the ads? I very rarely click ads anyway, but to do it from a crap site just seems really dumb.

      --
      Art is the mathematics of emotion
    3. Re:Taking market share from legitimate sites? by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1
      The thing that I can't figure out is who goes to a contentless site and starts click the ads?

      Somebody searching for something on the web (preferably from a search engine other than google...), and stumbling across your site by "accident". As the only contents are the ads, chances are that the visitor will click on one of them if they are interested in the subject.

      Now the tricky part is:

      • Make sure your site is ranked high enough that you attract enough random traffic (not that hard, after all they are only shooting for $7 / year / site...) to make it worthwhile
      • Make sure your site gets listed on search engines other than google. Indeed, Google's adSense ads are the same ads that get displayed on their own page near the search results. If your visitor came from google, chances are that he already saw the very same ads on the google result page where he just came from... However, if he came from Yahoo or MSN, it's a different matter.
    4. Re:Taking market share from legitimate sites? by Anonymous+Luddite · · Score: 1

      >> The thing that I can't figure out is who goes to a contentless site and starts click the ads? I very rarely click ads anyway, but to do it from a crap site just seems really dumb.

      That one's easy;

      1. The scammer builds a web page using "blackhat" SEO tricks to make it seem like good, ontopic content.
      2. The page shows up high in search results and many click onto it.
      3. once they get there and see it's shit, they look for a way out fast, often choosing one of the advert links rather than the "back" button.
      4. profit.

      As long as it pays, these losers will keep doing it...

  3. My opinion by erykjj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Perhaps it would make sense to increase the registration fee and/or eliminate the grace period. That way, only those who are serious about maintaining a web site would be investing in one.

    1. Re:My opinion by Eric+Giguere · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm not really sure why this is news. They should for sure exclude registrations that haven't passed their grace period when reporting activations... that's just common sense. A company can't fully book the revenue it receives if there's a return period. Same reasoning applies here.

      Eric
      Read about click fraud
    2. Re:My opinion by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Why should we limit web sites to people who are serious? If anything we should be lowering or eliminating the registration fee.

    3. Re:My opinion by Dachannien · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wait, don't get rid of the registration fee before I have a chance to write a brute-force "register everything" script.

    4. Re:My opinion by vinohradska · · Score: 1

      The problem is not the domain names. The name space could be infinite, and should be infinite. If it costs more to register on .com people will just move to .somethingelse where it is cheaper. The problem is one of information pollution. I despise this this sea of crap web sites that clutter and pollute the web. The signal to noise ratio of useful information keeps going down when you do random searches. And since it only hurts when you do a random search, it is the search engines themselves that need to filter out the crap. Google needs to do a better job searching in this new landscape that is so heavily polluted. Times have changed. A new breed of search will need to be able to cut through the crap better. Probably Google itself will simply improve. I sure hope so. But, getting back to the click-through problem, the financial incentive needs to be removed/lessened. Google needs to address this themselves by either changing their business model or changing their fee structure. Also, if the crap filter worked better then we wouldn't stumble on these sites and then they wouldn't earn as much money. This crap-web has the effect of enhancing the value of known brands (Amazon, for example), because people can't be bothered hunting for anything else. Slowly people will start to change the way they surf. They will stop starting in the Google search field, and fall back to their own set of known bookmarks. The real losers will be genuine new web sites that gather dust because no one finds them. Like the music scene, in a way.

    5. Re:My opinion by Cromac · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Wait, don't get rid of the registration fee before I have a chance to write a brute-force "register everything" script.

      This should be modded up (sorry, no points left) because that is exactly what would happen if there weren't any registration fee. Hell we're not far from that now with the companies who register tens of thousands of domains and park them for no reason other than to sell it to someone.

    6. Re:My opinion by fatcatman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hell we're not far from that now with the companies who register tens of thousands of domains and park them for no reason other than to sell it to someone.

      Can someone make this illegal? Please?

      I'm trying to setup a new web site. I made a list of several dozen possible domain names. Almost ALL of them are owned by these "buyadomain" companies and they want $200 - $500 for them.

      Now, I don't have a problem with people selling their domains. But these people aren't doing jack shit with the domains. They've bought up tens of thousands of good names and are simply sitting on them. Meanwhile people like me who want to use the name legitimately - actually setup a real web site with real content around it - can't, unless we pay their extortion fee. I think that's bullshit, and it shouldn't be allowed.

    7. Re:My opinion by Jantastic · · Score: 1

      You're too late, everything is registered ;-)

      --
      ...a fact which for the sake of a quiet life most people tend to ignore ~H2G2
    8. Re:My opinion by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      This should be modded up (sorry, no points left) because that is exactly what would happen if there weren't any registration fee.

      Yeah, and it would be the point. You say it as though it's a bad thing.

      Hell we're not far from that now with the companies who register tens of thousands of domains and park them for no reason other than to sell it to someone.

      We're basically already there. In fact, even when the cost of domains were high it was still mainly a fee for administration, not for the domain itself.

      Anyway, it's not like the registration fee goes to the public. What's it matter if it goes to a domain squatter or a registry?

  4. Is this news? by numb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Isnt this just plain capitalism. If they can earn money of buying names and put up ads on them, then why not?

    Dont sse any news here, move along.

    --
    NumB http://www.engvig.net
    1. Re:Is this news? by pmazer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The only problem I see is that they're snatching up names so that the people who want to use those names for a "valid" business will have to buy them at a premium, or can't access them at all.

    2. Re:Is this news? by ldnelso2 · · Score: 1

      Why not is that it is against the terms and conditions of the Google adsense agreement to set up a site solely for the purpose of generating adsense pay-per-click revenue. Here is why: 1. Advertisers PAY for those clicks, and they have a right to expect that their adverts are on legitimate sites (helps protect their brand image). 2. These ripoff artists are stealing money (from a supply-and-demand perspective, since keywords are bid on by advertisers) from legitimate adsense publishers who work hard to generate content that is relevant to consumers.

      --
      Leonard Nelson
    3. Re:Is this news? by weierstrass · · Score: 1

      If the domain name doesn't have any more value to you than it does as a contentless site, visited only by people who mistype addresses, guess at addresses, (ie just type www.computers.com looking for somewh to buy a computer) or follow links to spam sites from easily-fooled search engines, and then click on ad links like monkeys, why should you buy it anyway?

      --
      my password really is 'stinkypants'
    4. Re:Is this news? by Eric+Giguere · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That argument doesn't hold: if these "snatchers" are making money from those domain names, then they are in fact running "valid" businesses themselves. In other words, they're doing what all good businesses try to do: make money.

      Eric
    5. Re:Is this news? by McDutchie · · Score: 1
      In other words, they're doing what all good businesses try to do: make money.

      So is the mob. What separates a good business from a bad business is the way in which they try to make money.

    6. Re:Is this news? by Eric+Giguere · · Score: 1

      But there's nothing illegal about what this particular type of business is doing. It's not even immoral. Whether it's a "worthwhile" business would perhaps be a different story, but I suspect many businesses would fail those kinds of criteria.

    7. Re:Is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Surely morality is relative. I'd guess that rather a lot of people view money-making schemes that in their eyes do not contribute to society in any way as immoral (but as you say, quite obviously legal).

    8. Re:Is this news? by nadadogg · · Score: 1

      You're replying to a guy who's homepage is a "how to make money from google with adsense" page. Not a tough nut to crack.

      --
      i use linux and windows oh god how can i have an opinion
    9. Re:Is this news? by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      The advertisers only care whether the people that click through to them (costing them money) actually end up buying something. In many cases, the clicks coming from PPC sites are probably as good or better than the ones coming from content domains in terms of sales conversion, so why would they care?

    10. Re:Is this news? by rsynnott · · Score: 1

      Well, it's certainly against Google's policies, which they're beginning to enforce in the last month or so. They have a "report spam" button, now. If you see these sites, click the Google Adsense link under the ads, and click "report spam".

      --
      Me (Blog)
    11. Re:Is this news? by paul.dunne · · Score: 1

      Your handle is inaccurate. Please run the following sed script on it.

      sed -n 's/^n/d/p'

      HTH. HAND.

    12. Re:Is this news? by vinohradska · · Score: 1

      Good. A good start. As I said, this is simple information pollution, just like spam, and should be treated as such - using filters - both algorithmic and empirical. Google and the other search engines need to do a better job of filtering.

    13. Re:Is this news? by corblix · · Score: 1
      Dont sse any news here, move along.

      Of course it's news. No, it doesn't need to be controversial, or shocking, or whatever. But it's happening, and it didn't happen before. That makes it news.

  5. Re:As usual, google to the rescue... by Trigun · · Score: 1

    Caaught me off guard there. Good one!

    And you saved me $19.99!

  6. Re:As usual, google to the rescue... by Emperor+Stalin · · Score: 1

    Mate you are getting ripped off: £8.99 from amazon UK

  7. I tried this... by guildsolutions · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Actually got one check from google, Sadly even tho all of my sites were ligitamte and had real content not just faked up content, they booted me and said that I was generating false clicks, and then refused to tell me from where... This area needs to have some laws made regulating companies and there policies so the end users, the little guys, have some rights.

    1. Re:I tried this... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      If someone goes to the site and then clicks on the link, how is this not legitimate?

      Sure, google should eliminate these sites from its search engine, but I don't see the point of not giving them the ad revenue they earned.

    2. Re:I tried this... by kawika · · Score: 1

      Google's fraud detection is like a casino catching a card counter. If you win too much they figure you must be cheating. All they can do is look at the click patterns of your site and see how they compare to patterns at other sites that have AdWords.

      It's possible that you were the victim of a "joe job" attack where someone came to your site and clicked every ad on every page. I suspect that Google gives you a pass or two on those kind of incidents since they can detect and filter them based on other info (cookies and/or IP address for example).

      If you really pissed someone off, they may have set a few hundred zombie computers to fake-clicking on your links. Since those clicks come from completely different sources it isn't possible for Google to filter them like they can with Mr. Joe Job Happy Finger above. But based on high click rates they may have decided that the clicks can't possibly be real.

    3. Re:I tried this... by Eric+Giguere · · Score: 3, Informative

      Click fraud is a big problem and legitimate sites are running into it more and more often. Recently someone was targeting pay-per-click related ads on my sites (a lot of my content is related to that topic) and causing my earnings to skyrocket. But it was obviously illegitimate income. What you do is report your suspicions to Google and let them figure it out. I've always done this and kept on good terms with them.

      Let's face it, no one forced you to sign up with Google's AdSense program. If you can't abide by the rules that they impose, you always have the option of finding another ad program to suit your needs.

      Eric
      Read about Alaska cruising
    4. Re:I tried this... by flutkatastrophe · · Score: 1

      If you're talking about totalnewz.com, I'd bet that you were booted because your site is very similar to google news, basically a wire service tracker.

    5. Re:I tried this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How big was the cheque?

    6. Re:I tried this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, wait, this is a good one. We need a law saying Google has to... no, no, wait for it... HAS to do business with you or explain why not! Brilliant!

      I have a better idea: we need a law saying that people who don't understand the purpose of the legal system have to take a remedial government course.

    7. Re:I tried this... by g0at · · Score: 1

      This area needs to have some laws made

      For the love of goat, please, no.

      -b

    8. Re:I tried this... by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      The click should be because you want to go to the page which is advertising, not because you want to aid the site you came from.

    9. Re:I tried this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much is "skyrocket"?

      Not trying to be nosey, but how much can AdSense really earn you?

      Ballpark.

    10. Re:I tried this... by guildsolutions · · Score: 1

      Tripple digits, my account was canned 2 days before the second check would have been issued, and it was for around $700. My ads were on 5 domains, each getting 2500-5000 unique hits a week. I did purposfully fish out higher paying ads, but it was still for ligimate pages. Kinda akin to somone selling sodapop for $2 a can at a football game, its legal.. only because people are willing to pay it.

    11. Re:I tried this... by Serveert · · Score: 1

      So basically because he competes with Google he was booted? Doesn't it seem like playing with the devil - joining ad sense? Google could just see which publisher sites generate the most revenue then "steal" that revenue by competing with you and disabling your account.

      That's pretty evil if you ask me. I recommend another more trustworthy ad network IMO. One that doesn't compete with your publisher sites.

      --
      2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
    12. Re:I tried this... by vinohradska · · Score: 1

      Do you really think google even noticed what his site was?

    13. Re:I tried this... by Eric+Giguere · · Score: 2, Informative

      how much can AdSense really earn you?

      I get asked that a lot (well, I guess it's no surprise, since my book is titled "Make Easy Money with Google") but there are no firm statistics anywhere. All I have to go on is gut feel, really, but I suspect that most sites are earning between $50 to $250 a month. Some sites go way beyond that, earning several hundred or even several thousand dollars per month. And some, especially the new ones, will earn less. However, it's easy enough to make enough income to pay back your hosting costs, which is the first step.

      There's no real secret to this stuff. In the end, the secret "AdSense formula for making money" comes down to this:

      earnings = number of clicks * average price per click

      You can derive almost everything from this formula, as I described in the article The AdSense Formula.

      Generally speaking, the sites making a lot of money from AdSense get (no surprise) a lot of traffic. That's the hardest part -- getting the traffic, especially the right traffic.

      Eric
    14. Re:I tried this... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      What does that have to do with anything? Don't you think most people who wind up at these pages and click on the links want to go to the page which is advertising?

    15. Re:I tried this... by Serveert · · Score: 1

      Of course not, it doesn't generate enough revenue.

      Now, search on google for "free email" and notice how the first result on the right is for gmail. Don't bother trying to use adwords/adsense for your free email publisher site anymore. Basically google picks off the publishers that generate significant revenue either directly/indirectly. The net effect is you shouldn't trust google ad sense if your website makes a lot of money. You'll just be supply greedy google executives with the details of your revenue stream. Go with a pure affiliate network who isn't so greedy.

      --
      2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
    16. Re:I tried this... by antic · · Score: 1


      FWIW, one of my sites running AdSense makes US$50/week. For about 10 minutes/week effort, I need more sites like it!

      --
      'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
    17. Re:I tried this... by vinohradska · · Score: 1

      Got any solid examples of this, or are you just making wild guesses?

    18. Re:I tried this... by Serveert · · Score: 1

      Check out this search for free email. Notice that the first result on the right is for google's gmail. That competes directly with their other previous publisher sites that did free email. If you have a free email publisher site, google is getting more revenue if you use them, they compete with you as a publisher. Revenue goes to your or them, it's competition, period.

      I used to work in the industry for an affiliate network that pioneered this market and was well entrenched before google and remains a great company. there was always the temptation to snag revenue from publishers/advertisers. It's very tempting to push them around and fortunately they never opted to do that, google did.

      then there's froogle which competes with many other such sites. It's right in front of you but you're used to it so you don't notice.

      --
      2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
    19. Re:I tried this... by vinohradska · · Score: 1

      The first result in the paid advertizing on the right is gmail, yes, but they don't even show up on the left in the real search list. They are happily linking to all their direct competitors. They are just one many links on that page. So what is the problem?

      Is the problem that you were beaten in fair competition? I'd love to know what an "affiliate network" pioneered. Other than new ways to spam people and pollute the web with annoying ads.

    20. Re:I tried this... by Serveert · · Score: 1

      One of many links? There can be only 1 first result in sponsored listings and it's google. Sure it's great that they let other people compete in organic search but they have their foot in their publisher's business, using their leverage, which they have the right to do, to make sure they're first in the paid listing. That's competition with your customers(others who bought adwords CPC for "free email"). That's the problem from a customer's point of view.

      What did affiliate networks pioneer? Try adsense. Try linking publishers and advertisers. I know you want to say google invented everything but sadly they did not. Where did they get all those publishers? Affiliate networks. If you hate those annoying ads you must really hate google and their recent adoption of CPM graphical banner ads. Similar case with Yahoo and others who want to do everything, it's best to step back and wonder if you want to associate with such large companies who could swallow most of your traffic at any time(ie you're a free email publisher with adwords placement then all of a suddent google comes in and is #1). In any case I'm no longer affiliated with the industry but I see that you're a google employee. Or really, really stupid. Good luck in life. Seriously. I don't need to educate you anymore.

      --
      2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
    21. Re:I tried this... by vinohradska · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is just one of many links on that page. Look again with fresh eyes. It isn't even bold. Be honest, if you search for something with google, do you look at the search results first or at the ads first? Perhaps YOU would be a bad example because you seem to be hyper-sensitive about ad placement, but a normal person looks at the search results. You are placing way too much value on the pole position in the ad list.

      They provide "free email" so if I search on their site for "free email" what would you propose they do?

      And it is hardly news when companies compete on one level and do business together on another level. That happens all the time. Now if google was a monopoly, that would be a valid complaint.

      And what did affiliate networks pioneer? I see the answer is "not much". Targeted advertizing has been around forever. As has "linking". Google didn't invent it, but neither did affiliate networks.

      Google got where it is today because it works well and it is NOT annoying. If it ceases to be the least annoying / most useful site, then people will flock to something else. So it goes.

      As for calling me stupid, well... you must quite upset. Take deep breaths. You'll be fine.

  8. Ban them by kutsu119 · · Score: 1

    Google needs to periodically review it's "biggest earners" and see just how much it is updated, content wise, and also how many adverts per word their are.

    Get rid of the sites where text and adverts fight for space, let legit sites prosper!

  9. HARRY POTTER SPOILER IN PARENT by troon · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...I assume. I've not actually read the book.

    --
    Ydco co ,df C erb-y go. a Ekrpat t.fxrapev
  10. MOD DOWN-- TROLL by alc6379 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The original article doesn't say anything about Snape or Dumbledore in the article.

    --
    I don't moderate anymore. Karma penalty for 90% fair mods? Can I mod that unfair?
  11. Re:Linux users: Why bother? by ajs318 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    A. If you don't compile your apps locally, you can't be sure they don't contain nasties. There is nothing wrong with compiling applications. It's only like preparing your own food so you know there are no artificial additives in it. What is already being worked on is a system where you will be able to click on a package, download it and its dependencies, and compile it.

    B. There is nothing wrong with the command line. Sometimes it is the most efficient way of giving instructions to the computer. Mandriva has some nice utilities for configuring everything without using a text editor or command line. But you really ought at least to take an interest in what is happening behind the scenes. I can flick open an xterm, start pico and have a config file tweaked and the daemon restarted in less time than it takes for a fancy-schmancy point-and-drool frontend to load up.

    C. You are not looking hard enough for the information you seek.

    Conclusion: you are either an incorrigible whinger, who needs to be fed with a spoon; or a troll. I recommend that you stick your head up your arse and fart.

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  12. Re:As usual, google to the rescue... by Trigun · · Score: 1

    Hey, LinuxFormat from the U.K. costs me $18.99 an issue after exchange and shipping to Canuck Bucks. £8.99 sounds about right.

  13. would be easier... by ylikone · · Score: 1
    if you actually posted a URL

    --
    Meh.
  14. stiffled innovation by arudloff · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Think about how many small internet projects have failed due to really dumb, non-descriptive domain names.

    Granted, some companies have been able to pull off misspellings (flickr), but how much more time is left before anything even remotely pronouncable is already registered?

    If google really wants to "not be evil," they should find a way to pull the blanket from under these shams.. I almost wish domains were $100 a pop again just to make people think twice before doing this :(

    1. Re:stiffled innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Think about how many small internet projects have failed due to really dumb, non-descriptive domain names."

      Yeah...I knew that http://www.genericprojectstuff.net/ wasn't going to generate the kind of income i needed for my sports memorabilia yahoo! store...

      Where were you 2 years ago arudloff????

    2. Re:stiffled innovation by robertjw · · Score: 1

      how much more time is left before anything even remotely pronouncable is already registered?

      Have you registered a domain lately. It can be difficult to find a domain that fits your site, but I have never found any problems registering a domain that's 'remotely pronouncable'. Of course, the availability of domains with fewer characters is less. If you want a relatively short name that's pronouncable that may be a problem. Domains can (by RFC) be up to 255 characters. Not sure how many combinations that gives us, but I have never had any trouble registering a domain if it's over 6-8 characters.

    3. Re:stiffled innovation by arudloff · · Score: 1

      but I have never found any problems registering a domain that's 'remotely pronouncable'

      Eventually these squatters are going to move out to "deeper territory," and people will have to keep coming up with longer and longer domain names. There reaches a point where a long domain name is no longer of any value to a new business trying to build name recognition.

      Do you really think a new widget shop can truly compete with a 255 character domain name? This entire paragraph consisting of two sentences is 132 characters.

      http://www.doyoureallythinkanewwidgetshopcantrulyc ompetewitha255characterdomainname?Thisentire paragraphconsistingoftwosentencesis132characters.c om just doesn't have that much of a ring to it...(nor will slashdot even recognize it as one link ;)

    4. Re:stiffled innovation by robertjw · · Score: 1
      Eventually these squatters are going to move out to "deeper territory,"

      True enough, it's possible that squatters will eventually cause this problem, but I don't see it any time soon.

      Just for fun I went out and checked widgetshop.com, which isn't available, but the following names are:

      • WIDGETSHOPONLINE.COM
      • WIDGETSHOPHOME.COM
      • WIDGETSHOPSITE.COM
      • WIDGETSHOPNET.COM
      • FIRSTWIDGETSHOP.COM
      • BESTWIDGETSHOP.COM
      • NEWWIDGETSHOP.COM
      • MYWIDGETSHOP.COM
      • THEWIDGET-SHOP.COM
      Sure, they aren't ideal names, but a business should be able to build some name recognition on one of these or a variation. My point was more that there are many many pronouncable domain names out there. Personally I abhor squatters. There are some domains that I would like to use that are just taken up by cheesey link farm/ad pages. A good example is http://www.redlineperformance.com/ My friend has a business with that name and I'd like to set up a site for him, but some jerk has it registered for a link page. Wish there was a way to put a stop to that and still remain a capitalist society, but I don't know how.
    5. Re:stiffled innovation by praxis · · Score: 1

      Also, covering three or four letter domains with ad bait is pretty cheap, effective (people are likely to accidentaly visit your site), and profitable. Once you get into the domain (no pun intended) of forty character domain names, blanketing the spectrum to catch typos and other mispoints of the browser gets exponentially more expensive, less effective, and a loss.

    6. Re:stiffled innovation by aclarke · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I can think of one site with a misspelled domain name that really tanked. www.googol.com or something like that?

  15. Pay-per-click by GuitarNeophyte · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's too bad that search engine results are so full of all-advertising sites that good sites tend to fall though the cracks. I've seen a number of pretty-decent websites that didn't show up until the tenth page of a google search just because they weren't "Optimized for search engine traffic". It's annoying.

    I read an article a while back that says that anyone who does anything purely for the purposes of making their websites show up higher on search engine results than they should are scammers. I believe it. No matter how whitehat you are, if you're trying to beat the system, you're a scammer. period.

    Dumb ol' no-good-content-advertiser-based-websites.

    Luke
    ----
    This may be a shameless plug for my website, but at least it's got content.

    1. Re:Pay-per-click by aclarke · · Score: 2, Informative
      Well, I suppose you're entitled to your opinion and judging from your comment's moderation you're not the only person who feels that way. However, if you feel that "anyone who does anything purely for the purposes of making their websites show up higher on search engine results than they should are scammers", who decides the "than they should" part? You? The site owner? The search engine?

      Well, right now, the answer to that question is the search engine. Google (for instance) looks at your page and decides its relevance based upon a number of criteria. I personally think this is overall the best solution although of course it's not without its problems.

      For the record, my job involves optimizing sites as well as working on algorithms to improve our sites' bidding on Overture and Adwords. This is what I do full-time. The sites I work on are well-regarded, well-established, useful sites with proprietary content (no, not porn).

      Tell me, what use other than search engine enhancement does something like a title tag in a hyperlink REALLY have (yes, I know about the mouseover)? How about meta tags? How about rearranging the words in your page title so the most relevant ones show up first? These aren't dirty tricks, but they're designed to showcase the content that a site REALLY HAS, so that when a consumer goes to a search engine they find what they're looking for. We don't want to "trick" customers into visiting our sites. That's a very short-sighted tactic. We end up paying for bandwidth of a "non-qualified" "customer", and eventually our advertisers are going to catch on to this as well. It's the same as trying to lure homeless people into Nordstroms. They're unlikely to turn into customers.

      Anyway, that's just a counterpoint to consider.

    2. Re:Pay-per-click by Panaphonix · · Score: 2, Informative

      Agreed. Especially since Google ranks your page by how many pages link to it, what is wrong with having an incentive to getting the word out about your site to all the other relevant sites?

    3. Re:Pay-per-click by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      So if a webmaster converts his flash website into pure html so that Google can index his site and boost his ranking, he's a scammer?

      If you want to make blanket statements like that, then I'll make a blanket statement about you -- you don't have a damn clue what you are talking about.

  16. ummm... by ylikone · · Score: 0
    Google already does this.

    --
    Meh.
  17. Re:As usual, google to the rescue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's his affiliate link as well.

    Sly, very sly.

  18. Why can't the registrars put in some delays? by Jerle0 · · Score: 1

    I find it kind of strange that this problem exists in the first place. Since it's usually the same people who are registering/returning the domains, why can't they just some kind of limit in that only lets someone return 1 a day or something to discourage this type of behavior? Either that or make it a percentage system...you can only unload so many domains per day based on how many active domaions you have right now that have been there for a while (to make sure legitimate companies aren't penalized).

    1. Re:Why can't the registrars put in some delays? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the people doing this are registries not joe random citizen.

  19. Re:Linux users: Why bother? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A. If you don't compile your apps locally, you can't be sure they don't contain nasties. There is nothing wrong with compiling applications. It's only like preparing your own food so you know there are no artificial additives in it. What is already being worked on is a system where you will be able to click on a package, download it and its dependencies, and compile it.

    And you, of course, do a complete, detailed source code review before compilation to be sure that there are no "nasties" in there, right? What, you trust the site you got the source code from not to give you a version with "nasties" in it? If so, they why not trust a site to give you a compiled program without "nasties" in it, doofus.

  20. Re:Linux users: Why bother? by floorgoblin · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    While all the other replies to this have good points, the original poster does too. If Linux is going to become a truly viable option versus mac or Windows, than it needs to be accessible to those who don't like command lines or reading numerous Linux refernce books... that doesn't mean that Linux should not have a command line, obviously, but it wouldn't hurt to provide greater automation and an interface that even the layfolk can use easily, without sacrificing any of the more complex (and powerful) capabilities that Linux posesses. Personally, I think the open source world would benefit from being opened up to everyone (like Firefox, for example). People say, if you don't like spyware, switch to Linux, but then say if you don't like command lines, go shove it.

  21. Re:Linux users: Why bother? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    do you read every line of code before you compile? no? then SHUT THE HELL UP WITH THAT NONSENSE ARGUMENT ALREADY.

  22. How do they test? by bluprint · · Score: 1

    I'm curious, does anyone know how they "test against traffic analyzers"

    I thought google adsense inserts ads that match site content. Are they building entire sites with relavent content, then testing generated clicks/revenues for that site? And I thought Google only rebuilds indexes every so often, which affect the likely hood that a person would find your site at all. Wouldn't it take a while for a site to really start generating interest, even if it were highly relavent to a search?

    --
    A modern day witchhunt.
  23. I hate suitwankers by RealProgrammer · · Score: 1

    I think there's a special wing of Hades reserved just for SEOs, spammers, and other suitwankers.

    --
    sigs, as if you care.
    1. Re:I hate suitwankers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you just now create that article? I'm going to open up a can of VFD whoop-ass on you. Hahaha

    2. Re:I hate suitwankers by RealProgrammer · · Score: 1

      It appears that most people like that term, even though they think the article needs cleanup.

      --
      sigs, as if you care.
  24. Flippin' burgers by jfengel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So between the domain name and faked keywords on the site trying to pump up the page rank, they're trying to get people to go to their site and then click on one of the pay-per-click links.

    1. Put up a web page
    2. Pray that just based on the domain name people will come
    3. Profit

    Yeah, I guess we know what step 2 is, but pay-per-click is pennies, and you have to do all that setup work coming up with names, hosting the site, etc. I suppose its profitable, but jeez, at what point is it just easier to get a job flipping burgers? Or maybe even a reputable IT job?

    Google pay-per-click money is free only if your time is worth nothing.

    1. Re:Flippin' burgers by greenash · · Score: 1

      Except that pay=per=click is fun and you get to be your own boss. Additionally, once you set up a good ad site, the income comes in even after you stop working on it.

    2. Re:Flippin' burgers by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      If you have a hundred sites all getting a couple of dollars a day you've got a nice income.

      The work involved will be mimimal, perhaps a day or two, and once it's done you need never do it again.

    3. Re:Flippin' burgers by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      The people doing this own tens of thousands of domains and make more money than you can imagine (like tens of thousands of dollars a day). It's actually kind of sick how much money is in this.

    4. Re:Flippin' burgers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you're from eastern Europe or some other place with limited job opportunities, what's "not worth it" to a USian may be well worth it to you.

    5. Re:Flippin' burgers by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Perhaps. They were talking about seeking breakeven on the $7 yearly registration fee, so it sounds more like dollars per month rather than dollars per day.

    6. Re:Flippin' burgers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actuallly, it goes more like this:

      1. Get your own registrar accreditation (there are now over 500) or partner with an existing one
      2. Register some names
      3. Point them at Google's Adsense for Domains or Overture Parking
      4. Check the stats on day 4
      5. Delete any name making less than 2-3 cents a day
      6. Repeat

      Wanna see a real live example? Name Administration (Grand Cayman) is doing it... www.nameadministration.com/www.domainnamesales.com , look for any domain with linkz.com nameservers; also new.net and onlinenic are big players.

    7. Re:Flippin' burgers by rainmayun · · Score: 1

      You're not thinking like an engineer.

      Sure, if you're only doing a handful of domains, you'd do it this way. But if you're doing dozens, hundreds, thousands (?) of domains, you spend the time and effort it takes to automate the process.

      Then all you have to do is think of keywords to feed in, and the rest is taken care of you. I'd be willing to bet there are unscrupulous registrars willing to "assist" this process, so long as they don't look complicit.

    8. Re:Flippin' burgers by WoTG · · Score: 1

      Except pay per click is NOT pennies, not Google Adsense at least. There are numerous ads that will pay more than a dollar per click to the publisher (i.e. after google takes it's share as the middle man). A few topics that do really well have to do with lawyers building class action lawsuits, good travel terms, and mortgages -- places where a single "sale" could net a few hundred dollars to the advertiser, so a buck or two per click is OK.

  25. Re:Linux users: Why bother? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "but it wouldn't hurt to provide greater automation and an interface that even the layfolk can use easily"

    KDE, anyone? ... or how about Gnome or Fluxbox or fvwm, hell, any of the countless other window managers?

  26. Re:Linux users: Why bother? by mu22le · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Come on, do not be so rude to him (you are proving one of his points, btw)!!!!
    He's a _gamer_, not a linux user, he probably wants to use his pc to _do_ things, nice and smooth. Play Doom 7 or edit a picture or whatever, getting basic things done. And linux is not delivering it.
    I am a (kinda) linux nerd, I am willing to spend time looking for compatible hardware, recompiling the kernel to get things faster... he does not.
    And, belive it or not, most useres are like him.
    And untill the linux comunity does not find a way to give them what they look for they'll be Microsoft most secure market share.

    BTW
    the parent-parent article states a lot of false assertments (read bull$hit): you can have a nice guy to install application on your system (say, synaptic), for example.

  27. Commercial SEO tools by MemeRot · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There are tons of commercial SEO software products. They probably spend a half hour putting in some keyword lists that match their website name and then run a check on how that site would rank on google, yahoo, etc. Figuring a certain (very low) percentage of people will click an ad, and ballparking how many visitors they will get based on search ranking, they can tell how much the site is likely to make.

  28. Evict the Squatters by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

    At least these speculators are recycling the names quickly when they're not using them. I get pissed off when I hit a website, and get one of those fake "search portal" fronts from a squatter. There's got to be a way to make people use the minimum appropriate domain names for their sites, without charging more than necessary for the name. Maybe a $50 deposit, refunded after a month, held in escrow by the registrar? Maybe a traffic requirement for retaining the name, if there are other bids for it? That can survive a cheap "click simulation service" that keeps up fake traffic?

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Evict the Squatters by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      They're only returning them in order to get their fee back; if there was no 'trial' period they'd keep the names and just let them expire in a year or so.

    2. Re:Evict the Squatters by lonesome+phreak · · Score: 1

      Actually, they aren't getting releasaed back to the public. They go into a 45-day "rendition period" where all those domains are unregisterable unless you want to pay to get them "out of rendition", which is usually between $125-$250. That is a total rip-off.

      --
      Maybe we DID take the blue pill. You wouldn't remember anyway.
    3. Re:Evict the Squatters by Optic7 · · Score: 1

      I was thinking about this yesterday. What really should be done is that resale of domain names should not be allowed. That would take the profit incentive away from the squatters.

    4. Re:Evict the Squatters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Maybe a traffic requirement for retaining the name, if there are other bids for it?"

      That would just penalize individual/personal domain owners who fell below the arbitrary traffic limit. It would also penalize new, legitimate sites which were in long-term development before public display.

      The article itself hints at a partial solution: get rid of the 5-day refund grace period.

    5. Re:Evict the Squatters by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Actually, I like the other suggestion in this thread (combined with my own): Double the registration charge, keeping 50% as a refundable deposit (prorated after the first year, across the second year). And prohibit the resale of the domain name - surrender back to the registrar. Of course any trademark is IP of the corporation which registered the name, irrespective of any DNS activity.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    6. Re:Evict the Squatters by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Maybe doubling the fee (to $10-20), to include a prorated (over 5 years) refund might shake loose a lot of domains on ice. And, as another poster suggested, prohibit resale of the domain name. Just surrender back to the registrar upon ceasing the subscription. Retaining any trademark rights, possibly for resale, of course. That PTO system isn't nearly as easily fixed.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    7. Re:Evict the Squatters by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      That's interesting. Seems like a combo of no-resale, and a 50% refundable deposit (prorated across a couple of years) might do the whole trick. Maybe now, with ICANN seemingly on the ropes, is the time to launch this web-populist meme?

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  29. Yahoo Search Marketing for Publishers? by hex1848 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is Yahoo/Overture even supporting an AdSense equivalent at this point? Last time I looked into it, it was still being "developed".

    I have several cigar related sites and Google as pretty much shunned the entire tobacco industry. I would openly welcome a competitor to AdSense by Yahoo/Overture.

    1. Re:Yahoo Search Marketing for Publishers? by Dun+Malg · · Score: 3, Informative
      I have several cigar related sites and Google as pretty much shunned the entire tobacco industry. I would openly welcome a competitor to AdSense by Yahoo/Overture.

      I typed in "cigar' in the google search box, and sure enough, there was not a single ad, just search results. Did they ever exprese any reasoning behind this, or is it just explained away as "policy"? I tried a few other similar searches and found that "guns" is verboten, while "rifle" and "shotgun" are fine. Also "cigarettes" are out, but strangely not "cigarette". "Beer" and "whiskey" are apparently right out, but not "wine"-- because we all know wine drinkers are sophisticated bluebloods and whiskey and beer drinkers like in a trailer park and shoot each other with "guns" while smoking a "cigar", right? "Murder", "pedophelia", and "strangler" are apparently okey dokey as ad words though, with "strangler" even encouraging us to look for one on eBay.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    2. Re:Yahoo Search Marketing for Publishers? by millennial · · Score: 1

      Oddly enough, "cigars" works just fine.

      --
      I am scientifically inaccurate.
  30. They'll never get paid by jpbutler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Google only pays out once you've passed $100 in income. If these guys are only making $10/year, they won't be seeing anything anytime soon.

    1. Re:They'll never get paid by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      I think you can group together the income from all your sites.

    2. Re:They'll never get paid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is that per-site or per-person? If you've got 100 sites each making $10 a year, you'll be getting a regular check

    3. Re:They'll never get paid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Errmm.. That's $10 per year PER DOMAIN. They don't own just one :)

  31. so what is the problem then? by wkonkel · · Score: 1

    After reading all of the comments, I have yet to see a single reason why it's either google's or godaddy's responsibility to regulate what sites can be on the internet. The only quazi-reasons I have been able to deduce are "I don't like seeing advertisements". Regardless, hearing people say "godaddy should raise their price or not allow domains to be refunded" is quite possibly the worst solution I've heard... "let's screw over all consumers because I don't like ads!"

  32. Experience in teh trade show business by 3seas · · Score: 1

    the main purpose of a trade show is to collect name, to make a contact list.

    Nike spent million if not more doing this in the trade show business, then they stopped. Why?

    Cause they had everyones name.

    At what point does pay per click become pointless?

    For google, don't most of us already know about www.google.com? not to mention how its becomming rather integrated with the internet in many ways.

    1. Re:Experience in teh trade show business by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      Not because they had everyones name, but because getting new names would cost than they could expect to make back.

  33. Crap sites yeild crap traffic by salesgeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Crappy websites yeild horrible traffic. I will pay $8 per click for good traffic. I won't pay at all for bad traffic. Google has steadily declined in the quality of traffic they provide over the past couple of years. Overture, too has slid.

    Eventually, Google and Yahoo will have to cull the herd (actually they do right now). They must deliver a good value compared to other kinds of advertisements. Advertisers have pulled the rug out from under the online ad market before, and they will again if they see costs for conversions going sky-high. Right now that is the trend.

    Another problem is that crap websites create noise in search engine results diluting Google's core product and Yahoo's second product (their first is the myYahoo! portal).

    --
    -- $G
  34. Re:Linux users: Why bother? by wkonkel · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I'm not sure why this post is here... but I'm glad to hear that compiling code yourself is more secure because you don't know what nasties are in the binaries... because I for one look over every single line of code that I compile... all 50 kazillion lines of code for kernel, system tools, x windows, gimp, gnome, and every other piece of software I use! No sir-ry bob! I don't let a single line of code get compiled before I look over it!

  35. Re:complex? by symbolic · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    without sacrificing any of the more complex (and powerful) capabilities that Linux posesses

    This is what I find rather ironic. The very nature of complexity implies that we should know a little bit about what we're doing before we actually do it. I don't believe there is anything that will step in and understand this stuff for you, on Windows, Linux, or any other operating system. You can make the process less cumbersome, but if you don't understand the consequences, you're still in the same boat.

  36. So These Are "Billboard Sites"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    They have only ads and links?

    Welcome to the information highway, complete with billboards!

  37. Does Google, Yahoo, and Their Advertisers Care? by mikes.song · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Really, do they care? Google and Yahoo both work to *not* list SPAM sites... But, say a site has zero content on it, and the site is only ads, and the site is not listed in the search engines, but people still visit, click, and buy. Who cares?

  38. click fraud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally I think these site are just promting click fraud in a fancy way.

    If I was an advertising and paying $50.00 a click, like some poor shemps do when the advertise for the keyword monothalama, I would be pissed at receiving clicks from such sites.

    The only way any of this will stop is when the advertisers start to refuse to pay for such clicks.
    Click Authority is a great way for advertisers to see in real time the quality of the clicks coming from these site.

  39. Re:Linux users: Why bother? by Gondola · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I've tried a lot of different Linux distros, and I can say honestly that they are getting slowly better.

    I can install a Linux distro after burning the ISO's to CD, run the install process, and boot to a GUI. A simple GUI network setup utility is all that is needed to get people online and productive, if a browser and office-type software are included.

    4 requirements for making Linux mainstream

    - Easy install (create a Windows-based installer that will download and burn your CDs/DVD for you, perhaps using BitTorrent, or perhaps FTP with automatic md5 checking). No complicated questions during Install process unless user chooses Advanced setup.

    - Easy network setup. Automatically check for a DHCP server, and put up a big "Do you want me to use this automatically obtained IP address? (Default, YES). Otherwise, Skip Network Setup, or Advanced network setup.

    - Default to a GUI login with a simple username creation process, or default to a no-password GUI console only login. Do not enable any externally reachable services by default, such as SSH, FTP, Apache, etc. Anyone who knows how to use SSH would choose Advanced setup anyway.

    - Basic word processing and other office-type software, GIMP, etc., a couple games, all clearly labeled and available from a simple menu, with all system setup/advanced options available from an Advanced menu.

    World-dominating option...

    - AOL client. Is there an AOL client for Linux? That'd be a killer app. Imagine an AOL subsidized Linux machine that's free with your subscription to AOL. If you sub for a year, you get to keep the machine.

  40. Why? by xant · · Score: 1

    Why would a registrar ever do that? They make money on registrations. Someone is kindly doing them the favor of searching the domain-space for registrations that are worth some money, and then giving the registrar the money. That they return a few is just an operating cost, it's still mostly profit for the provider of the grace period.

    --
    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
  41. Pay per click is the culprit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pay per click advertising needs to distract you from what you are doing enough for you to follow a link into the unknown and buy something. A pay per click advert has to promise a lot to work and it will work best on a crappy website where the only exit is a pay per click ad. Pay per click ads just have to be bad and Google is to blame for the web pollution that the popular adsense program causes.

    Pay per view advertising does not require instant action from the user - it does not have to try to stop you doing what you are doing and make you do something else and works best on sites with decent content.

  42. don't feed the -- TROLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let the mods do their job.

    The trolls want attention, by replying to them, and repeating their trolling content, you give them what they want, and they'll keep on coming.

  43. This way of making money is old by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    The new way is now to sell this idea in TV commercials to suckers who think the idea is brilliant, and expect to rake in the thousands of dollars a week that the "pioneers" did. The registrations are probably from all the $79.95 instruction booklet, get rich quick wannabes.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  44. The advertisers are the real loosers by neves · · Score: 1

    The fraud is against the advertisers who pay Google to put their publicity in sites with good content. If the sites go to empty sites, they are still paying Google for nothing and loosing money. I know people who stopped to put ads in content sites due to lower return by investiment.

  45. not really, by Khashishi · · Score: 1

    The advertisers are still getting clicks. What do they care if the referring sites have no content?

    1. Re:not really, by neves · · Score: 1

      because they pay per target click. If I'm paying, I don't want clicks from people that's not interested in my product.

  46. Yes, it is news by xeno-cat · · Score: 1

    "But there's nothing illegal about what this particular type of business is doing."

    Which is exactly why it is news. Slashdot is saying, "hey, look what this ass hats are doing". I haven't seen anyone argue in favor of the "service" they are offering in exchange for the money they are leaching. Therefore, it looks like a great scam to ban by technical means. But first someone has to bring up the issue so it can be discused, and a solution devised.

    They are worse than useless, they are getting paid to be harmful. Thankfuly there is no law against making this kind of business technicaly impossible.

    Kind Regards

    --
    "A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us w
  47. The scammers use HTTP proxies. I know this because by blcss · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've seen it on my honeypot. They look for proxies that don't reveal themselves as such in the headers. They use lots of proxy judge sites such as http://www.softvb.com/cgi-bin/judge2-35.cgi, http://207.234.198.165/cgi-bin/prxjdg.cgi?en, http://motorscreensavers.com/cgi-bin/pxjdg12.cgi?e n,
    http://wilsonjack.ejunx.org/prxjdg.cgi

    They fake the User-Agent and Referers fields in the headers to look like real traffic. I've seen the User-agent field change half a dozen times in a day from one host. That might be chained proxies, but here's something that isn't. One guy tried to fake a Referer as netbroadcaster.com but he did a typo the first time and it was netboradcaster.com, which doesn't exist.

    Here are some sites they hit:

    | 1 | http://www.findbestsite.com/
    | 2 | http://www.mpww.net/white_yellow_page1.htm
    | 3 | http://www.mpww.net/white_yellow_page.htm
    | 4 | http://www.bigbusinessonline.com/chevrolet/chevrol etlumina2.html
    | 5 | http://www.mpww.net/web_hosting1.htm
    | 6 | http://www.ffgame.net/candy/scr2.htm
    | 7 | http://www.mpww.net/travel.htm
    | 8 | http://www.xwss.com/breakdown-insurance/breakdown- insurance-termsandcons.html
    | 9 | http://www.mpww.net/womens_health.htm
    | 10 | http://www.gamesir.us/games/boom_boom.html
    | 11 | http://www.aoshao.com/watchout.shtml
    | 12 | http://www.art-ton.us/fat/3d-ganes.php
    | 13 | http://www.linksfortraveller.com/cruises.html

    --
    We don't need yet another new programming language. Let's just pick an existing language and fix its flaws.
  48. Filtering by UnapprovedThought · · Score: 1
    A new breed of search will need to be able to cut through the crap better.

    Actually, I think it would be great if google would just allow more search terms to be supplied. I usually use a lot of minus terms to try and filter out the junk, and run into the maximum pretty quickly.

    For instance, if all of the undesired sites shared one phrase, say, "search categories" then it would be easy enough to blow them away by putting a -"search categories" on the search line. Not much chance that the uninteresting sites will want to include an obvious "this site sucks" keyword target though, once they learn that people are avoiding it.

    I guess another way to solve this is that all decent sites could get together and decide to use a positive keyword, like say:

    • "unfescennine" or
    • "creative commons license" or
    • "non-profit site" or
    • "all code is licensed under the GPL"
    ...and include that on their pages. If enough sites were clued in to this idea, you could get search results that would then only include the "decent" sites.

    That would work for a little while until the ad sites get wise to the trick and begin to use that keyword themselves (won't their lawyers be surprised someday if they mindlessly use the last one...)

    Should a keyword change be necessary, coordinating it amongst the "good" sites would be a nightmare, though.

    Hmm, maybe a better solution is just to participate in GPU, a distributed community-run GPL search engine. I've never used it, so I can't vouch for the performance, but at least you have a chance to modify the search algorithm itself.

    1. Re:Filtering by vinohradska · · Score: 1

      Yes, negative search terms help, but this is usually a response to getting crap back on the first search. Which implies two things. 1) I am spending more time searching than I'd like, and 2) I need to figure out the pattern to the crap myself to try to filter it out. If I can notice a pattern, then google could figure it out too.

      And I'm talking here about crap pages that are pretending to be useful, not pages that are useful about something else. For that 2nd case, I can use a quick negative filter or another positive one.

      Your idea about sites using hidden keywords would never fly, but some kind of client side white list & black list could be useful.