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The Dirty Little Secrets of Search

Hugh Pickens writes writes "The NY Times has an interesting story (reg. may be required) about how JCPenney used link farms to become the number one google search result for such terms as 'dresses,' 'bedding,' and 'samsonite carry on luggage' and what Google did to them when they found out. 'Actually, it's the most ambitious attempt I've ever heard of,' says Doug Pierce, an expert in online search. 'This whole thing just blew me away. Especially for such a major brand. You'd think they would have people around them that would know better.'"

5 of 154 comments (clear)

  1. What do you mean by "know better?" by Gopal.V · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The whole idea of an SEO budget is to push your name out to the top line of google, bing or anything else people use to search.

    The intent was to game the system. And by doing so, make a ton of money. There are no laws for internet search ... unless you can use trademark laws to push a competitor who's doing that to your brand name.

    Unscrupulous yes, ruthless yes, but that is the true face of capitalism anyway. Google can try regulating, but only enough to make the same people put in pennies into their sidebar offering of less-worth, but clearly marked advertising.

  2. Company cheats Google, gets punished by geschild · · Score: 4, Insightful

    News at 11.

    Reasonably written article.

    If you already know the ins and outs of search or have no interest in it's specifics you can spare yourself the read, though. Ymmv.

    --
    Karma? What's that again?
  3. Let's help them by RockMFR · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is totally unfair of Google to punish JC Penney like this. We need to help them restore their page rank. I'll start.

    Nazi memorabilia
    abortion factory
    murder weapons
    penny stock
    worst place to work
    token black guy

    1. Re:Let's help them by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I was going to tell you that's a waste of time, because Slashdot adds rel="nofollow" to all links, but I thought I'd better check that it still did before making an assertion. It turns out that the source code for this page only contains one link with the nofollow flag set - the one to timothy's homepage.

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      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  4. Shame on you, thespec.com! by goodmanj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "The NY Times has an interesting story (reg. may be required) ... what google did to them when they found out.

    Copying a New York Times article wholesale, and then using a Slashdot post to bait-and-switch readers into visiting your website rather than the Times?
    Ballsy.

    Doing so when the article's content is about using malicious links to artificially inflate your site's visibility?
    Just. Not. Cool.

    The original NY TImes article is here. Whether you approve of the Times' registration policy or not, you shouldn't support people who steal their content and use it to make money.