Google Tweaks Algorithm; EHow Traffic Plummets
jfruhlinger writes "For some time there's been rumbling that Google's search results have been gummed up by low-quality pages from 'content farms,' written at low or no cost specifically to score high on common Google queries. Now it looks like the latest update to Google's search algorithm is having an effect, cutting into traffic to eHow (and cutting down the stock price of eHow's owner, Demand Media, in the process)."
of value was lost!
Wouldn't it be a lot simpler to just block all robot traffic to expertsexchange, ehow, and the like? Or even more trivial, allow users individual profiles to block specific user selectable domains?
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
If your company's business plan focuses exclusively (or even primarily) on gaming Google search results, then anyone dumb enough to invest in you *deserves* to be screwed.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
...to bad rubbish!
I wonder how many lawsuits we'll now get by companies like eHow/Demand Media for Google ruining their income. Personally I'm pretty tired of all these crappy and ad-laden content farm sites I end up on whenever I google for technical stuff, and I think Google should have the freedom to tune their search algorithms to give a higher quality service for its users. If a company makes themselfes dependant on another company's search algorithms and then get screwed over by it, then that's their own damn fault.
Previous Slashdot discussion:
http://tech.slashdot.org/story/11/03/11/1711252/Google-Introduces-Domain-Blocking-To-Search
Article discussing how:
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/03/hide-sites-to-find-more-of-what-you.html
I don't know about anyone else, but I was beginning to get very pissed off with looking up things on Google and constantly being linked to Big Resource, which was just a huge page of nothing.
Gettin' even bigger? Get as big as you like, you'll soon not see any visits from me...
THE HONOUR OF THE KNIGHTS - CC Licensed Sci-Fi Novel
I'm quite sick of eHow showing up in search results, giving me useless information for anything. ExpertExchange I get value from as a techie, but eHow is useless. Now, if they can only make it so my competitors don't show up I'd be even happier.
Google has been turning into a cesspool lately.
I run a website that is entirely my own work, is the result of years of research and involves many hours a day of new research. I am able to provide the data I collate for free to everyone because AdSense income covered hosting costs and allowed me to pay rent and buy food. I was not making vast sums of money, but I could do what I love and provide a useful resource to thousands of others. Now, scraper sites get ranked above me and even sites that cite me as the source rank higher than I do for many keywords. It's unfortunate, but for me this means less time doing actual original research and more time having to go out and market myself.
As a one man organisation, it's going to be really tough to keep going. I think Google have made a massive error here - by saying they can gauge the quality of a website (and its usefulness) algorithmically is arrogant and short-sighted. I hope they figure this out quickly. I really do hate having to sell stuff, even my own work!
They definitely need to tweak it further to get rid of or decrease the number of results from expert sex change.
2. Click on an article that you think is interesting.
3. Click on the "Post a Comment" button.
4. Type your comment subject in the subject field. Recommended subjects are outdated 1990's Internet memes.
5. Type your comment in the comment field. Recommended comments are outdated 1990's Internet memes with a sprinkling of [your favorite operating system] is better than [the operating system you hate most].
6. Profit!
And yet I still get LOTS of content farm results... fuck them, they are so goddamed annoying [NOT Google, the content farm sites that pass themselves off as relevant in the search results, but when you reach them have absolutely NOTHING relevant to your search]
"Dark spots in giant's search results mark the beginning of the new iteration its search algorithm for the fourth (or fifth?) time since Google's inception - an activity many scientists and internauts feared was dangerously delayed. Owners of previously unknown internet real-estates can expect higher yields of their greens, but protection and limiting exposure to the screen are still advised".
they will adapt their pages and quickly smother google searches. I know the news pages are like this, the day after the first change many sites dropped off of the right side bar only to return within weeks. A great example on the unfiltered news site is Huffington Post, NY Times, and LA Times. All three fell off, the first more than the other two, but now fill the sides up again.
Google can keep tweaking all they want but more people are paid to ensure rankings and page hits than Google has to ensure fairness and correctness of results
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
If that site had any pages, other than the fake ones with no content, that is.
How to decrease traffic to your website after using all the SEOs at your diposal:
1. First get a Search Engine Optimizer (SEO) to have your website come up all the time.
2. Abuse the fucking hell out of it. Have free lance writers write lamo "how to" articles and pay them shit. Get "articles" on every goddamn topic - accuracy is irrelevant. Getting people to your website is the point.
3. Keep the SEO people cracking and eventually your site will come up as the first choice no matter what people are goolging for.4. Eventually, people get sick and tired of your lamo articles cluttering up their searches and many times confusing them as to what to do, the power that be at Google will curtail your SEO efforts. In the meantime, your stock will take a hit.
i've gotten experts exchange results in google searches forever, and i loathe them
however, not once, in years, have i seen "experts exchange" written in such a way in your post that it makes me think "expert sex change"
so thanks. thanks a lot. for making a bane of my existence somehow even worse. because now i will never look at "experts exchange" in google results again without seeing "expert sex change"
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
Maybe I'm the only one, but I actually really enjoy those eHow pages.
They come up almost any time I do a search on some random task. When it's something that I don't know much about, and don't really care about that deeply, their articles are almost always just what I need. If I keep searching through mounds of support sites and forum posts, I might get an extra tiny tip or two, but for just the basics in under 3 minutes they actually did a pretty good job.
What about Expert Village and Yahoo! Answers?
Burn eHow
You can get better advise from the crazy drunk down at the park.
This guy has a legit complaint. I'm not a car guy, but I do have several non-tech related interests and it is damned hard to find comprehensive specs, even on manufacturers sites. As for selling ads vs. selling the content directly, get off your high horse.
You have it entirely backwards. Google has made the only intelligent decision here, by saying that they cannot possibly gauge the quality of all websites manually, and sticking to their guns about doing it programatically. That way, suing them over your position in the rankings is much more difficult because they can prove a lack of favoritism.
Google is making a smart move from a legal CYA perspective. But their bread and butter is ultimately the usefulness of their results, not the objectivity of their algorithm.
Awesome. Now knock down about.com and I'll be happy.
I do some fairly technically oriented searches at work, and sometimes the first three pages of hits would be [1] sites that sell (or make you register for) copies of otherwise freely available documentation and [2] pages that are just random titles and snippets of other works without links.
Or there's some paragraph on a message board or in an article that has all the key words, but is useless, and all I get is 50 copies of the same article or posting. Some message board sites seem to be just copies of other sites with different CSS skins.
"Kids Exchange".
http://www.bannedinhollywood.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/kidsexchange.jpg
Why should i have to go to a site I know I hate in order to get it blocked?
You might not know every site you wanted blocked off the top of your head
Unless you've gone to the web site before while not logged into Google. Or you've gone to the web site through a link from a forum post, which Google might not have tracked because it wasn't from a Google search result. Or you can tell just from the excerpt on the Google search result page that the site is a scrape of some other site.
This actually surprises me. I have a few articles I wrote for ehow last year before they stopped their Writer's Compensation Program, and the earnings I'm getting on those articles have at least *doubled* since google made those changes.
My site is older (they can verify that easily enough) than the scraper sites, has more links to it (the basis of the original page ranking system) and is also quite clearly being duplicated by these sites.
If you own the copyright in non-free works that they are reproducing without permission, send one copy of a signed takedown request to Google and one to the IP address block owner.
Demand Studios pays halfway decent money for writing articles. The work is difficult but the money's helped me keep a roof over my family's head during the atrocious economy. In the past few years they've tightened their standards tremendously... it is not easy to write for them.
If they go under, I'm screwed.
A web site has no "right" to a ranking. A previous ranking confers no "right" to a future ranking. Using the "free advertising" that comes with search engine rankings carries a risk that is different from paid advertising. I hope the effected commercial site's prospectus notifies investors that they are at the mercy of web site rankings.
Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of SEO cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced. I fear something awesome has happened
But can Ehow tell you how babby is formed?
Soytainly.
I'm not sure what you other geeks are searching for, but as someone who has learned and used Google's advanced search features from the beginning, I have to say that I barely ever come across all this extra crap that you guys are bitching about incessantly. I almost always get what I want in the first few hits because I tend to search for things like "esx director filetype:pdf site:redbooks.ibm.com". Just yesterday I searched for "joe's crab shack steam pots nutritional information" and saw dozens of PAGES of the same garbage just being -- well, sorry -- regurgitated over and over. If I hadn't done that search just yesterday, I wouldn't know what you guys are whining about.
Maybe you should take some time to learn the advanced search techniques. After getting them off the ground with the basics, I regularly kill two birds with one stone by teaching people advanced Linux concepts by also teaching them how to carefully construct their search terms and get the answers they need right away. When they come to me with questions, my first response was always "what did Google say?" They are now experts in Linux AND "Googling".
I don't have to block anything. I know how to use Google.
"How can I improve my web page Google rank?"
Have gnu, will travel.
The reason that Google is important is that they have good algorithms for judging site quality and showing the interesting relevant sites first. They became the dominant search player because PageRank produced better results than many other search engines when they started, as well as being fast and uncluttered. (DEC's Altavista, the original dominant player, was also fast and uncluttered, but Google's result quality was a lot better.)
If they weren't judging site quality, AdSense wouldn't be producing enough revenue for you to live on either.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
I wonder if sites will EHow will see their ranks increase again as they are getting so much attention directed towards them in the news ...
Seriously - I have found usable answers to problems on EE before. The site is annoying, but why does /. think the site is a problem?
"the natural order of things"
Who wants to be the first to tell Zakkie that in "the natural order of things" there would be no intartubez? The internet itself is an artifact, and everything about it is artificial. There IS no "natural order".
So, what you are saying is, using some of Google's older models, you were treated well, and you were happy. With the updated algorithms, you are not being treated as well, and you resent it. This has nothing to do with any "natural order" at all. You simply prefer one algorithm over another.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
After being forced to think unflattering things about google in recent months search changes and the ever useful "block all results from this annoying site" is starting to make me like google again.
For the love of god they still need to get rid of live preview or just make it such that accidential sneezes don't always trigger it.
Now that Google, following Blekko's lead, is hammering the well-known "content farm" sites, expect Demand Media to respond by spreading their content across large numbers of junk domains. Demand Media owns eNom, the spammer's registrar.
I've been writing for eHow since last July. It was a good way to make some money while traveling. Almost since I started I've been writing with the assumption that Demand Media will close down at some point. The entire business model is based on Google's search results which assumes too much for a stable business. I'm happy to produce the best quality content I can while I can.
If Demand Media is a content farm, they are the best of the content farms. I have to write articles with several references to authoritative sites (i.e. not wikis or blogs) that are then fact-checked and edited by a copy editor before being posted to eHow or one of the other DM properties. I can't just make stuff up or throw out inferior quality writing. A copy editor will (and has) reject poor work. As a provider of good articles on a wide range of topics, Demand Media is poor to fair. Higher paid, more experience writers with more time and resources are producing better content.
Demand is head and shoulders above some of the sites like Big Resource that offer nothing original or useful. But compared to journalists employing their craft, eHow writers are neophytes. That's why most people I know who write for eHow are looking for a better gig in the future, but for now it pays the bills.
I hope that Answers.com suffers. They are full of junk. I have tried correcting stuff but gotten blasted for it by them. I gave up. I would love to see them go down in the rankings. That would help put more correct answers higher.
Hi there!
Depending on what I may be missing with "free to everyone", care to say what you are researching? I am peeking at all kinds of new topics just to see what is out there, so if Google eats Links, I'll add one for you!
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
How about they tweak it so that I don't see results from expertsexchange or yahoo answers? Both sites are pretty worthless and often are at the top of my search.
unemployed liberal arts majors and other independent workers that are educated but unable to find jobs. The content is generated through sites like Textbroker.com. They pay $1-$5 or something like that per article for "freelance authors" willing to chuck out dozens of 300-500 articles to spec in a day.
Ironically, the list of articles that they are willing to pay for at any moment is automatically generated, and looks something like:
How to pharmaceutically bend gravity ...
How to ride a celery to the fishpond
How to rocket bravely to the moon
How to blend avocado into guacamole
How to remachine a flange for an ESM-1501X
The list runs into the hundreds of thousands of "needed" articles. The hapless contract crowdsource workers then keyword search or browse through them endlessly looking for anything they can chuck out a 300-500 word article for, in order to earn their dollar or two. By writing several thousand words in a day whilst endlessly consulting Wikipedia, one can make something approximating a minimum-wage income.
I know this because as a former managing editor we had several interns in our department that had used this or similar sites (there are several, I don't know if they're all owned by Demand Media) to make extra dollars in college.
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
Am I the only person who actually _likes_ ehow? For certain searches, I will skip the first 5 results if I see an ehow link below them. Sometimes they're exactly what you want.
Thank you
next
alibaba.
Don't be so judgemental of their workers, either.
A lot of them lost their real jobs and those jobs will never come back. In fact jobs in general won't be coming back, ever. Unemployment is looking to stay above 8% permanently (like in Europe).
Content mills are paying a lot of people's rents and food.
This war on content mills will put a lot more out of work and you'll have to pay for that in higher taxes, crime or... well, this is slashdot, I imagine people here would say "Oh well, can't find a real job? STARVE!!!" Well, I hope you're saying that when the shoe is on your foot.
Disclaimer: I'm not a content mill guy. I own a brick and mortar business. People who have jobs at content mills buy my services, just like those who work in IT buy my services. So that is my dog in this fight.
Demand Media is a content farm; they pay people to write articles based on their interpretations of the Google algorithm. 95% "White-hat SEO", and no different from what places like HuffPost does. If the algorithm changes, they can make adjustments, do better keywords and content policing, and still make a buck.
Link farms, on the other hand, camp domain names and make a website entirely of Google ads, keywords and algorithms, usually by exploiting flaws in the rankings system that would normally discriminate against this kind of thing, aka "Black-hat CEO". They don't tend to have IPOs though, because anyone with half a brain knows they won't last once the loophole is fixed.
There are content providers who produce for private clients. These include QualityGal, ContentDiva, etc.
These companies are not like AssociatedContent or DemandMedia, they produce for actual clients. Things like articles, press releases, a variety of work, and it's all original content.
Content mills will overpopulate and die. Their business model is limited to how many how-to's people want to look up. The market will get saturated. But press releases, technical articles, website design, client articles and white papers will never go away.
--- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
To places like Demand Media, buying new domain names is cheap. And Demand is only one of many content farms out there; if you just block domains you'll be playing Whack-a-Mole forever. Only making it so that these places can't turn a profit will have any long-term effect at all.
This isn't going to be a popular opinion, but here goes: just because you work for a company that (ab)uses SEO, doesn't mean you have no work ethic and copy-paste everything. Content that is copied word for word does worse on rankings than content that isn't, so eHow actually does try to screen it out via an automatic plagiarism checker. They also have quality standards, haphazardly enforced as they can be.
That doesn't mean that everyone knows what they're talking about, and that bad content doesn't get through. But assuming that if you're a member of a company that employs thousands of people, you must be making a living off copy-pasting is quite ignorant.
See also: this article; it's admittedly a bit out of date.
>Maybe Google should have a "page changed" API that publishing systems could call with a URL, so that after new content goes up, Google gets the first look, before the scrapers find and copy it.
I assume you don't know about Google Sitemaps. It's a file (sitemap.xml) that lists your old (and new) URLs. There's a mechanism for informing Google of a new sitemap, too. Many sites send a new sitemap notification every time they post a new article.
http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?answer=40318
Not to toot my own horn, but I cover this kind of stuff on my blog--stuff which some/many people know as common knowledge but which others haven't encountered just because there's so much to absorb, anymore.
I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
So instead of coming up with a better algorithm that filters out crap they should force users to do their work for them? I can see the headline now "Microsoft's Bing forces users to help improve their own crappy product". Ooops .. :-)
all I can say is, it's about freaken time!