December 30th, 2006
I’m gonna guess you have to do something pretty damned naughty to get one of those from Google. I’ve never seen one before today, but there it was when I ran the this query, just a few minutes ago. Check out the Google “malware logo“.
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December 14th, 2006
Christmas is a good time to think about online consumer trust. Comscore predicts online retail will top $100 billion in 2006. That’s good news, to be sure. But while the horses are at full gallop, it makes sense to look out ahead for obstacles or other things that might trip us up.
A few months back I speculated about the enlarging role of trust in electronic commerce. As an SEO dabbler, I had taken note of Google Trustrank, which accords trust using the deceptively simple formula: “Whomever is trusted by the trusted shall be trusted.” This fundamentally democratic approach to deciding which web pages to display in search results inspired me to think about other applications of trust-based schemes that might help stem online consumer fraud and other persistent consumer detractors. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in predictions, business ethics, google, hypothetical business models, trustrank | No Comments »
September 30th, 2006
Images have been a big part of my SEO research. I have even made several blogs for the purpose of experimentation in image SEO. Voodoo Blog was the first such blog. The Definarium came later. I used these blogs (and others) to test the effects of anchor text, ALT tags and other contextual variables on the treatment of images by the Search Engine.
I recently received a comment on the Definarium from a person who wanted to help me understand why hotlinking is bad, because it steals bandwidth. I am aware of this problem and did not wish to advocate bandwidth theft. Here is the email I sent the person who left a comment:
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