By Susan B. Shor TechNewsWorld
01/19/05 9:43 AM PT
"It may help," said Danny Sullivan, editor of SearchEngineWatch.com. "It isn't going to stop comment spam. What it may do is make it a little less attractive. It's not a magic bullet."
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Key search engine companies Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), MSN and Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) as well as Weblog tool
provider Six Apart have united to stop "comment spam," but one
search engine expert does not think the effort will slow the
practice.
Most bloggers allow reader responses to entries. This also opens the door to
spammers, who use automated programs to post links to their own Web sites in
the comments sections of blogs. The links, and the words within them, have
some effect on the spammers' site ranking within search engines.
Adding a Tag
The measure announced late yesterday supports an HTML tag called "nofollow." When attached to the end of the spammed hyperlink, it signals search engine crawlers to ignore that link. The goal is to take away the incentive for posting such links.
The tags would be added automatically to posts through updated blogging
software. If you don't want the tag there, you would have to remove it manually.
"It may help," Danny Sullivan, editor of SearchEngineWatch.com, told
TechNewsWorld. "It isn't going to stop comment spam. What it may do is make
it a little less attractive. It's not a magic bullet."
There are many holes in the solution, he said.
Bloggers must each set up their sites to accommodate the nofollow tags, for
one, he said. Sullivan has written an article describing how to do
that.
"People want the links even if they don't affect their Web rankings," he
said. "And they may think, 'I'm running automatic tools, so why not keep
placing the links?'"
In other words, generators of comment spam are unlikely to change their
habits because automatic tools make mass postings effortless. Even if
the percentage of untagged links is low, the spammers would still get
benefit from them. And even the tagged links still work, so they could still get
click-throughs from their placement.
Implementation Coming
The rel="nofollow" tag is already a part of HTML, and Google's crawlers already
recognize the code. Yahoo said it will begin support within a few weeks, and
MSN will follow later this year with the switch to its own search engine.
Six Apart will release a plug-in for its software, Movable Type.
Many factors play into search engine rankings, so while one extra link won't
change a ranking, a 1,000 is likely to, Sullivan said.
Individual bloggers can do a lot to limit the amount of comment spam, he
said, first by adding the nofollow tag, but also by taking such steps as
requiring registration in order to post, creating a black list of those
banned from posting and adding a graphical code that must be viewed and
retyped as confirmation that a real person is attempting to contribute.
Yahoo, Verizon Join To Offer Broadband Service January 18, 2005
The arrangement might reflect the desire by telecoms like Verizon to do whatever they can to protect their Internet access turf against intrusions from cable television providers. The battleground is not only over users today, analysts say, but also over who controls the pipeline to a more robust Web experience in the future.
Yahoo, MSN Gaining Ground on Google, Study Shows January 14, 2005
"Google is the king of customer experience in the search engine industry, but Yahoo, MSN and Ask Jeeves are improving," Dr. Bonny Brown, director of research and public services for Keynote, said. "Given the open nature of the Web, as these sites continue to improve the user experience, they will undoubtedly begin to attract more users and improve user loyalty," Brown said.
Google Responds to Gmail Bug Exposure January 13, 2005
Ryan Russell, an independent security expert, told TechNewsWorld that he was pleased by Google's fast response to the Gmail security issue. However, Russell also agreed with the HBX proposition that the issue indicated a failure to some degree of Google's software development process.
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