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Much has been said lately about Google's recent initiative to support the
'no-follow' tag
in an attempt to combat blog comment spam. Here's our take:
What is blog comment spam and how does it look like?
Leaving comments in
blogs usually means filling up a form with four fields: one for your
name, one for your email address, one for your URL, and one for your
comments.
Let's look at some of examples of spammy comments:
http://blam.sourceforge.net/images/decent_spam_example.gif.
What you see is irrelevant copy (nice site!, etc.) and a keyword-stuffed
link anchor text, usually pointing to off-topic, high margin sites.
What Does the no-follow tag look like and what does it do?
Instead of linking to another site like this:
<a href="http://www.anothersite.com">Another
Site</a>,
a link using the 'no-follow' tag will look like this:
<a href="http://www.anothersite.com"
rel="nofollow">Another Site</a>.
When a search engine sees a 'no-follow' tag in an HTML link, it will not
follow it, nor assign link popularity to the destination page. Search
engines are encouraging blog software vendors and blog owners to use the
'no-follow' tag in blog comments and signature links. The theory is that if
search engines stop following those links, spammers will stop posting.
Are spammers the only problem?
Unfortunately, no. Many websites have achieved high
Pagerank and search engine rankings due mostly to links left by their
webmasters in blog comments and signature link sections. While those
comments and signature links may very well be relevant to the topic being
discussed, their purpose, most of the time, is just to inflate the link
popularity of the website belonging to the person leaving the comments.
Being link popularity such an important component of good search engine
rankings, this is clearly a loophole that needed to be closed.
While some webloggers are complaining that Google is throwing away the baby
with the bathwater (punishing spammers and legitimate contributors alike),
the truth is that comments and signature links in blogs are intended to
point readers to other websites, resources or blog posts that may be of
interest to them, and to foster a sense of community. Their objective is not
(and never was) to increase the link popularity of weblog visitors'
websites.
Will the nofollow tag be effective?
This measure may or may not stop comment spam. After all, humans can
still see and follow spammy links, so spammers may still see some value
(albeit significantly reduced) in continuing to post comments. What this
measure will certainly do is to make link popularity more difficult to
achieve. It will force webmasters to work harder and try other avenues to
get links, for example, through
directory listings, through
syndication of useful articles with a link to their sites in the
resource box, or simply the old fashioned way: by offering content so
remarkable that other webmasters will feel spontaneously compelled to link
to: just what the search engines intended when they made inbound links an
important ingredient in their ranking calculations.
It is important to note that Google's 'no-follow' tag recommendation applies
only to comments and signature links, not to the original posts. Links made
from original blog posts will still be followed, indexed and weighted by the
search engines.
This article was reprinted with the pre-approval from the writer whose
name is listed below:
Mario Sanchez publishes The Internet Digest (
http://www.theinternetdigest.net ), a growing collection of Internet
marketing articles, tips and resources, and SEO Tutorial (
http://www.seotutorial.info ) , where you can learn the basics of search
engine optimization in four easy steps. |