Revenue Source

Welcome to the Revenue Source affiliate marketing forums.

You are viewing our internet marketing and SEO forums as a guest which gives you limited access to most of our discussions.  By joining our free community, you will have access to post affiliate marketing topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), exchange SEO strategies, and access many other special features.  Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems, please don't hesitate to contact us.

Go Back   Revenue Source > Affiliate Marketing Hangout > Internet Marketing Articles
Reload this Page Digg Has A Problem With SEO
Tags: , ,

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old
  (#1 (permalink))
Revenue Source Veteran
Affiliate Marketing News has a brilliant future here!
 
Affiliate Marketing News's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 19,644
Affiliate News Bot
Revenue Source
Ft Lauderdale, FL United States
   
Digg Has A Problem With SEO - 12-28-2006

Some sort of battle between Digg's behind-the-scenes moderators and the SEO community came to a boiling point just before Christmas as Lee Odden's domain became part of Digg's banned list.

"Well, Mr. Dallas, we've heard your smut masquerading as songs, and we've heard how teen prostitution, pregnancy, drug use, cults, runaways, suicide and poor hygiene are sweeping this nation. We thought you might like to share with the committee any particular causes you might see for those latter problems."



"I dunno. Maybe the proliferation of narrow-minded, suffocating zealotry masquerading as parenting in this country."




-- Steve Dallas considers the problems of a young generation and tells Congress how those are being mishandled by people in control, from a long-ago Bloom County comic.


The social media site Digg enables the contribution of links to pages online containing items that may be of interest to Digg's visitors. Digg's users can vote up or down on those submissions, with the ones receiving the most votes making it to Digg's front page.



That can generate a big spike in short term traffic for a website. Naturally, sites that benefit from such traffic due to ad placements also benefit from the "Digg effect." This has led to some webmasters trying to find ways to get that traffic through any means possible.



It isn't known how long Digg has had moderators in place behind the scenes, and for some time they did not even admit to having them. But the potential for abuse probably made them necessary. Their actions have not always led to universal approval.



The SEO community seems to have earned blanket enmity from Digg's moderators. When news of Lee Odden's domain being banned became public, a long-seething problem between the two began to garner more notice.



A request for comment from Digg executives about Lee's situation has remained unanswered; Digg personnel have been very reticent on discussing their moderators or their impact on sites affected by their negative actions.



Lee confirmed his posted suspicions of Digg's actions in an email response to me:



Because someone or several people noticed several stories that concern SEO being submitted from our blog (not by me or my employees though) and certain influential Digg users that hate anything to do with SEO emailed spam complaints, dugg down a few recent stories and that was it.


The result has left Lee's TopRankBlog.com domain banned from Digg. Any attempt to submit a story where his domain in the URL fails with this message: url is on the banned submit list.



Lee isn't alone in Digg's Turkish prison for domains. Several other webmasters have reported problems with overzealous antispam policies implemented by Digg.



I chatted with Rand Fishkin, a frequent speaker at search-related conferences and an avid Digg user, about Lee's situation. He believes Digg editors hate SEO and will take any opportunity to ban a site to do so.



It isn't a one-sided problem, though. Rand noted how some SEOs have tried gaming Digg to get traffic. The response to this has been an overwhelming backlash against anything SEO-related.



"I've seen many dozens of articles on SEO get flagged for spam, and many that reached the front page (i.e. weren't flagged by the community) get pulled down very quickly for being on SEO-like subjects," said Rand. "It's a sad state of affairs that has heated up recently due to SEOs trying to game Digg more and more."



He also feels that Digg's actions against SEO have taken place as the editors and the community judge SEO by a few who have tried spamming Digg and similar sites.



"Judging any community by what a few of its more maligned members' behaviors is what creates prejudice and intolerance," said Rand. "Diggers (particularly the editors) should be smarter than this - after all, they hate being judged by what the 14-yr old Digg members write and do."



---

Tag:



Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Furl



Bookmark WebProNews:








More...
  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Similar Threads for: Digg Has A Problem With SEO
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Digg It, New Features Online Affiliate Marketing News Internet Marketing Articles 0 12-18-2006 05:04 PM
The Real Click Fraud Problem - Botnets Affiliate Blogs Affiliate Marketing 0 12-07-2006 05:01 PM
Bug fix of InnoDB scalability problem Affiliate Blogs Databases 0 11-14-2006 10:03 PM
Digg Filling In Holes Affiliate Marketing News Internet Marketing Articles 0 11-06-2006 04:13 PM
Digg Filling In Holes Affiliate Marketing News Internet Marketing Articles 0 11-04-2006 06:07 AM



© 2004-6 RevenueSource.com.  All rights reserved.  Do not duplicate or redistribute in any form.
This website and its logos/design are property of RevenueSource.com.  All rights reserved. vBSEO 3.2.0 RC7


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34