Domain
Name Registration - Google is now going to track when
a domain is registered among other things. An older
domain will get a higher ranking. No more throw away
domain names. No more jump to the top of Google results
in thirty days.
They
will also be tracking the length of renewal on the
theory that a person that renews for ten years will
be more likely to build a worthwhile site than someone
who only holds their domain for a year.
Google
will also be keeping a blacklist of known spammers
and will be using this list when checking dns records
of websites. So spammers who make sure to get their
new throwaway domains with different nameservers in
order to throw Google off may have to try something
new.
Google
Spyware? - They are using "user behavior"
to rank sites. In my book, if spyware removers try
to remove Alexa every time I run it, then this function
of the Google toolbar can only be called spyware.
Yes, you may check the box on the terms of service
for the toolbar, but it still tracks your internet
browsing.
But,
I think the theory will make search engine results
much better.
Google
will be tracking the number of times a document is
selected from the search engine results. This is a
great idea. It means you now have to write the titles
of your pages to grab the searcher's attention. And
since the search terms are highlighted in the results,
maybe placing them at the beginning of sentences in
your page may make then stand out due to capitalization.
But I also see a way that this can be spammed by a
network of "search and click" spammers.
They
will also be tracking the amount of time a person
spends on the page that they find. I don't know about
you, but I have been around long enough to notice
a spam page and I am gone in two seconds. This may
help drop them out of legitimate results.
Content
Changes - I think this comes down to just updating
your information the way it should be updated. If
you have a forum that hasn't been active in a week,
the one that is very active with new posts every minute
will definitely rank higher.
But
the document also mentions that some stale sites may
not be ranked lower if not updated that much. For
example, a site on the Civil War will not be expected
to change as much as a news headlines site and an
older, more stable site may get the rank boost.
Query
Analysis - A search for "American Idol Winner"
will produce different results than it did last year,
even if a page on last year's winner has more links
pointing to it.
Google
will be following trends by the increase or decrease
in the usage of certain search terms or phrases. I
am not sure how this will be implemented. Will there
be a quicker ranking algorithm for new trends? Or
will sites that have a tendency to break new topics
get top billing for such terms?
The
search engine will also be sensitive to terms that
could be used for different subjects. When you search
for "Deep Throat" are you looking for Mark
Felt or a Linda Lovelace movie? Google will track
what searchers are actually looking for and changes
in searching trends.
A
Google Browser? - Google also says that they will
attempt to track bookmarks and favorites files along
with cache files to help determine the ranking of
sites. The only way I see this happening is through
their own browser and again, this brings up the question
of spyware.
Topics
- Pages will now be tracked for the topics they cover.
Maybe this is what Site Flavored Search is all about.
Google says that changes in topic will traced for
scoring. So a drastic change in a site may drop in
down in the search results. I think this must already
be in effect, just for some of the things I have seen
with my own sites.
Anchor
Text - Google says that links to pages from other
sites tend to have differing anchor text if they are
obtained naturally. Artificial linking campaigns tend
to produce anchor text that is the same.
Anchor
text that changes when the page the link is on changes
will be counted as being more relevant.
Anchor
text that changes with time may indicate a change
in topic on the site.
Anchor
text that is no longer relevant to the site linked
to may be discounted.
Traffic
- Google will track traffic to a page to determine
if the content is stale or not. This is a cue that
sites will no longer be create and forget. Google
will also factor in Advertising traffic.
Linking
- Google says that legitimate sites attract links
back slowly. Whether this is true or not depends on
the definition of "slowly". I know of sites
like stumbleupon.com, where users comment and rate
sites constantly and one site sent into the mix can
get hundreds of links to it within a day just from
comments posted about it.
Google
also says that exchanging links, purchasing links,
or gaining links from documents where their is no
editorial discretion are all forms of link spam. Does
this mean that if you link to someone and they link
to you, that is spam? Than a lot of bloggers out there
who aren't really trying to spam may get accused of
doing so.
They
will also be measuring the authority of the page that
the links are on, mentioning government documents
specifically. This smacks of information control.
Who assigns this authority and what makes one person
more of an authority of another? If a political issue
is searched for, will a Democrat's or a Republican's
page come up first?
The
freshness of the page that the link is on will also
help determine the freshness of the linked-to page.
This is a good argument for using a blog and pinging
after your entries.
A
page that is updated while the link on that page remains
the same is a good indicator of the relevant link.
Ranking
History - Ranking change is another feature that Google
will use to detect spam. Not that all sites will be
flagged as spam sites if they see a huge jump in ranking.
Some of these sites could be topical. The authors
of the site may have caught onto a new trend just
as it was rising.
But
Google also will measure the change in a sites ranking
to determine if the content is becoming stale, i.e.
a drop in links to the site.
Now
this must mean some sort of balance and I hope they
have leeway for traditional SEO. For example, If you
have written new software and have created a PAD file
for it, you can literally get hundreds of new links
in a weeks. It only takes a second to submit.
What
about if you started your own affiliate program. You
can get a lot of links quickly that way? Will Google
see this as spam? We will have to wait and see.
Finally
Hope - Competition always inspires a better product
and more options for internet users. Despite the focus
on Google in search engine forums and its name being
used to define "search for something on the internet",
i.e. I Googled him, Google hold on the market has
actually dropped.
When
once you could optimize for Google and leave it that,
now the combined use of MSN and Yahoo is greater than
Google, with Yahoo nipping at Google's heels.
This
leaves options for us as search engine marketers and
internet searchers. If one search engine doesn't suit
us, at least we know that it isn't the only one we
have to choose.